If you live in {{CITY}}, you are simultaneously governed by four layers of elected and appointed officials — your city or town, your county, the state of South Carolina, and the federal government. Each layer has its own jurisdiction, its own taxes, and its own places where decisions actually get made. This is the map.
Layer one: city or town
The city government is the layer you bump into most often: trash pickup, water and sewer, local roads, building permits, parking, the police department in incorporated cities, the parks department, zoning for what can be built where.
Most South Carolina cities — including {{CITY}} when applicable — use a council-administrator (sometimes called council-manager) form of government. The voters elect a city council, the council hires a professional city administrator (or city manager), and the administrator runs day-to-day operations and supervises department heads. Some cities have a strong-mayor form where the elected mayor is also the chief executive; others have a weak-mayor setup where the mayor is one council vote among many.
Council meetings are public. Agendas have to be posted in advance under the South Carolina Freedom of Information Act. There is almost always a citizen-comment portion of the agenda — usually capped at 2-3 minutes per speaker. Showing up at council is one of the highest-leverage things a resident can do, because most local boards hear from very few citizens on most issues.
What city government cannot do: create new criminal laws (those are state law), set state income tax rates, override state preemption on issues like gun laws, short-term rentals in some cases, or minimum wage. {{STATE}} is a strong-preemption state, meaning the legislature has the final word on a long list of issues that other states leave to cities.
Layer two: county
County government in {{STATE}} covers both unincorporated areas (no city) and provides services that span cities — courts, jails, the sheriff’s department, property assessment and tax collection, elections administration, public health, libraries (in most cases), some roads.
{{STATE}} counties are governed by an elected county council, typically with a council-administrator structure similar to cities. The council sets the property tax rate (millage), passes ordinances, and adopts the annual budget. The administrator runs operations.
Other key elected county officials in {{STATE}} include:
- Sheriff — the chief law-enforcement officer of the county, elected separately from the council. The sheriff runs the county jail and provides law-enforcement services in unincorporated areas. Independent of the council on operational decisions; dependent on the council for the budget.
- Coroner — elected. Investigates deaths under specified circumstances.
- Auditor and Treasurer — usually elected. The auditor calculates property tax bills; the treasurer collects them.
- Clerk of Court — elected. Manages court records and certain administrative functions of the courts.
- Solicitor (district attorney) — elected by the judicial circuit, which often spans multiple counties. Prosecutes state criminal cases.
- Probate Judge — elected. Handles estates, marriage licenses, certain mental-health commitments.
- Register of Deeds — elected in some counties, appointed in others. Records property transactions.
This is why South Carolina election ballots are often long: many of the offices that other states fill by appointment are elected here.
Layer three: the State of South Carolina
South Carolina state government has the same three-branch structure as the federal government — legislative, executive, judicial — but with some {{STATE}}-specific quirks worth knowing.
The General Assembly (legislative branch)
The {{STATE}} General Assembly meets in Columbia. It has two chambers:
- South Carolina House of Representatives — 124 members, two-year terms.
- South Carolina Senate — 46 members, four-year terms.
The General Assembly meets in regular session from January through early-to-mid May each year — relatively short by national standards. Most of the substantive work happens in committee. Every bill is introduced, read on the floor, referred to a committee, debated and amended in committee, sent back to the full chamber for two more readings, and then (if it passes) sent to the other chamber to repeat the process. Bills that pass both chambers go to the governor.
Committee meetings are public and most are now streamed at scstatehouse.gov. The same site publishes every bill, every vote, every member’s contact information, and the daily journals of both chambers.
The governor and constitutional officers (executive branch)
South Carolina elects nine statewide constitutional officers — more than most states. All serve four-year terms:
- Governor — chief executive.
- Lieutenant Governor — runs on a ticket with the governor (this changed in 2018; before then they were elected separately). Presides over the Senate.
- Secretary of State — handles business filings, charity registration, notary commissions.
- Attorney General — chief legal officer of the state; runs the prosecution side of state government.
- State Treasurer — manages state funds and investments.
- Comptroller General — state accountant; pays state bills; produces the state’s financial reports.
- Adjutant General — head of the SC National Guard. Used to be elected; appointed by the governor since 2014.
- Superintendent of Education — runs the SC Department of Education. Statewide elected.
- Commissioner of Agriculture — runs the SC Department of Agriculture.
The governor of {{STATE}} is structurally weaker than the governors of many other states — much of the executive function is split among the other constitutional officers, each elected independently and accountable to voters rather than the governor.
The courts (judicial branch)
{{STATE}}’s court system runs from local magistrate courts up through:
- Magistrate Court — minor criminal cases (max 30 days), traffic, small claims up to a fixed limit. Magistrates are appointed by the governor with Senate confirmation.
- Municipal Court — city ordinance violations.
- Circuit Court — felony criminal cases and major civil cases. Trial-level court of general jurisdiction. Circuit judges are elected by the General Assembly.
- Family Court — divorce, custody, juvenile, adoption. Also elected by the legislature.
- Court of Appeals — intermediate appellate court. Nine judges, elected by the legislature.
- Supreme Court — five justices, elected by the legislature for 10-year terms.
The fact that the legislature elects most judges (rather than the public or the governor) is one of {{STATE}}’s most distinctive — and most debated — features. It concentrates judicial selection power in the General Assembly.
Layer four: federal
South Carolinians send two U.S. senators (statewide, six-year terms) and seven U.S. representatives (district-based, two-year terms) to Congress. Federal officials are involved with federal taxes, Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid (Medicaid is a federal-state partnership), the federal courts, the military, interstate highways, federal environmental and labor regulation, immigration, and federal grants that flow to state and local programs.
Federal money is a much bigger share of state and local budgets than most people realize. Highway funding, school funding (Title I, special education), public health, Medicaid, public housing, and disaster recovery all involve federal dollars passing through state and local agencies. When you hear that the {{STATE}} state budget is $X billion, a substantial fraction of that is federal pass-through.
Home rule — the South Carolina version
“Home rule” is the principle that local governments can make local decisions without asking the state for permission. {{STATE}} has a limited version of home rule, codified in the state constitution and the Home Rule Act of 1975. In practice it means:
- Cities and counties have authority over a defined set of local matters (zoning, local roads, local taxes within statutory limits, local police powers).
- The state legislature retains supremacy on a long list of issues and routinely preempts local action on others (gun regulations, short-term rental rules in some cases, minimum wage, certain employment rules).
- Counties don’t have the same broad police power that cities have under the SC code — county powers are enumerated rather than open-ended.
This is why local debates often hit a wall when the state has spoken. A city council in {{CITY}} can pass an ordinance, but if it crosses a preempted line the courts will strike it down.
Where the decisions actually happen
If you only have time to watch one body, watch your county council and your city council. They make most of the decisions that touch your daily life — property taxes, zoning, police priorities, parks, schools (through funding and board elections), local infrastructure.
If you only have time to read one document, read your local annual budget. The budget is the most honest statement of priorities any government produces. What gets cut, what gets new positions, what gets capital spending — that’s where the actual choices are made, regardless of what speeches said about them.
How to find your representatives
- State legislator: scstatehouse.gov has a “find my legislator” tool.
- U.S. representative: house.gov, enter your ZIP.
- U.S. senators: Both serve all of {{STATE}}, no district lookup needed.
- City and county officials: Your city or county website lists current council members with contact information.