Chauncey K. Gregory

Chauncey K. Gregory
Member of the South Carolina Senate
from the 16th district
In office
1992 -2008; 2011 - present
Preceded by Red Hinson; Mick Mulvaney
Personal details
Born (1963-03-18) March 18, 1963
Lancaster, South Carolina
Political party Republican
Spouse(s) Sherri
Children Marshall and Ellen Gray
Profession Businessman
Religion Presbyterian

Chauncey Klugh 'Greg' Gregory is a Republican member of the South Carolina Senate, representing the 16th District from 1992 through 2008, and again since 2011. In January 2008 he announced his retirement at the end of that year.[1] Gregory expressed his wish to re-enter the State Senate, and he ran for the District sixteen seat in 2011 after it was vacated by newly elected Congressman Mick Mulvaney. He was re-elected after winning the five-way Republican primary outright, garnering seventy percent of the vote, thereby making history in South Carolina, as it was the first-five way primary where no run-off was needed. Gregory's current term expires in January, 2013. His current committees are Fish, Game and Forestry, Rules, Judiciary, Agriculture and Natural Resources, and Corrections and Penology.

Gregory represents Lancaster and York Counties and resides in the city of Lancaster. He was instrumental in ridding the state of video poker and is currently working toward restructuring the state government, to give the Governor more power, and therefore, greater accountability for the successes and failures of the state. He is the former chairman of the senate Fish, Game and Forestry committee, which, among other things, oversees the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources.

In 2009, Gregory was appointed to the Board of Trustees of the University of South Carolina by South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford. His term was to expire in 2012; however, he had to resign upon his re-election to the Senate.

References

  1. Fort Mill Times: Gregory won’t run again for state Senate seat Archived July 4, 2008, at the Wayback Machine. The South Carolina Senate Republican Caucus, January 31, 2008

External links


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