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May 28 edition

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MAY 28–JUNE 3, 2026

WWW.YOURISLANDNEWS.COM

COVERING BEAUFORT COUNTY

Primary candidates weigh in on crime, growth, transparency

Doug Seifert, Republican candidate for Beaufort County Sheriff candidate, greets visitors Friday, May 22, 2026, at Lowcountry Produce on St. Helena Island while campaigning ahead of the upcoming June 9 primary election June 9, 2026. Photo by Asa Aarons Smith/The Island News

By Delayna Earley The Island News Ahead of the June 9 primary election, The Island News sent detailed candidate questionnaires to those running in several contested local and state races impacting Beaufort County voters. Questionnaires were sent to candidates in the Beaufort County Sheriff Republican primary, Beaufort County Council District 4 and District 5 Republican primaries, and the South Carolina House District 121 Democratic primary. Each questionnaire included a general

candidate information section, along with 10 issue-focused questions tailored specifically to the office being sought. Questions focused on topics currently impacting Beaufort County and the Lowcountry, including public safety, gang activity, growth and infrastructure, affordable housing, transparency in government, Pine Island and the Cultural Protection Overlay, property insurance costs, education, environmental concerns and the relationship between local and state government.

Candidates were also invited to submit guest opinion columns as part of the publication’s election coverage. All candidates contacted by The Island News participated in the questionnaire process and submitted responses. Due to print space limitations, only portions of candidate responses appear in print. To read each candidate’s responses in their entirety, visit the online version of this story at yourislandnews.com.

SEE PRIMARY PAGE A4

LOWCOUNTRY LOWDOWN

LOLITA HUCKABY

Redistricting, ‘Pinky-gate’ rumors occupy state, county conversations

Beaufort’s Kelly Glanzmann and 3-year-old Charlotte place flags at gravesites during in honor of Memorial Day during Flags In at Beaufort National Cemetery on Friday, May 22, 2026. Amber Hewitt/The Island News

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BEAUFORT ith the June 9 primaries rapidly approaching, the focus on political candidates builds just like the summer heat. But the future of those primary elections, especially for the state’s seven U.S. Congressional seats, seems unclear. For the past week, members of the South Carolina legislature have been conferring in Columbia working on a redistricting plan that may erase the blue hue of the state’s only Democratic district and African American Congressman, Rep. Jim Clyburn. You might remember the state legislative session officially ended May 14, but Gov. Henry McMaster, reportedly at the urging of the President, called the 170 elected officials, and their staff, back to work on a new district plan which would diminish Clyburn’s chances for re-election to an 18th term representing the Sixth Congressional District. The House, with the support of Beaufort County’s five Republican members followed party lines and quickly adopted a plan. The county’s only Democratic representative, Michael Rivers of District 121, likewise followed party lines and voted with the minority against the plan.

SEE LOWDOWN PAGE A6

Honoring their sacrifice Beaufort community comes together over Memorial Day weekend to pay respects to America’s heroes

Staff reports Beaufort residents and visitors alike turned out Monday, May 25, 2026, to honor those who made the ultimate sacrifice for their country on Memorial Day.

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At the annual Flags In event, beThe Memorial Day weekend, which culminated Monday with ginning at 6 p.m., on Friday, May the annual parade the ceremony 22 at the main flagpole in Beauthat follows at the Beaufort Na- fort National Cemetery, gravesite tional Cemetery, got underway SEE HEROES PAGE A6 on Friday.

Delaying the inevitable?

t is Saturday and this morning I have my coffee, my laptop, and a front-row seat on the on-going redistricting debate in the South Carolina Senate. It started on Tuesday, May 19, 2026. On Tuesday I watched these inSCOTT GRABER ternet-broadcasted proceedings — first in the S.C. House of Representatives — with Lolita Huckaby. linoleum-tiled, 50s-era kitchen. Lolita came of age in Rowland, We sat on bar stools in my small,

N.C., within sight and shadow of the huge sombrero at South of the Border. She grew up in the segregated South that came with Black servants. I was an “Army brat” but I spent every summer with my maternal grandparents who lived 30 miles south of Rowland, N.C., in Florence, S.C. They, too, had house servants. I did not know Lolita in those early, innocent days but I do know

her childhood included what we both believed was a warm and loving relationship with the Black ladies who made our beds, ironed the sheets and boiled our early morning grits. But then, of course, came the discovery that these women lived different lives. In my case that happened when I went (with my grandmother) to the ramshackle

SEE GRABER PAGE A10

NEWS

EDUCATION

SPORTS

INSIDE

Port Royal looks to revive MCIP funding for port redevelopment

Ground broken on new Lady’s Island Middle School, Beaufort High career building.

USCB golfer Octavio Laurent 1st Sand Shark to win national championship.

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Lowcountry Life A2 News A2–7 Voices A8–11 Education B1–2 Health B3 Arts B4

Sports Military Directory Classifieds Games Cartoon

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May 28 edition by The Island News - Issuu