Elections Thomas first won election to the state senate in 1984. He was reelected six times, never facing a
Democratic challenger—in 1988 (99%), 1992 (98%), 1996 (100%), 2000 (89%), 2004 (99%), and 2008 (99%). He lost the 2012 Republican primary in a five-way race, finishing in third place after receiving only 20.5% of the vote—well short of qualifying for the runoff.
Tenure On May 20, 2009, Thomas voted to force Governor
Mark Sanford to take the
ARRA funds, or the federal stimulus, and use the one time money for reoccurring needs. Thomas was one of the first conservative Republican state senators to call for the resignation or impeachment of
Governor Mark Sanford. In August 2009, he wrote a letter to state legislative leaders saying that in his view, Sanford's use of expensive plane tickets on state business were an impeachable offense. In September 2011
USA Today ran a story on legislative pensions and how legislators abused their power to "pump up their pensions." Thomas was the poster child for this article. USA Today found that he had taken home over $148,000 more than other South Carolina legislators. At the time of the USA Today article, Thomas had paid for thirty years of service necessary to draw legislative retirement pay instead of legislative salary which comes from the General Fund of South Carolina's State Budget. Nineteen other South Carolina senators have chosen to take the $32,390 retirement pay rather than the $10,400 salary. South Carolina has one of the lowest pay scales for legislators among the fifty states.
Committee assignments Thomas was Chairman of the Banking and Insurance Committee and Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee Sub-committee on Constitutional/Administrative Officers. ==Other political activities==