SC Congressman Ralph Norman enters race for governor. Here are 5 things to know
He joins Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette, state Sen. Josh Kimbrell, and Attorney General Alan Wilson already in the race for the Republican nomination for governor to succeed Gov. Henry McMaster, who can't run in 2026.
Norman is expected to make a formal announcement Sunday at a kickoff event in Rock Hill.
Because South Carolina is a reliably red state, winning the GOP nomination is key to anyone running for a statewide office.
Who is Ralph Norman?
Norman was elected to six terms in the State House before being elected to Congress. He's represented South Carolina's 5th Congressional District since 2017 after winning a special election. The district includes Cherokee, Chester, Fairfield, Kershaw, Lancaster, Lee, Spartanburg, Sumter, Union and York counties
He is a member of the U.S. House's Freedom Caucus and was a supporter of the creation of the South Carolina House Freedom Caucus.
Before being elected to Congress, Norman was a real estate developer.
Why it makes sense for Norman to run?
Norman has been in Congress for eight years. He's also 72 years old and whoever wins the GOP nomination is likely to hold onto the governor's mansion for eight years. If he doesn't run now, the next real opportunity may only be when he's in his eighties, making a bid less likely to succeed.
He brings business experience to the race and has established himself as conservative on spending issues.
'A family man who is probably ready to work a bit closer to home, Ralph has run a business, served in the Statehouse and U.S. House, and has distinguished himself, in working with the Freedom Caucus in Washington, as an outspoken fiscal hawk who understands conservative issues and governance,' said Rob Godfrey, a longtime South Carolina Republican strategist who is not working for any campaign this cycle. 'The governorship could afford Ralph a chance to employ skills he's learned throughout his career.'
He may have a lane being in the Freedom Caucus and presumably having the backing of the hard-line conservative South Carolina Freedom Caucus.
'Ralph has proven that he has his values, he has his beliefs, but he's not an obstructionist for the Republican Party, just to be an obstructionist like a (U.S. Rep.) Thomas Massie,' said Alex Stroman, a former SC GOP executive director not working for any campaign this cycle. 'If you look at Ralph on the speaker vote, if you look at Ralph on the 'Big Beautiful Bill,' Ralph tends to kind of hold out and have his position to make sure his positions are heard. But I think Ralph is, at least from my viewpoint, in the caucus they know ... he's coming at it from a place of principle, and at the end of the day, Ralph is trying to get the yes and trying to be a team player.'
Is Norman aligned with President Donald Trump?
Norman backed former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley's bid for president during the 2024 campaign, sticking with her until she dropped out. He eventually backed Trump's bid when he was the last Republican left in the race.
Norman also initially wouldn't vote for U.S. Rep. Mike Johnson to be House speaker, holding up that election until he got onto a phone call with Trump, which had been facilitated by U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace.
The 5th District congressman also was a holdout on the Trump-pushed tax cut and spending bill known as the 'One Big Beautiful Bill' before a final vote on July 3.
Norman said he voted for the bill after receiving assurances from Trump over how green initiative tax credits would be handled by his administration, he said.
'We got clarification of what's going to be enforced,' Norman told reporters July 3 according to The Hill. 'We got clarification on how the IRAs are going to be dealt with. We got clarification on the tax cuts.
What advantages does Norman have?
Norman has deep pockets and his wealth could help finance a statewide run. According to federal financial disclosures, Norman has at least $27 million in land and cash assets an investments, according to his 2023 financial disclosure form filed in August of last year.
'Ralph is personally wealthy, if he's willing to dive into those coffers,' Stroman said.
Being in Washington also gives Norman access to donors across the country.
'He has dealt with the pressure of raising money. He has worked with stakeholders across local, state and federal government for years. And he knows the budget process — through the lenses of a business owner and a federal and state policy maker — and that's not experience that can be under sold these days,' Godfrey said.
His style may be useful when campaigning around the state.
'Ralph is also someone who's really engaging, really well-spoken, (and) folksy. He can go into different areas of the state, I think connect with voters. And so I think that Ralph is somebody that even when you may disagree with some of his opinions, he's really hard to not like,' Stroman said.
What challenges does Norman face?
Norman hasn't always been on the Trump train, which could hurt him in a state where the president is popular among the GOP voting base. He also has supported the State House Freedom Caucus, a group of hard-line conservative lawmakers. That could hurt Norman among establishment Republicans.
Voters may see him as standing in the way of the president's goals.
'He came around on both of those at the end of the day, but I think that could be a challenge, just because people might see him as being not fully on board the president's agenda,' Stroman said about Norman's votes on the House speaker and tax cut and spending bill.
His steadfast backing of Haley in 2024 could come back to hurt him.
'I think that points to kind of his standing on loyalty. I think he liked Nikki, that they were close, and that when other people, maybe in the state or even nationally, decided to go with (Trump) and take the easy route, Ralph went full (throttle) for Nikki Haley, for a friend. He stood by a friend,' Stroman said.
He may not be well known around South Carolina.
