Tag: governor

By Matthew Christian, originally posted by the Aiken Standard on May 28, 2025

AIKEN — A potential Republican gubernatorial nominee supports changes to how most judges are elected in the Palmetto State and efforts to make South Carolina’s government more efficient.

Lt. Governor Pamela Evette was asked about both topics during a question-and-answer session at a May 27 Aiken Republican Republican Club meeting at Newberry Hall.

“Do you support changing the election of judges by the legislature and can it be done in South Carolina,” an anonymous person asked Evette via an index card.

The 170-member South Carolina General Assembly elects South South Carolina Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, Circuit Court and Family Court judges. The governor nominates and the Senate confirms magistrate judges and masters-in-equity. Probate court judges are elected by popular vote.

Evette said she supported a system in which the Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, Circuit Court and Family Court judges would be nominated by the governor and confirmed by the Senate.

“The governor should appoint and the Senate should confirm and when you do that it pretty much falls on the back of of one person,” Evette continued.

If implemented in the Palmetto State, the nomination-and-confirmation process would mirror how federal judges are selected.

“Like the governor has said… I believe the federal system is really, really good,” Evette said.

There are concerns that the lawyer-legislators serving in the South Carolina General Assembly — in 2023, 46% of the state’s senators and 27% of the state’s representatives were lawyers — could slow or stall the process to preserve the current system.

“Well, we said tort reform couldn’t be done, but it got done this year,” Evette continued. “So, I think anything can happen.”

Another anonymous question writer asked Evette about the Trump administration’s efforts to prevent illegal immigrants from receiving Medicaid.

“Medicaid was never meant to give to non-U.S. citizens and that’s what they’re stopping,” Evette said.

Evette added that she’s a huge fan of Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency.

“I’m an accountant by trade for all of you who don’t know,” Evette said.

Evette and her husband, David, founded Quality Business Solutions, an Upstate firm that helps businesses with accounting and human resources.

“I used to call it efficiency when I was in public accounting,” Evette said. “I worked with companies to learn how to be efficient… and utilize the money that they had to grow their businesses. That’s what President Trump is doing now. That’s what Elon Musk is doing now.”

The state of South Carolina is constitutionally mandated to have a balanced budget — expenses are equal to revenues — unlike the federal government, Evette continued. And the state’s rainy day fund is as big as it’s ever been, she added.

“I don’t believe that we are sending money to foreign entities to do Sesame Street and some weird language that I don’t even know,” Evette said.

The U.S. Agency for International Development provided $20 million to fund an Iraqi version of the popular children’s program, Musk said earlier this year. The DOGE team has eliminated that grant but there are still several legal challenges to DOGE’s actions ongoing.

“But can we be more efficient? Yes,” Evette said. “The best of companies will tell you they can always run more efficiently. Should we leverage AI? Should we leverage technology? Absolutely we should. Because that’s how you save money.”

Making the state more efficient is part of the path to lower and eliminate the state’s income tax rates, Evette said.

“I have said forever, I want to see South Carolina be a zero-state income tax state,” she added. “But you have to be able to do that by being efficient, right? You have to be able to walk and chew your gum at the same time.”

Evette is one of several candidates considering a bid for the 2026 Republican nomination.

Other potential candidates include S.C. Sens. Sean Bennett and Josh Kimbrell, U.S. Reps. Nancy Mace and Ralph Norman, and S.C. Attorney General Alan Wilson.

Filing for the nomination will open next March. The primary and any needed runoffs will be held next June.

Published May 19, 2025 by Fox Carolina

South Carolina Lieutenant Governor Evette sits down with Fox Carolina’s Justin Dougherty to discuss important issues happening in our state and a possible run for governor.

WATCH NOW

By Shaun Chornobroff, Originally posted in SC Daily Gazette April 3, 2025;

Photo Credit: Travis Bell

Lt. Gov. Pam Evette would hope to put her “own stamp” on the state

COLUMBIA — As she mulls a 2026 gubernatorial bid, South Carolina’s lieutenant governor says her decision is guided by a desire to build on the state’s economic growth under Gov. Henry McMaster using her own business experience.

