Randal Wallace

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Randal Wallace

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Education

High school

Myrtle Beach High School

Bachelor's

Lander University

Personal
Religion
Christian: Lutheran
Profession
Real estate, Member of the Myrtle Beach City Council
Contact

Randal Wallace was a 2012 Republican candidate who sought election to the U.S. House to represent the 7th Congressional District of South Carolina.[1]

Randal Wallace for House campaign logo.

Biography

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A long-time South Carolina Republican activist, Wallace graduated from Lander in 1996. In the nine years preceding the election, he worked in real estate at Waccamaw Land and Timber. In 2001, Wallace was elected to the Myrtle Beach City Council. Prior to his election, he served on the Myrtle Beach Zoning Board of Adjustments.[2]

Elections

2012

See also: South Carolina's 7th Congressional District elections, 2012

Wallace ran in the 2012 election for the U.S. House to represent South Carolina's 7th District. Wallace ran against Dick Withington, James Mader, Chad Prosser, Katherine Jenerette, and Renee Culler in the Republican primary on June 12. He was defeated by Tom Rice (SC) and Andre Bauer. The runoff election was June 26th. The general election was November 6, 2012.[3]

Effect of redistricting

See also: Redistricting in South Carolina

The 7th District was added following the results of the 2010 census. According to the Washington Post, despite Republican-controlled redistricting decisions, this district is a battleground for Democrats and Republicans seeking control of the U.S. House. With Republican front-runner Thad Viers deciding not to run and Democrat Ted Vick showing some appeal to conservatives, South Carolina's 7th was a swing district.[4]

Polls

Florence Forum

On May 14, 2012, the candidates of the 7th Congressional District attended a forum that was followed by a post-debate poll. Then, Jay Jordan won the poll with 49 percent of the votes. Former Lt. Governor Andre Bauer followed with 23 percent, and Chad Prosser came in third with 11 percent. Tom Rice garnered nine percent of the votes, and Randal Wallace ended the night with three percent.[5]

Campaign finance summary

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Recent news

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External links

Footnotes


Senators
Representatives
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Democratic Party (1)