Tag: Lt. Governor

Event at Fort Dorchester Elementary highlights efforts in South Carolina

South Carolina Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette and Vision to Learn President Ann Hollister attended a special event Friday, March 14, at Fort Dorchester Elementary School, celebrating the nonprofit’s success in providing vision care to children across South Carolina.

During the event, Evette and Hollister helped 20 students at the school try on their new glasses for the first time. This moment marked a milestone for Vision to Learn’s South Carolina program, which has provided more than 30,000 vision screenings, 12,000 eye exams and 10,000 pairs of glasses to students in need, all at no cost to the child or their family.

“Education is the gateway to success, and for students with vision issues, glasses are the gateway to learning,” Evette said. “I’m proud to partner with Vision to Learn to help ensure our children have access to the eye care they need to reach their full potential.”

Since its launch in 2021, Vision to Learn has expanded its reach in South Carolina, assisting students in Charleston and Dorchester counties. The program serves as one of the state’s most comprehensive school-based initiatives for children’s eye care.

“Vision to Learn has been a game changer for students in Dorchester County,” said Dorchester School District Two Interim Superintendent Chad Dougherty. “By providing eye exams and glasses to students where they are every day – at their neighborhood school – this effort has delivered access to care that was sorely lacking for many of our students.”

Vision to Learn, a national nonprofit founded in 2012, seeks to address the disparity in access to eye care, especially in low-income communities. According to the organization, about 1-in-4 children need glasses, but many go without the proper care. In South Carolina alone, an estimated 100,000 students lack the necessary glasses.

“More than 3 million children across the country go to school every day without the glasses they need,” said Vision To Learn Founder Austin Beutner. “Every child in every school, everywhere in the country, should have the glasses they need to succeed in school and in life.”

For more information on Vision to Learn and its programs, visit www.visiontolearn.org

CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCSC) – Extremely early polling shows South Carolina Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette with a slight lead among likely Republican voters in the state’s 2026 governor’s race.

The Trafalgar Group, an Atlanta-based political research group, polled 1,127 likely Republican voters between March 8-10 and found 31 percent of voters said they would vote for Evette.

U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace, who represents South Carolina’s First Congressional District, locked in 29 percent while Attorney General Alan Wilson maintains a close third with 27 percent of the vote.

About 11 percent said they’d vote for Rep. Ralph Norman, who represents the state’s Fifth Congressional District.

While prospective candidates are starting to position themselves for a run at the governor’s mansion, no one has officially announced their intentions yet.

The same poll questioned voters on how they feel about a variety of issues, including the performance of the president, tort reform and changes to state income tax.

On President Donald Trump’s work in office so far, the poll showed 73.7 percent of South Carolina Republicans approve of how he’s handling the job.

The poll shows there’s strong support, nearly 65 percent, for House Bill H. 3497, which would reform liquor liability for bars and restaurants but less support for the current tort reforms in Senate Bill S.244. Nearly 55 percent of those polled said they view the bill unfavorably.

When it comes to eliminating the state income tax through House Bill 3733, more than 80 percent of people polled supported the idea. However, the question set sets up respondents to believe cutting state income tax would generate more revenue by spending cuts and making the state more competitive.

The polls also found strong support for an SC DOGE with about 75 percent of people saying they view House Resolution 3926 and Senate Resolution 318 favorably or very favorably. 44 percent said it’s their top legislative priority.Those who responded to the poll were primarily white and over the age of 65 with a near even split between men and women.

The group reports a 2.9 percent margin of error.

Click here to read the full findings.

Originally posted by Fox Carolina on March 8, 2025.

HORRY COUNTY, SC (WMBF) – South Carolina Lieutenant Governor Pamela Evette visited Carolina Forest neighborhoods to speak with residents and first responders still fighting a now over 2,000-acre wildfire.

Lt. Governor Evette told WMBF News she assessed damage from the wildfires but also came to thank Horry County first responders.

“The people of South Carolina are resilient, and their kind and we work together,” she said. “It’s a miracle that we’ve had no loss of life, no loss of property, and that’s not by chance.”

Her visit follows Senator Lindsey Graham and Congressman Russell Fry, who also praised first responders on Friday.

Horry County Fire Rescue says they’re making progress and are happy with the containment they’re seeing on the lines with the South Carolina Forestry Commission reporting a 55 percent containment as of Saturday morning.

