Senate shifts Waccamaw Neck to new congressional district


After two days of debate, the state Senate voted 26-15 to move the Waccamaw Neck from the 6th to the 7th Congressional District.

A plan from the Senate redistricting committee last week moved all of Georgetown County into the 6th District, now held by Rep. James Clyburn, a Democrat. That angered county Republicans. But state Sen. Ray Cleary of Murrells Inlet told a meeting of party members over the weekend he believed that plan could be amended to put at least the Waccamaw Neck into the 7th District with Horry County and several counties in the Pee Dee.

Cleary said he was optimistic that it would pass despite a vote last week to table the change. The Senate took up an amendment Monday by Sen. Hugh Leatherman, a Florence County Republican, that included the Waccamaw Neck and Chesterfield County in the new district.

It ran into opposition from Sen. Gerald Malloy, a Darlington County Democrat, who said it would create a district dominated by coastal interests in Horry and Georgetown counties. "This is an urban-rural issue," he said.

Debate resumed Tuesday afternoon with President Pro Tem Glenn McConnell calling on the Senate to limit debate on the 30 amendments in order to adopt a resistricting plan that can go to the House this week. After a procedural vote, Leatherman's amendment was brought to a vote.