A Winthrop University poll found Norman was only familiar among 35% of Republican voters. Norman will have to raise his name ID.
'He's represented a Statehouse district and a congressional district, but he's never served in statewide office, so he has to go to parts of the state where he hasn't lived, where he hasn't known the voters quite as well - and he has to introduce himself,' Godfrey said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


San Francisco Chronicle
14 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Trump wields influence over GOP and keeps potential successors vying for his favor
WASHINGTON (AP) — Although President Donald Trump has not directly said he thinks JD Vance should be the heir to his 'Make America Great Again' base of support, he acknowledged this week that his vice president is probably the favorite to succeed him "at this point." But even as he promoted Vance, Trump also made sure to mention Secretary of State Marco Rubio, telling reporters at the White House on Tuesday that his administration's top diplomat is 'somebody that maybe would get together with JD in some form' on a future political ticket. The remarks reflect the massive influence the Republican president currently has over his party. They also serve to promote two of Trump's top advisers without telegraphing the president's singular preference for a successor. Not definitively anointing Vance, or any other Republican, keeps those hoping to succeed Trump vying for his favor, both inside his administration and in the wider Republican field of possible contenders. Speaking with reporters following an executive order signing at the White House, Trump was asked if Vance were the 'heir apparent to MAGA.' 'I think most likely, in all fairness, he's the vice president," Trump said. "I think Marco is also somebody that maybe would get together with JD in some form. ... It's too early obviously, to talk about it, but certainly he's doing a great job and he would be, probably favorite at this point.' When Trump selected the then-39-year-old Vance over other more established Republicans — including Rubio — as his running mate last year, many theorized that Trump was planning for the future of his political movement, angling for a vice president who could carry MAGA forward. Vance has embraced the role at every turn, doing the president's bidding on everything from his relationship with Ukraine to the fight over records related to the Jeffrey Epstein sex trafficking scandal. Trump, meanwhile, has not hesitated to give Vance high-visibility assignments. As the White House promotes mid-decade redistricting efforts in Texas — and acknowledges it would like the notion to expand to other states — Vance is expected Thursday to discuss redrawing district lines with Gov. Mike Braun during a trip to Indiana. While there, Vance will also headline a fundraiser for the Republican National Committee, which he serves as treasurer. In June he traveled to Los Angeles trip to tour a multiagency Federal Joint Operations Center and a mobile command center amid clashes between protesters and police and outbreaks of vandalism and looting following immigration raids across Southern California. And earlier this year, Vance was in swing congressional districts in his role as lead cheerleader for Trump's signature tax cut and spending law, an assortment of conservative priorities that Republicans dubbed the 'One Big, Beautiful Bill.' He also lobbied senators on Capitol Hill, working to swing GOP holdouts to support the legislation, and in July cast a tie-breaking vote to get the measure passed in the Senate. He's also taken on a robust role related to foreign policy, holding meetings of his own with world leaders, including Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi during a trip to New Delhi, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House. Rubio, who has described Vance as among his closest friends in politics, said on Fox News Channel on Sunday that he felt Vance "would be a great nominee if he decides he wants to do that.' Other Republicans mentioned as possible 2028 contenders are already making the rounds of early-voting states. Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin speaks at a GOP fundraiser in South Carolina this weekend, and Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders headlines an event in that state later this month. Both have taken pains to stay in the president's good graces. Not every Republican contender has gone that route. Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, who lost the 2016 nomination to Trump, has been visiting early-voting states, too, but he voted against the president's signature legislative measure. And Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp — who has long harbored ambitions to run for president but has a complicated history with Trump — recently said he was sitting out of a Senate race in his state, a decision telegraphed by some as an indication Kemp might be eyeing the 2028 White House race.