The lieutenant governor also showed appreciation to the residents of Horry County for taking it upon themselves to step in and help.

“That’s what I’ve heard from first responders over and over, is thank you so much to this community for stepping up, for making sure that they had enough snacks, water, Gatorade, a place to lay their heads to rest when there were breaks,” she stated. “That they could come back and try to get a little rest. So, thank you to the community for all you do.”

On Saturday, Horry County officials and the South Carolina Forestry Commission said the fire remains at 55% containment, with crews attacking occasional flare-ups and hot spots. Still, overall things are moving in a positive direction.

Still county officials are strongly enforcing the county-wide burn ban and it is still in effect until further notice.

Photo Credit: Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina Pamela Evette speaks to the crowd at a rally for Donald Trump on Friday, Feb. 23, 2024, in Rock Hill.

A network of President Donald Trump’s advisers, staff and political consultants are lining up behind South Carolina Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette, launching a new super PAC to boost her prospects as a leading contender if she decides to run for governor next year.

The group, Patriots for South Carolina, has already secured $5 million in donor commitments, according to details shared first with The Post and Courier Feb. 19.

“The Lieutenant Governor has demonstrated throughout her career that she has what it takes to be a strong, conservative leader for South Carolina,” said Chris Grant, who is serving as a senior adviser for the newly formed, pro-Evette super PAC.

“The resources committed to backing her, should she decide to run, clearly shows her support runs deep in the state,” Grant said.

Evette told the newspaper in a written statement she has been overwhelmed by the encouragement she has received for a potential 2026 gubernatorial bid and the show of support from the newly created group.

“President Trump needs strong allies in state government who know what it takes to get the job done — to continue the good work of the McMaster administration and keep SC winning,” she said, adding that she is taking a serious look at the governor’s race and urged supporters to “stay tuned.”

A roster of seasoned Republican strategists from Trump’s political orbit, including Grant, have joined the group’s leadership — an early sign that Trump’s allies are working to shape the race as Gov. Henry McMaster, who was one of the president’s earliest backers, nears the end of his final term.

Grant most recently worked as a consultant for Make America Great Again Inc., or MAGA Inc., which was the top spender on Trump’s behalf in the 2024 election cycle.

Grant’s involvement in the pro-Evette effort comes on the heels of his announcement that his consulting firm, Big Dog Strategies, is relocating its headquarters to Charleston — underscoring his commitment to the state and its political future.

Andy Surabian, who worked as a senior adviser to Vice President JD Vance during the Republican’s 2022 U.S. Senate bid in Ohio as well as his 2024 vice presidential run, will serve as the group’s CEO.

Surabian is a close adviser to Donald Trump Jr., the president’s son. During the 2016 presidential campaign, Surabian was a key member of Trump’s “war room” and later served as a key adviser to Steve Bannon during his brief tenure as Trump’s chief of staff.

Dan Adams, the CEO of Greenville-based investment banking firm The Capital Corp, will serve as chairman of the PAC. He was a major McMaster donor who was also one of 30 donors who met privately with Trump in 2017.

The group’s spokesman is Justin Evans, who most recently served on Trump’s South Carolina team as director of special projects.

In 2020, he worked with the Trump White House on its advance team and traveled the country to prepare for events with both Trump and then-Vice President Mike Pence.

“The Trump agenda is on the ballot in 2026, and there is no one better to carry the America First mantle than Pam Evette,” Evans said. “South Carolina needs a Trump businesswoman and conservative outsider to continue the success of the McMaster Administration, and Pam Evette is the perfect candidate for the job, should she choose to run.”

If Evette, 57, decides to enter the race, she is expected to face a competitive Republican primary. Other likely contenders include state Attorney General Alan Wilson and U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace, R-Charleston, among others.

Evans said Evette offers something unique, even Trump-like.

“She, like the president, had tremendous success in the private sector before offering herself up for public service,” Evans said. “That differentiates her from the other rumored candidates.”

Evette had no prior experience in elected office when McMaster picked her as his running mate in 2017, the first time a S.C. governor ran on the same ticket as his pick for lieutenant governor. She came in as president and CEO of Quality Business Solutions, a payroll and human resources company based in the Upstate.

