Candidates • Ted Adams (C) • Lindsey Graham (R), U.S. Representative • Victor Kocher (L) • Alex Sanders (D), former President of the College of Charleston
Campaign The election campaign between Graham and Sanders pitted ideology against personality. Graham spread his message to the voters that he had a consistent conservative voting record and that his votes in Congress closely matched that of outgoing Senator
Strom Thurmond. Sanders claimed that he was best to represent South Carolina in the Senate because he held membership in both the
NAACP, the
Sons of Confederate Veterans, the
NRA, and because he said that his positions more closely matched the citizens of the state. He said that he was against the death penalty for religious reasons, supported abortion rights, and was for greater government involvement in education. Graham attacked Sanders for these positions consistently throughout the campaign, but Sanders hit back at Graham for wanting to privatize
social security. Graham scored an impressive victory in the general election and the margin of victory proved that Democrats had little chance of winning an election in the state for a federal position. He achieved his victory because he rolled up strong margins
the Upstate and was able to also achieve a majority in the
Lowcountry, an area which Sanders had been expected to do well since he hailed from
Charleston. However, strong support in the Lowcountry for Republican gubernatorial candidate
Mark Sanford doomed Sanders chances of running up a margin in the coastal counties.
Debates • Complete video of debate, October 6, 2002 • Complete video of debate, October 13, 2002 • Complete video of debate, October 18, 2002 • Complete video of debate, October 20, 2002 • Complete video of debate, October 25, 2002
Predictions Polling Results Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic •
Calhoun (largest town:
St. Matthews) •
Darlington (largest city:
Hartsville) •
Abbeville (Largest city:
Abbeville) •
Chesterfield (Largest city:
Cheraw) •
Sumter (Largest city:
Sumter) •
McCormick (largest town:
McCormick)
Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican •
Horry (largest town:
Myrtle Beach) == See also ==