Tuesday, May 5, 2026

David Pascoe: A Record of Accountability

  From The Editor

The entrance of David Pascoe into the South Carolina Attorney General race has ignited the inevitable friction that occurs when an outsider someone who has spent decades operating independently of the state’s entrenched political machinery attempts to challenge the status quo.

Pascoe’s transition from Democrat to Republican in 2025 has become the primary vector for attacks against his credibility. Critics frame this shift as pure political opportunism, arguing that a career Democrat cannot suddenly pivot to become a reliable conservative. However, Pascoe’s justification for the move centers on a perceived ideological divorce from the Democratic Party, which he argues has abandoned core principles regarding public safety and the rule of law. He has specifically cited the federal commutation of death row sentences as a breaking point a stance that positions him directly against the soft on crime ideologies that have become standard within the national Democratic platform.

In South Carolina, where the good ol’ boys network has long transcended simple party lines, voters are faced with a stark choice, trust the traditional party label, or trust a record of aggressive, non-partisan prosecution.

In this opaque world of state level politics, where the revolving door between corporate lobbyists and elected officials often dictates policy, the career of David Pascoe stands as a rare example of a prosecutor attempting to penetrate the institutional fog. As a solicitor and special prosecutor, Pascoe led one of the most significant corruption investigations in South Carolina history, targeting the entrenched power structures of the General Assembly.

Pascoe’s credibility with voters is inextricably tied to his role as a special prosecutor during the Probegate investigation. To his supporters, this was not a partisan witch hunt, but a deep tissue examination of corruption that reached the absolute highest levels of the South Carolina State House.

Targeting Power: Pascoe successfully secured the indictment and resignation of powerful figures, most notably the then Speaker of the House.

Institutional Conflict: His tenure as special prosecutor involved intense, years long courtroom battles against the Attorney General’s office itself, which repeatedly attempted to have him removed. This history of fighting his own institution is precisely why he is viewed as an existential threat by current political insiders.

The Corruption Unit: Pascoe’s campaign centers on the establishment of a dedicated Public Corruption Unit. He has explicitly warned that he will not spare Republicans, asserting that the most necessary criticism of corruption must come from within one's own party.

Pascoe’s most notable work was his multi year investigation into the South Carolina Statehouse. While mainstream narratives often highlight the bipartisan nature of his work, the reality was a direct confrontation with the political elite. His investigation peeled back layers of influence peddling, revealing how powerful legislators leveraged their public offices to enrich themselves and their associates through clandestine consulting arrangements and lobbying operations.

Key figures held accountable during the probe include.

Bobby Harrell: Former House Speaker, who resigned following revelations regarding the misuse of campaign funds for personal expenses.

Rick Quinn Jr. & Jim Merrill: Former House Majority Leaders, both of whom resigned and pleaded guilty to misconduct in office.

John Courson: Former Senate President Pro Tempore, forced to plead guilty after a state grand jury unearthed secret payments totaling $159,000 from a political consulting firm.

Jim Harrison: Former Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, who was convicted of perjury after accepting nearly $900,000 in secret payments over a 13 year period.

Pascoe’s investigation did not occur in a vacuum. It was met with significant institutional resistance. When he sought to use the state grand jury to pull back the curtain on powerful political consultants specifically the Quinn family the Attorney General’s office attempted to have him removed from the case.

The subsequent legal battles, culminating in a South Carolina Supreme Court decision, were necessary to preserve the independence of the inquiry. Even after successfully securing convictions, Pascoe’s call for structural reform and stronger ethics laws was met with legislative silence a predictable reaction from a body designed to prioritize self preservation over public transparency.

Lacking the resources to engage in infinite litigation against deep pocketed corporate interests, Pascoe utilized Corporate Integrity Agreements (CIAs). By extracting payments from entities like the University of South Carolina, AT&T, and SCANA in exchange for non-prosecution, he forced a level of financial accountability that is rarely seen in state level public corruption cases.

While critics argued these agreements allowed corporations to avoid a formal admission of guilt, Pascoe viewed them as a necessary pragmatic tool to bypass the cycle of apathy currently suffocating the state’s regulatory environment. He notably directed these funds totaling over $350,000 to the S.C. Ethics Commission, attempting to bolster the very agency tasked with overseeing the lobbying activities he had spent years exposing.

Pascoe’s record suggests that the primary obstacle to ending public corruption is not a lack of evidence, but a lack of political will within the existing legal establishment. His tenure demonstrates that when a prosecutor is willing to endure political blow back and navigate the systemic procedural confusion often deployed by the state to protect its own, real accountability is possible.

While critics attempt to use the term law fare to describe his actions painting him as a political weapon it is essential to distinguish between the weaponization of the legal system for partisan ends and the pursuit of genuine prosecutorial accountability. Critics point to his past fundraising for figures like Joe Biden, or his ties to prominent attorneys, as evidence that he is a Trojan horse. Conversely, supporters note that as a solicitor, Pascoe has spent decades trying violent crime cases and consistently pushing for death sentences positions that fundamentally contradict the standard progressive agenda.

The reality of the South Carolina race is a contest between two distinct, incompatible visions for the Attorney General’s office.

Candidates who are part of the existing state establishment. These individuals may be more comfortable to the party base, but they are arguably beholden to the same closed loop structures that were exposed during Probegate.

Disruptive Prosecution: Pascoe, who is positioning himself as an adversarial force against the swamp.

Ultimately, whether his investigations into his colleagues are viewed as necessary accountability or political retribution depends entirely on a fundamental assessment of the state. Is the current system in Columbia fundamentally sound, or is it in dire need of a radical, outsider led purge? Voters must decide if their priority is maintaining party purity and traditional alliances, or empowering a prosecutor with a proven albeit unconventional history of dismantling the state’s most protected political interests.

As Pascoe continues to advocate for a permanent Public Corruption Unit, this fundamental question remains. Will the state allow for a permanent, independent watchdog, or will it continue to rely on the irregular, high pressure interventions of individual prosecutors to maintain the veneer of integrity? For now, the Statehouse remains a landscape where, without constant, aggressive scrutiny, the incentives for misconduct remain firmly in place.


Sources:

David Pascoe South Carolina corruption investigations summary

David Pascoe and the Statehouse Corruption Probe: A Landmark Fight for Integrity in South Carolina - David Pascoe pascoeforscag.com

Special prosecutor Pascoe giving corruption cases to SC AG | The State thestate.com

Prosecutor Pascoe wants to give $352,000 to SC Ethics group | The State thestate.com





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David Pascoe: A Record of Accountability

  From The Editor The entrance of David Pascoe into the South Carolina Attorney General race has ignited the inevitable friction that occurs...