At the time, McMaster said he picked in part due to her “fresh eyes” when it came to governing, as well as her relationships with the business community.

While the PAC itself is pro-Evette, the outside group cannot legally coordinate their spending or messaging with the candidate or campaign.

On Feb. 17, Presidents Day, Evette issued a video statement on social media where she expressed her thanks that Trump was back in the White House, calling him a “bold and courageous leader.”

Evette and her husband, David, were among Trump’s invited guests who traveled to the Palm Beach County Convention Center to celebrate his 2024 election night victory.

She also recently traveled to Washington, D.C., to applaud Trump signing an executive order banning transgender athletes from participating in female sports.

Trump did not call on Evette by name, or ask her to say a few words, as he did with Mace.

Filing for the gubernatorial race won’t officially open for more than a year, but when it does it is expected to draw significant interest and competition. It will also be the first time South Carolina has had an open governor’s race since 2010 when 38-year-old Nikki Haley emerged victorious and made history when she was elected the state’s first female governor.

Excerpt from South Carolina Public Radio | By Maayan Schechter, Gavin Jackson, Russ McKinney
Originally Published February 20, 2025

We’re still in a watch, not even a warning, in the 2026 governor’s race.

Traditionally, we expect to see announcements in the spring and summer before the subsequent June 2026 primary.

Nevertheless — while no one has opened a 2026 gubernatorial campaign account yet — there is still money floating out there.

Especially in the direction of Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette.

The Post and Courier’s Caitlin Byrd first reported that “a network of President Donald Trump’s advisers, staff and political consultants are lining up behind South Carolina Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette, launching a new super PAC to boost her prospects as a leading contender if she decides to run for governor next year.”

Patriots for South Carolina PAC has already raised $5 million.

A Trump endorsement will be one the most critical factors in this statewide race in which many Republican contenders occupy a similar policy lane.

Who we’re watching right now:

  • Evette, a self-made millionaire and former president and CEO of Quality Business Solutions in Travelers Rest, was recently spotted sitting in the front row in the East Room when the president signed an executive order banning transgender players on women’s sports teams.
  • 1st District Congresswoman Nancy Mace, a former state lawmaker, who has put her focus over the last year on legislation that targets the transgender community. At that same White House event, Trump acknowledged Mace’s work. In a post on XWednesday, Mace posted the Post and Courier article about the PAC, referring to Evette as a “a nice lady.”
  • Attorney General Alan Wilson, who also became of a focus of Mace’s criticism from a fiery House floor speech — criticisms that Wilson denies — but has kept busy joining other attorneys general in federal-focused lawsuits. Over the past two years, Wilson has also joined Republican efforts to tweak the state’s judicial vetting and election process.

 

by ABC NEWS 4 STAFF. Originally published February 20th 2025

South Carolina Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette will be the featured guest at the upcoming Charleston Business & Brews event in March.

Slated for Thursday, March 13, at New Realm Brewing on Daniel Island, the event, which runs from 5 to 7:30 p.m., is free and open to the public.

Evette, the 93rd lieutenant governor of South Carolina and the state’s first female Republican to hold the position is known for her entrepreneurial spirit. She founded Quality Business Solutions, a payroll, HR, and benefits services firm, which grew into one of the nation’s fastest-growing small businesses under her leadership.

Since taking office in January 2019, Evette has focused on leveraging her professional experience to benefit South Carolina’s businesses and communities. She has been an advocate for the state’s small business ecosystem and has worked to attract new businesses to the area.

The event is organized by Follywood Productions and sponsored by companies including HNTB, Kavalyn Custom Solutions, Apostioli, and Ridge Media. New Realm Brewing is located at 880 Island Park Dr., Charleston, SC 29492.

Facility is less than 10 miles from Shaw Air Force Base

BY: SHAUN CHORNOBROFF – originally posted 1/17/2025 in the South Carolina Daily Gazette 

SUMTER — The sixth veterans’ nursing home in this military-friendly state officially opened Friday less than 10 miles from Shaw Air Force Base.

The $71.5 million, 125,000 square-foot facility offers veterans low-cost care complete with a barbershop and salon, community game rooms and large public and private courtyards.

“This is the crown jewel of our dedication to our community and to our veterans in our community,” House Speaker Murrell Smith, R-Sumter, said at the ceremony. “I look forward to this facility being here for years to come.”

