COLUMBIA, S.C. — Just like the 12 other elections this century, it was a good night for Republicans in South Carolina.
The GOP continues to gain seats almost 25 years after taking control of nearly the entire state government. On Tuesday, they did not lose a single incumbent and likely added four Senate seats to have a 34-12 advantage in the chamber. Democrats had a 14-seat lead back in 1992.
It's the first time Republicans will have a two-thirds supermajority in the Senate, which assures they can end filibusters with ease. In the House, Republicans held firm with 87 seats in a 124-member chamber with two vacancies. The combination means Republicans can put constitutional amendment on ballots without a single Democratic vote.
The Associated Press has not declared a winner in two of the seats Republicans said they flipped because they have margins under the 1% of the vote that triggers a mandatory recount, including one race with a 32-vote margin in unofficial totals and provisional ballots left to argue over and count. But with modern voting machines, recounts almost never change a result in South Carolina.
''South Carolina sent us 34 Republican senators. We owe it to them to use them,'' Republican Senate Majority Leader Shane Massey said Wednesday.
Exactly what that means will have to wait until he gathers the 34 members for a caucus meeting later this month, Massey said. More loosening of gun laws is a long-desired conservative goal, and for some another is a total ban on abortion instead of the state's current law making abortions illegal after cardiac activity is detected about six weeks into a pregnancy.
''Life is a personal issue. Like many things, I'm going to have to find out where my new members are,'' Massey said.
And there are a lot of them. In an institution where senators often stay for decades, there will be 13 new members in 2025. Nine of them are Republicans.