翻訳と辞書 ・ South Carolina Wing Civil Air Patrol ・ South Carolina World War II Army Airfields ・ South Carolina's 1st congressional district ・ South Carolina's 1st congressional district special election, 1825 ・ South Carolina's 1st congressional district special election, 1971 ・ South Carolina's 1st congressional district special election, 2013 ・ South Carolina's 2nd congressional district ・ South Carolina's 2nd congressional district special election, 1795 ・ South Carolina's 2nd congressional district special election, 1822 ・ South Carolina's 2nd congressional district special election, 2001 ・ South Carolina's 3rd congressional district ・ South Carolina's 4th congressional district ・ South Carolina's 4th congressional district special election, 1802 ・ South Carolina's 4th congressional district special election, 1915 ・ South Carolina's 4th congressional district special election, 1953 ・ South Carolina's 5th congressional district ・ South Carolina's 5th congressional district special election, 1794 ・ South Carolina's 6th congressional district ・ South Carolina's 6th congressional district special election, 1807 ・ South Carolina's 6th congressional district special election, 1818 ・ South Carolina's 6th congressional district special election, 1919 ・ South Carolina's 7th congressional district ・ South Carolina's 7th congressional district special election, 1901 ・ South Carolina's 7th congressional district special election, 1919 ・ South Carolina's 8th congressional district ・ South Carolina's 9th congressional district ・ South Carolina's 9th congressional district special election, 1821 ・ South Carolina's 9th congressional district special election, 1822 ・ South Carolina's at-large congressional seat ・ South Carolina's congressional districts
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South Carolina's 5th congressional district : ウィキペディア英語版 | South Carolina's 5th congressional district
The 5th Congressional District of South Carolina is a congressional district in northern South Carolina bordering North Carolina. From 2003 to 2013 it included all of Cherokee, Chester, Chesterfield, Darlington, Dillon, Fairfield, Kershaw, Lancaster, Marlboro, Newberry and York counties and parts of Florence, Lee and Sumter counties. Outside the rapidly growing city of Rock Hill, the district is mostly rural and agricultural. The district borders were contracted from some of the easternmost counties in the 2012 redistricting. The district's character is very similar to other mostly rural districts in the South. Democrats still hold most offices outside Republican-dominated York County. However, few of the area's Democrats can be described as liberal by national standards; most are fairly conservative on social issues, but less so on economics. The largest blocs of Republican voters are in the fast-growing suburbs of Charlotte, North Carolina and Cherokee County, which shares the Republican tilt of most of the rest of the Upstate. In November 2010, the Republican Mick Mulvaney defeated longtime Congressman John Spratt and became the first Republican since Robert Smalls and the end of Reconstruction to represent the district. ==List of representatives==
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