South Carolina is home to more than 68,000 active-duty and reserve military members, 400,000 veterans and eight military bases.

“There is still sort of this rebel spirit in the heart of the South Carolinian. Military folks, that sort of draws us into the profession,” said Sen. Jeff Zell, R-Sumter, who was stationed at Shaw for eight years before retiring with 20 years of service.

“We feel at home here,” said the freshman senator.

Shaw Air Force Base, located outside Sumter city limits, has been training pilots since World War II, opening six years before the Air Force was established as a separate military branch. Last September, Sumter was designated the state’s only World War II Heritage City.

More than 13% of Sumter County’s residents are veterans, according to census data, the highest percentage of South Carolina’s 46 counties.

Yet, Sumter wasn’t initially slated for a veterans’ nursing home.

When the state sought a U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs grant in 2015 for additional nursing homes, the state was looking at opening a second one in Columbia.

Then Smith became chairman of the powerful budget-writing committee in 2019 and started publicly asking why the homes weren’t being located in other cities with military bases. The three existing nursing homes at the time — all at capacity — were located in Columbia, Walterboro and Anderson.

House Speaker Murrell Smith (center) shakes hands with Secretary of Veterans’ Affairs Todd McCaffrey as Lt. Governor Pamela Evette claps at a ribbon cutting ceremony for the state-run Patriot’s Village veterans’ nursing home on Friday, Jan. 17, 2025. (Photo by Shaun Chornobroff/SC Daily Gazette)

“I asked the question, ‘Why not Sumter?’” Smith, who became House speaker in 2022, told the crowd. “Why not put them in the military communities across the state?”

What had been planned for Columbia became Patriot’s Village near Shaw.

Zell said he was impressed by what he saw Friday.

“I didn’t realize the complexities of it,” he told the SC Daily Gazette. “This isn’t just a little building.”

The other two veterans nursing homes that opened ahead of Patriot’s Village are in Gaffney, home to Senate Finance Chairman Harvey Peeler, and Florence, home of his powerful predecessor, the late Sen. Hugh Leatherman.

Future facilities in Orangeburg and Horry counties are set for completion over the next several years, said Robert Hoskins, the deputy director of facilities management for the state’s Department of Veterans Affairs.

Gov. Henry McMaster is asking legislators to put an additional $20.6 million next fiscal year toward running the six veterans nursing homes.

The additional annual commitment would help ensure veterans are “well taken care of,” Lt. Gov. Pam Evette said Friday about the governor’s budget recommendations for 2025-26.

“I can hope you see our passion, not just in today, not just in what we’ve done, but our passion moving forward,” she said.

Veterans’ cost to live at Patriot’s Village is $68 a day, the same price as the locations in Florence and Gaffney. The three other facilities are priced at $45 a day, said Heyward Hilliard, the state’s director of veteran homes.

“It’s a great value,” he said.

All honorably discharged veterans who served full-time are eligible for the homes, Hilliard said.

The Sumter facility can accommodate up to 104 veterans and will have 130 full-time employees. Its amenities include areas for physical, occupational and speech therapies, dining areas, an on-site pharmacy and a pool hall.

Admissions are expected to begin in late February or early March.

However, one resident is already known.

Ernest Martin, an 82-year-old veteran, will be moving from the nursing home in Florence County to Patriot’s Village, so he can return to Sumter.

“Everything looks so modern, so good, so up to date,” Martin said. “It’s outstanding.”

By Aeon Bailey. Originally posted in the Journal Scene 1/22/2025

On Thursday, Jan. 16, in Summerville, Scout Boats hosted an unveiling event for the 670 LXS, which the company’s website describes as “one of the largest outboard-powered sportfishing yachts” in the world. In attendance was South Carolina Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette, who spoke at the unveiling.

“This is such a thrill for me to be here,” Evette said. “As Lieutenant Governor, I talk about our boaters, especially Scout Boats and the bragging rights that they give South Carolina. Sometimes, I don’t believe we see the forest for the trees with the amazing manufacturers we have here in our state, but manufacturers like Scout Boats allow us to send South Carolina’s fingerprints all across the globe.”

