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Charleston, S.C., elects its first Republican mayor since Reconstruction

Pedestrians walk by City Hall and St. Michael's Episcopal Church in Charleston, S.C.
Charleston last elected a Republican mayor in the 1870s, according to historical records.
(Bruce Smith / Associated Press)
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The historic South Carolina city of Charleston has elected its first Republican mayor since the Reconstruction Era.

William Cogswell, a former GOP state lawmaker, defeated incumbent Democratic Mayor John Tecklenburg by about 2 percentage points in Tuesday’s runoff, according to the South Carolina Election Commission. Results posted online by the commission on Wednesday showed 566 votes separating the two candidates, out of 30,251 ballots cast.

Cogswell, 48, had secured the most votes in the Nov. 7 general election but not a majority, sending him and Tecklenburg to Tuesday’s runoff.

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Charleston’s municipal elections are technically nonpartisan. But Tecklenburg is a well-known figure in the state’s Democratic politics who endorsed Joe Biden in South Carolina’s pivotal 2020 presidential primary.

Cogswell, who served three terms as a Republican in the state House and describes himself as a moderate, earned endorsements from others within South Carolina’s GOP political circles, including U.S. Sen. Tim Scott.

The world’s first successful submarine attack occurred in Charleston Harbor, Feb. 17, 1864, when sailors aboard the 25-foot-long Confederate sub, the H.

Aug. 20, 1989

Charleston last elected a Republican mayor in the 1870s, according to historical records from the city and other municipal areas.

Republicans including state GOP Chairman Drew McKissick and U.S. Rep. Russell Fry, who served in the state House with Cogswell, celebrated the GOP win in social media posts and statements.

“We can confidently say that I’m going to be the next mayor,” Cogswell said Tuesday night as results came in. “The people have spoken, and we’re ready for a new
direction ... that puts labels aside, so that we can find pragmatic solutions to our problems.”

In a concession speech Tuesday night, Tecklenburg called his eight years as mayor “the honor of [his] life,” and asked his supporters to rally around his successor.

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“I’d like to congratulate our new Mayor-elect William Cogswell ... and I’d like to ask each and every Charlestonian, everybody out there, to give him your support,” Tecklenburg said. “When Mayor Cogswell succeeds, Charleston succeeds, and that’s something we’re all in favor of.”

With Cogswell’s election, Charleston becomes the second reliably blue area in South Carolina — where Republicans dominate congressional and statewide politics — to choose a Republican mayor in recent years.

In 2021, Daniel Rickenmann, a longtime City Council member in South Carolina’s capital city of Columbia, was elected its mayor after winning GOP backing.

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