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1978 United States Senate election in South Carolina

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1978 United States Senate election in South Carolina

← 1972November 7, 19781984 →
 
NomineeStrom ThurmondCharles D. Ravenel
PartyRepublicanDemocratic
Popular vote351,733281,119
Percentage55.56%44.40%

County results
Thurmond:     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%
Ravenel:     50–60%

U.S. senator before election

Strom Thurmond
Republican

Elected U.S. Senator

Strom Thurmond
Republican

Elections in South Carolina
U.S. President
Presidential primaries
U.S. Senate
U.S. House of Representatives

The1978 South Carolina United States Senate election was held on November 7, 1978, to select theU.S. senator from the state ofSouth Carolina. Popular incumbentRepublican SenatorStrom Thurmond defeatedDemocratic challengerCharles D. Ravenel.

Democratic primary

[edit]

TheSouth Carolina Democratic Party held theirprimary for governor on June 13, 1978.Charles D. Ravenel, an unsuccessful candidate in the1974 gubernatorial contest, originally planned to run for governor again in 1978, but was convinced by Vice PresidentWalter Mondale in 1977 to run for senator. He garnered over 50% of the vote in the primary and avoided arunoff election.

Democratic Primary
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticCharles D. Ravenel205,34855.95%
DemocraticJohn Bolt Culbertson69,18418.85%
DemocraticTom Triplett50,95713.88%
DemocraticTom McElveen41,55711.32%
Total votes367,046100.00%

Republican primary

[edit]

SenatorStrom Thurmond faced no opposition fromSouth Carolina Republicans and avoided aprimary election.

General election campaign

[edit]
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Thurmond generally ignored Ravenel on the campaign and refused to debate him. When they did cross paths, Thurmond criticized Ravenel for never having held a political office. Ravenel did not help his cause by his actions in the 1974 gubernatorial race when he refused to endorse the Democratic nominee after he had been disqualified. This irritated many Democrats and they also accused him of being nothing more than a liberal New Yorker. Age was beginning to become an issue with Thurmond, so to combat perceptions of old age, Thurmond often appeared with his children on the campaign trail. While 1978 was generally a Democratic year, Thurmond was able to pull off a commanding victory over Ravenel.

Thurmond, having first been elected on a segregationist platform in the 1950s, had somewhat moderated his racial views in the 1970s, having hiredAfrican American staffers, championed grants to black colleges and businesses, voted in favor of extending theVoting Rights Act of 1965, and established scholarships for black students at four South Carolina colleges with religious affiliations. That garnered him the endorsement of 10 of South Carolina's 11 African American mayors. In addition,Isaac W. Williams, the Field Director of the state'sNAACP chapter, did not outright endorse him, but considered what Thurmond would do for the Black community in 1978 more important than his actions in the 1940s and 1950s, saying that "if voters just try to punish a politician for the sins of the past, what does it profit him to improve?" thus also managing to increase hisAfrican American support.[1]

General election results

[edit]
1978 South Carolina U.S. Senate Election[2]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanStrom Thurmond (incumbent)351,73355.56%−7.73%
DemocraticCharles D. Ravenel281,11944.40%+7.71%
Write-in2570.04%N/A
Total votes633,109100.00%
Majority70,61411.15%−15.45%
Turnout633,10957.7%−7.5%
Republicanhold

See also

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References

[edit]
  1. ^"Thurmond's Black Hope".Washington Post.ISSN 0190-8286. RetrievedMay 6, 2021.
  2. ^Clerk of the United States House of Representatives (1979)."Statistics of the Congressional Election of November 7, 1978"(PDF).U.S. Government Printing Office.
  • Bass, Jack;Marilyn W. Thompson (1998).Ol' Strom: An Unauthorized Biography of Strom Thurmond. Longstreet. pp. 290–292.
  • State Election Commission (1979).Report of the South Carolina State Election Commission. Columbia, SC: State Election Commission. p. 54.
  • "Challenging a Southern Legend". Time. October 16, 1978. Archived fromthe original on October 22, 2012. RetrievedFebruary 9, 2008.
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