Evette has attended business events in the past, including for political causes such as Donald Trump’s rally at Sportsman Boats in 2023, when South Carolina’s Small Business Leaders for Trump Coalition was announced. In a press release from the Trump campaign, Evette is quoted as saying, “No one has done more for America’s small businesses than President Donald J. Trump.” Trump was also mentioned at the Scout Boats unveiling, with one company official jokingly saying to the crowd that while the president-elect could not be there, he’d stated Scout Boats is “making boats great again.”

Evette’s website highlights her business involvement, including her time serving as a member of South Carolina’s Small Business Regulatory Review Committee.

“As Lt. Governor, Evette has used her professional background to serve the people and businesses of South Carolina,” according to the website. “She has dedicated her time to highlighting S.C.’s thriving small business ecosystem and attracting new business to the Palmetto state.”

The event consisted of a meet-and-greet, an unveiling, a tour of the boat and a reception.

By Seanna Adcox — originally posted by the South Carolina Daily Gazette on January 14, 2025

COLUMBIA — Gov. Henry McMaster is asking legislators to increase teachers’ minimum pay to $50,000, keep college tuition steady, and allow people to buy state lottery tickets with a debit card.

Those are among the recommendations in his $13 billion budget package released Monday, a day ahead of the Legislature’s return to the Statehouse.

A $50,000 salary floor for first-year teachers in 2025 would reach his goal a year ahead of schedule and represent a 66% increase in starting pay since 2017, when he became governor.

The additional $200 million his proposal distributes to K-12 schools would increase minimum pay by $3,000 across the so-called salary schedule, which pays teachers according to their years of experience and level of college degree. And, unlike last year, he is not seeking to change when pay rises — an idea that brought a backlash from veteran teachers with advanced degrees.

The Republican governor also made clear that legislators need to keep increasing pay beyond the accomplished goal.

“I emphasize again we should not stop there,” McMaster told reporters about the $50,000 recommendation. “We must have educated young people.”

The latest report on teacher vacancies, released in November, showed the first break in ever-increasing shortages since 2019. Pay increases that have climbed above the Southeastern average could help explain the reduction.

Comparing South Carolina to its next-door neighbors, the state-paid minimum for first-year teachers in Georgia this school year is just shy of $43,600, and in North Carolina, it’s $41,000. That’s $6,000 less than in South Carolina. However, as in South Carolina, school districts in surrounding states often use local taxes to pay more than state minimums.

This school year’s state-paid average is $57,250. But with local supplements, 16 of South Carolina’s 72 school districts already start teachers at or above $50,000.

Those districts wouldn’t be required to boost salaries more. The increased fiscal autonomy legislators gave them several years ago allows them to use their state aid however they want, as long as they pay teachers the state minimums.

McMaster’s proposal also puts $29.4 million toward hiring 177 additional school resource officers, which would fulfill his push to have an armed officer at every public K-12 school. When he set the goal in 2018, following a mass shooting at a high school in Florida, 406 schools had an officer. That number’s grown to 1,106 this year.

His budget also funds a third year of $20 million grants for school safety improvements. Last year’s awards included $2 million to lock up student’ cellphones during the day.

Colleges

As for higher education, McMaster seeks to freeze college tuition for in-state students for a sixth consecutive year.

However, the $29 million his plan distributes in exchange for that promise is less than a quarter of what colleges say they need to keep tuition steady. Arguing there’s no rationale to colleges’ requests, the governor’s budget creates a “tuition mitigation” calculation that involves tuition, inflation, and the number of in-state, undergraduate students.

He recommends putting $100 million toward the University of South Carolina’s efforts to build a highly specialized hospital for strokes, dementia and other diseases affecting the brain and nervous system.

That’s $50 million less than USC is requesting in state aid for the estimated $350 million project in downtown Columbia’s BullStreet District.

Lottery sales

Beyond using lottery profits to fund merit-based college scholarships, McMaster wants to continue spending $100 million on need-based financial aidand $95 million on scholarships at technical colleges that prepare students for high-demand jobs.

But keeping that tuition aid flowing from lottery sales, he said, will require ditching the cash-only rule for buying tickets.

Lottery profits are expected to bring in $64.5 million less this fiscal year compared to last. And they’re projected to continue falling by $35.5 million next fiscal year, according to the state Board of Economic Advisors’ November forecast.

