Executive branch
GovernorHenry McMaster (Republican)
Official officeGovernor website
South Carolina entered the Union on May 23, 1788 as the 8th state. South Carolina’s political story stretches from the colonial lowcountry and plantation economy through secession, Reconstruction, civil-rights struggle, and rapid modern growth in manufacturing and tourism. Today its state government is centered in Columbia and operates through a governor and a bicameral General Assembly made up of a Senate and House of Representatives.
Use this section to understand how the state organizes executive authority, legislative power, and federal representation.
South Carolina’s government is organized around an elected governor and a bicameral General Assembly that includes a Senate and a House of Representatives. Columbia serves as the focal point of statewide lawmaking, budgeting, and public administration.
Use an address in South Carolina to identify the federal and state officials who represent that address.
Use an address in South Carolina to check voter information and election resources when those tools are available.
Confirm that your voter registration is active with your state election office.
Register to vote online or update your name, address, or party information when your state allows it.
Download or review the mail registration process and deadlines for this state.
Find out whether you can register in person before Election Day or at your polling place.
Access voting guidance for military members, their families, and citizens living overseas.
Look up where to vote in person and review any location details provided by the state.
Upcoming statewide elections from Google Civic appear here when they are available.
No upcoming elections for SC are available in Google Civic right now.
Population, housing, education, language, workforce, geography, and industry data for the state.
Overview
Use these statewide indicators to get a quick picture of who lives in South Carolina and how the state is changing.
Work
This section combines workforce totals, labor-market context, and the major industries that employ people across the state.
Language & place
These charts show how residents describe the state across language spoken at home and settlement pattern.
These long-run charts keep the economic pressure points in one place: income, wages, rent, housing, tuition, and healthcare. Together they show how the balance between pay and basic costs has shifted over time.
Official statewide median household income. The adjusted line converts each year into current dollars so visitors can compare purchasing power over time.
A clean state-level historical series was not available, so this chart falls back to the federal wage floor and its value in current dollars.
A national context chart showing how the federal wage floor has changed and how much buying power it has lost or gained in current dollars.
A national price index for tuition and school fees. The adjusted line removes overall inflation so visitors can see whether tuition has outpaced the broader cost of living.
A national medical-care price index. The adjusted line removes overall inflation so the chart shows the real rise in health-related costs.
Focus on the statewide economic picture: income, work, industry, housing costs, labor conditions, and major public companies and wage rules.
Current-dollar gross domestic product from BEA when a BEA API key is available.
Current statewide wage rules, tipped cash wages when available, and the biggest official regional differences.
No separate state minimum wage law; employers covered by the FLSA must pay at least the federal minimum.
Federal tipped cash wage under the FLSA.
$0.25 above the current federal floor of $7.
State page highlights major official differences and coverage rules rather than every local ordinance.
Current snapshot effective
January 1, 2026
This section organizes nonpartisan state-level resources that help people follow public decisions, review official disclosures, request records, and move from information toward civic participation.
The goal is practical accountability: clearer institutions, easier public access, and straightforward paths for people who want to understand how state government operates and how to engage it.
Public accountability starts with access. These links help people read the rules, review public information, and understand how the state says government should work.
These resources help people follow how power is organized, how money is disclosed, and where to start when they want to monitor public decision-making.
Accountability also depends on participation. These links make it easier for people to register, verify local information, and connect statewide systems to action in their own community.
Keep the most useful statewide civic resources in one place without repeating the links already covered elsewhere on the page.
Use this section for the broad statewide civic resources that are not already explained in more detail elsewhere on the page.
These links help visitors move from statewide information into local offices and county-level tools.