Melissa Lackey Oremus

Melissa Lackey Oremus (born November 17, 1978) is an American politician. She is a member of the South Carolina House of Representatives from the 84th District, serving since 2019.[1] She is a member of the Republican party.[2]

Melissa Lackey Oremus
Member of the South Carolina House of Representatives
from the 84th district
Assumed office
2019
Preceded byRonnie Young
Personal details
Born (1978-11-17) November 17, 1978
Aiken, South Carolina, United States
Political partyRepublican
Alma materUniversity of South Carolina Aiken (B.S.)
Southern Wesleyan University (M.S.M.)

Electoral history

South Carolina House of Representatives District 84
Year Candidate Votes Pct Candidate Votes Pct Candidate Votes Pct Candidate Votes Pct
2019 Special Republican Primary[3][lower-alpha 1] Melissa Lackey Oremus 699 30.9% Alvin Padgett 528 23.4% Cody Anderson 460 20.4% Danny Feagin 432 19.1%
2019 Special Republican Primary Runoff[4] Melissa Lackey Oremus 1,178 56.3% Alvin Padgett 915 43.7%
2019 Special General Election[5] Melissa Lackey Oremus 809 97.4% Others/Write-in 22 2.6%
  1. The top four candidates of six are listed here.
gollark: I should run appeals instead.
gollark: As they say, But even when those Turing firmware blobs end up being released, there will still be the issue like with Maxwell / Pascal / Volta of only running at the boot clock frequencies without any re-clocking support for being able to drive the hardware at its optimal clock frequencies. For overcoming that challenge, additional firmware support or workarounds need to be devised around the PMU handling. Until that happens, the Nouveau performance past the GeForce GTX 700 series remains very slow.
gollark: This is efficiency.
gollark: If you instead say you'll do them in 6 to 8 weeks, people will be happy if you do them in mere days.
gollark: See, this is the problem, you shouldn't say you'll do things in 10 minutes.

References

  1. "South Carolina Legislature Online - Member Biography". www.scstatehouse.gov. Retrieved June 2, 2020.
  2. "The Voter's Self Defense System". Vote Smart. Retrieved June 2, 2020.
  3. "Election Night Reporting - Rep Primary". www.enr-scvotes.org. Retrieved June 2, 2020.
  4. "Election Night Reporting - Rep Primary Runoff". index.html. Retrieved June 2, 2020.
  5. "Election Night Reporting - General Election". index.html. Retrieved June 2, 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.