Former South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford will face a runoff in the Republican race as Elizabeth Colbert Busch, sister of Stephen Colbert, has won the Democratic primary for an open congressional seat in South Carolina. State Sen. Larry Grooms and former Charleston County Councilman Curtis Bostic are in a tight race for the second spot in the April 2 runoff.
As South Carolina voters selected their nominees on Tuesday in the state’s 1st District special election, Mark Sanford spent Tuesday awaiting to find out if he would be chosen as the Republican nominee for a congressional seat left vacant by Tim Scott. The Palmetto State’s dramatic race had 18 total candidates vying in the South Carolina primary, including Elizabeth Colbert Busch and Ted Turner’s son.
While Elizabeth Colbert Busch easily won the Democratic vote Tuesday night, Sanford led the field against 15 other Republicans for the party nomination but could face a run-off April 2 if he fails to win more than 50% of the ballots. It was expected he would not receive more than 50% needed to ensure his name on the final ballot in the May 7 general election.
Indeed, while Colbert Busch drew attention for her relationship to the faux-rightwing-TV-blowhard, the more interesting race to watch has been the Republican primary for the first congressional district: would the former South Carolina governor–who finished his second term in 2011 after an extramarital affair and then attempted to cover it up by saying he was hiking the Appalachian Trail–be able to return to politics?
Tuesday evening’s results advances Sanford to a runoff election on April 2. Early results show it remains unclear who Sanford will face in the GOP runoff, and the bigger question is whether voters and Republican backers believe Sanford to be the strongest contender against Elizabeth Colbert Busch.