But enabling people to buy lottery tickets with debit cards could turn that around. According to the Lottery Commission, that would generate an additional $52 million.

According to the governor, South Carolina is one of only three states that require cash-only lottery sales, with Tennessee and Wyoming being the other two.

McMaster, who as state GOP chairman campaigned against the lottery ahead of the 2000 referendum, said he remains opposed to gambling.

Asked why he now supports making it easier for people to play, he said, “there are a lot of young people who got an education” from lottery-funded scholarships who couldn’t otherwise afford it, and the state shouldn’t abandon that.

Fewer people are buying lottery tickets partly because of the cash-only rule. Not only do fewer people carry cash, but a lot of stores no longer even allow cash payments, he said.

Allowing debit purchases would keep up with the times without allowing people to go into debt to play the lottery, he said. He’s against allowing credit card purchases, since that can run up a debt, but likened using a debit card to spending only what’s in your pocket.

“If we don’t allow changes of that program, the chances of being able to do what we’re supposed to are slim,” McMaster told reporters.

Tax cuts

As for how to further cut income taxes, he’s leaving that to legislators.

McMaster’s budget gives no specific recommendations beyond completing the tax cuts provided in a 2022 law, which is on track to be fully phased in next year.

Cuts should continue “as much as we can, and as fast as we can,” he said.

But he made no suggestion on the numbers. House Republicans have made “historic income tax cuts” a top priority. Senate Majority Leader Shane Massey has said the Legislature should go beyond cutting income taxes to overhaul the tax code. There is no plan yet.

The governor’s budget proposal is just that — a proposal, which legislators can use as a guide or ignore. They generally do some of both.

However, McMaster’s had better success than his predecessors with his budget recommendations, largely because he meets with legislative leaders ahead of releasing his plan and works with them through the process — rather than publicly criticizing them. The gist of many of his recommendations make it to the final budget package, though the details or dollar amount are often different.

Employees’ health care

McMaster’s budget plan again provides pay raises for state law enforcement but includes no across-the-board cost-of-living raise for other state employees.

However, it would fully fund increases in state employees and teachers’ health care premiums, representing the 13th consecutive year they would pay nothing more out of pocket for their health care expenses.

Covering that increase will cost more than $112 million next fiscal year, bringing the total rise in employees’ premiums over four years to almost $450 million.

“Long-term, it is simply unsustainable for the state health plan to require over $100 million additional dollars annually,” the budget reads.

So, he’s calling for a cost study, saying health insurers contracted by the agency that oversees employee benefits need to propose cost savings to slow the rate of growth.

The State Health Plan provides health insurance for more than 540,000 public employees, their spouses and dependents. They include employees of K-12 school districts, colleges, state agencies and retired government workers.

The budget plan includes an additional $55.4 million in state taxes just to maintain health services for South Carolinians covered by Medicaid, the government-paid health plan for the poor and disabled.

Asked about the potential of supporting an expansion of Medicaid eligibility to more poor adults, the reply from his office was quick: No.

Photo Info + Credit: S.C. Gov. Henry McMaster and Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette during the governor’s state budget press conference in Columbia, S.C. on Monday, Jan. 13, 2025. (Travis Bell/STATEHOUSE CAROLINA/Special to the SC Daily Gazette)

Lieutenant Governor Pamela Evette brings her supporters, friends, and the people of South Carolina her 4th Quarter e-mail update. As our state continues to recover following Hurricane Helene and we look forward to having President Trump back in the White House, here are a few highlights on election night, honors / recognition, podcasts, and #TeamSC working together towards recovery +  S.C. business features (large & small), S.C. non-profits who are making a difference, and a few personal updates.

Below is December 2024’s opening message from Lt. Gov. Evette.

A Message from Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette

As we celebrate this holiday season and approach the end of 2024, our state and nation have so much to be thankful for. As Lt. Governor, I was incredibly proud of how Team SC and all South Carolinians came together in the aftermath of hurricane Helene — helping one another and our neighbors to the north in Western North Carolina.

I am also grateful that Americans across the nation came out and voted in November for a return to common sense and for strong family values. Thank you to all of you for helping to get our nation back on the right track starting with the election of President Trump.

I wish all of you, your families, and your loved ones a wonderful holiday season. Merry Christmas and many blessings in the New Year!

Lt. Governor Pamela S. Evette