The Greenville News

Democratic Party chair Harvey files to run for Congress

- Samantha Swann

Spartanbur­g County Democratic Party Chair Kathryn Harvey has filed for the U.S. House of Representa­tives District 4 seat.

Harvey said her announceme­nt is built on the work she and the local party have done for the last two years.

"We've been building infrastruc­ture with our local party. It feels like there's enough of a support system to fight for this and also be able to carry forward what we've been building," Harvey told the Herald-Journal on Monday. "There's so many good people in the mix, really working to bridge campaigns this year. And personally, I am not happy with my representa­tion. I think it's time for a qualified woman to run for office, that people in the state deserve better, and they deserve a choice on the ballot."

Harvey is a communicat­ions consultant and owner of Neue South Collective, which works primarily with Spartanbur­g nonprofits. She led the countywide U.S. Census effort in 2020 and was elected as chairwoman of the Spartanbur­g County Democratic Party in 2022.

While this is Harvey's first time as a candidate, she has provided communicat­ions services for local campaigns, including Spartanbur­g City Councilwom­an Meghan Smith and several Democratic statehouse candidates.

“We're building a congressio­nal campaign team. Wonderfull­y, in each of our races in Spartanbur­g County, the Democratic candidates are building out their campaign teams,” Harvey said. “We left our convention a month ago really unified. There's more infrastruc­ture and talent in place to help lead campaigns and there's more quality candidates running in the Upstate of South Carolina than we have ever had.”

As of March 25, Harvey is one of four candidates for District 4 and the only Democrat. Republican Adam Morgan and Constituti­on Party candidates Michael Chandler and Mark Hackett also have filed.

Rep. William Timmons, the Republican incumbent, has not yet filed to continue representi­ng the district that covers parts of Greenville and Spartanbur­g counties. April 1 is the filing deadline.

Harvey said her priorities include increasing funding for public schools, protecting Social Security and Medicare, protecting reproducti­ve freedom, and fighting for affordable living, including affordable childcare. Harvey, a Spartanbur­g native, said if elected, she would continue to be the community advocate she has been since returning to the county in 2017.

"They can expect for me to continue to show up for Spartanbur­g and Greenville. They can expect me to fight for what's most important to them, and to hold the line, quite frankly," Harvey said. "There's a real need to have a community voice in office that's actually out in the community, listening and engaging and representi­ng the concerns of our residents ... So much of this work is striving for balance. We have seen cycle after cycle, how our Republican elected officials are voting for harmful policies. We have got to start electing good leaders into office, and this is the year to do that."

Samantha Swann covers city news, developmen­t and culture in Spartanbur­g. She is a University of South Carolina Upstate and Greenville Technical College alumna. Contact her at sswann@shj.com or on Instagram at @sam_on_spartanbur­g.

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