Pam Evette has served alongside McMaster since the 2018 election, the first in the state with candidates for governor and lieutenant governor running on the same ticket. McMaster, the state’s oldest and longest-serving elected governor in state history, can’t run again.

“That plays a factor in this, making sure that legacy continues on, so I’m seriously considering (running),” Evette told the SC Daily Gazette on Wednesday.

She did not give a timeline for a decision.

Evette, who joined McMaster’s team as his running mate in November 2017, said the accomplishments she’s proud of include using the governor’s bully pulpit to promote the career paths available to students through the state’s technical colleges.

Her roles have included leading South Carolina’s 2020 Complete Count Committee, which had the unexpected task of getting an official tally of residents amid a pandemic.

The 57-year-old accountant will be aided by the political action committee Patriots for South Carolina. Made up of allies of President Donald Trump, the PAC has already secured $5 million in donor commitments for Evette, The Post and Courier first reported.

It’s a boost she’ll need to stand out among an expectedly crowded field for the Republican nomination. Despite her travels across the state as the governor’s ambassador and her frequent appearances beside McMaster at news conferences, Evette is an unknown to many voters, as shown by the latest Winthrop Poll.

Although no one is officially in the race, Republicans considering a bid include Attorney General Alan Wilson, U.S. Reps. Nancy Mace and Ralph Norman, and state Sens. Sean Bennett and Josh Kimbrell.

Unlike any of them, Evette’s bid for governor would be her first solo run for elected office.

Mace, who constituents criticized for not attending a town hall in her district last Friday, was at the Statehouse on Wednesday and told reporters “things are looking very positive” for her decision on a gubernatorial announcement. She added that she was meeting with House Speaker Murrell Smith, R-Sumter, about the “future of the state.”

The First District congresswoman has made repeated jabs at Evette on social media.

However, the lieutenant governor said the comments don’t bother her much.

“That’s what you see in Washington (D.C.) politics, and that’s why we are where we are in Washington with an unbalanced budget and things not getting done,” Evette said.

One question is who in the potential field might get Trump’s endorsement. In January, Mace told reporters that Trump’s opinion on her potential run would be a crucial factor in her decision.

Evette said she’s not relying on his endorsement, though she called Trump an inspiration. She described herself as a “Trump girl” when McMaster introduced her to voters in 2017. It was at a reception in Washington, D.C., for Trump’s inauguration where she first met McMaster.

Last week, Evette traveled to Washington at the invitation of the White House for an event celebrating Women’s History Month. Mace was also among attendees.

‘Time is money’

Originally from Ohio, Evette moved to South Carolina two decades ago and made the Palmetto State her adopted home, she said. It’s where she raised her three children and grew her business.

When McMaster picked Evette, the political novice was the president and CEO of Quality Business Solutions, an outsourcing payroll and human resources firm operating out of Travelers Rest for clients nationwide. (Her husband became president when she joined McMaster’s team.)

Her business credentials and desire to cut bureaucratic red tape remain the key component of her potential sales pitch to voters.

During her conversation with the SC Daily Gazette, Evette said she’d want to put her “own stamp” on the state with a company-like approach to the governor’s office.

Sounding a lot like former Gov. Nikki Haley, who also had an accounting background and crafted her reputation as the “jobs governor,” Evette said she’d focus on making South Carolina the most business-friendly state in the nation — if she were to run, of course.

As a former business owner, now equipped with more than six years in office, Evette says she has a unique understanding of how to help the state’s business community.

“When you believe that the government can run efficiently like a business in the private sector, who’s better to do that than a businessperson that’s had to live with it every day in the private sector,” she said.

She also wants to continue a push for technical college education, which she says would “create the workforce of tomorrow.”

She touted the success of the state’s Workforce Industry Needs Scholarship, better known as SC WINS, that covers expenses for students at South Carolina’s 16 technical colleges.

SC Daily Gazette Editor Seanna Adcox contributed to this report.