New York Post
14 minutes ago
- New York Post
Mayor Eric Adams once again denied public funds for NYC re-election bid while Mamdani, Sliwa granted millions
4 Mayor Eric Adams was once again denied matching funds in his re-election bid. Lev Radin/Shutterstock Mayor Eric Adams' re-election bid was denied matching funds once again — this time losing out on $3 million as the city's campaign finance watchdog accused his camp of obstruction. The City Campaign Finance Board hinted the mayor, who is running as an independent in the November election, may never see a dime as it believes his first campaign for City Hall in 2021 may have violated the law. 'The board determined Mayor Adams campaign has failed to demonstrate eligibility for public funds payments at this time, on two grounds. One, failure to provide requested information and two, reason to believe the campaign has violated the law with respect to the failure to provide requested information,' said Board Chair Frank Schaffer. 4 James Keivom 'The board finds the campaign has provided incomplete and misleading information to the CFB, and has impeded the CFB staff's ability to complete its investigation,' Schaffer said of the regulatory body's ongoing probe into alleged misconduct during Adams' 2021 campaign. The board has repeatedly refused to allow Adams' re-election bid to cash in on the city's generous 8-to-1 matching funds program, starting in December, when it first cut the mayor off from the program. It has cited both Adams' since-dismissed federal indictment on bribery and corruption charges, and his team's refusal to answer a number of outstanding demands for documentation about fundraising. The campaign has maintained that it is up to date with the board's requests. It expected the spigot of taxpayer cash to be turned on after securing a win in court last month, when a judge ruled Adams could not be denied funds based on the past criminal case. 4 Democratic candidate Zohran Mamdani brought in an additional $1.6 million, bringing his general election total to over $2.5 million. REUTERS 'We are reviewing all legal options, including formal action to compel the release of public matching funds,' said campaign spokesperson Todd Shapiro. 'We will not allow a vague and bureaucratic process to undermine the democratic right of our supporters to participate in this election.' The denial delivers another blow to Adams, who is struggling to recover from poor approval numbers and the political fallout from his case dismissal. His re-elect bid pulled in a massive $1.5 million haul after socialist Zohran Mamdani's upset win in the June Democratic primary, bringing Adams' total fundraising to over $6 million in private donations. Hizzoner is within $2 million of the $8 million fundraising threshold, and the CFB estimates he has about $4.27 million left to spend as of July. At the same time, the board approved $1.68 million in matching funds for Mamdani and signed off on $1.91 million for GOP nominee Curtis Sliwa. 4 GOP nominee Curtis Sliwa brought in $1.9 million. Stephen Yang Mamdani maxed out his fundraising in the primary, bringing in over $7 million. The latest campaign boost brings his cash on hand to over $5 million, while Sliwa has over $2 million to spend with the new matching funds. Former Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who is running as an independent after his embarrassing defeat to Mamdani in the Dem primary, did not fundraise during the last period, according to his campaign. As of July 15, he had $1.17 million to spend of his cash from the primary race. Independent Jim Walden was also granted $237,000 in taxpayer money for the general election, bringing his account balance to around $1.6 million.


The Hill
14 minutes ago
- The Hill
Miss United States accuses GOP Rep. Cory Mills of threatening to release explicit videos of her
A Florida Republican official and beauty pageant title-holder has accused Rep. Cory Mills (R-Fla.) of threatening to release explicit videos of her after their romantic relationship ended earlier this year, according to a police incident report. Lindsey Langston, who was crowned Miss United States 2024 and was elected as a Republican state committeewoman last year, made the allegations in an interview with the Columbia County, Fla., Sheriff's Office on July 14. Mills told The Hill in a statement that the claims 'are false and misrepresent the nature of my interactions.' He has not been charged with a crime. According to the police incident report, Langston, 25, began a romantic relationship with Mills, 45, in November 2021 and moved into his house in Florida after he told her his divorce was finalized in May 2024. In February 2025, Langston ended the relationship after she saw news reports that police were investigating a physical altercation between Mills and another woman in his Washington, D.C. residence. Both Mills and the alleged victim later denied that a physical altercation took place. 'Lindsey confronted Cory about the woman, to which Cory told her he was not in a romantic relationship with her and the press fabricated the story,' the police incident report said. 'Lindsey then found a social media account for the other woman and saw posted photos of her with Cory.' After the break-up, 'Cory has contacted Lindsey numerous times on numerous different accounts threatening to release nude images and videos of her, to include recorded videos of her and Cory engaging in sexual acts,' the incident report said. Mills also sent messages threatening to harm men that Langston dated in the future, she told police. The last message Mills sent Langston — who was crowned Miss United States on Oct. 8, 2024 — before the report on June 12 was: 'I hope you hold your crown until the end.' The allegations and incident report were first reported by Drop Site News and Blaze News. Columbia County Sheriff's Office spokesperson Steven Khachigan told The Hill that the report was forwarded to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement for further review. The FDLE did not immediately return The Hill's request for comment. Before speaking to police, Langston consulted Anthony Sabatini, a former Florida state representative who ran in the Republican primary against Mills for his congressional seat in 2022, for legal advice, Sabatini told The Hill. In a statement to The Hill, Mills took aim at Sabatini. 'Anthony Sabatini is weaponizing the legal system to launch a political attack against the man who beat him in the primary, using his corporate legal office to push a narrative built on lies and flawed legal arguments – all to score political headlines,' Mills said. 'We have not been made aware of any report or allegations from law enforcement or the alleged complainant,' Mills continued. 'These claims are false and misrepresent the nature of my interactions. I have always conducted myself with integrity, both personally and in service to Florida's 7th District. 'Out of respect for the legal process, I won't comment further at this time. My team and I will fully cooperate to ensure the truth is made clear. I remain focused on serving my constituents and advancing America First policies. I appreciate your understanding as we deal with this private matter and your support during time,' Mills said. Sabatini in response pointed to screenshots of messages allegedly sent by Mills to Langston, which have been posted on social media. 'Get me his number and I can send him videos. Take care,' Mills allegedly said in one message. 'Let him put his actions behind his mouth. I can send him a few videos of you as well. Oh, I still have them,' Mills allegedly said in other messages. Sabatini told The Hill that a restraining order for Langston against Mills is pending.