Yahoo Web Search

  1. Murrell Smith Jr.

    Murrell Smith Jr.

    American politician

Search results

  1. Occupation. Attorney, politician. George Murrell Smith Jr. (born May 15, 1968) is an American politician and the 61st Speaker of the South Carolina House of Representatives. Since 2001, he has represented the 67th district of South Carolina for Sumter and Sumter County. [1]

  2. Born May 15, 1968 in Florence. Son of G. Murrell and Jody Hill Smith. Wofford College, B.A., 1990. University of South Carolina School of Law, J.D., 1993. October 16, 2004 married Macaulay White, 2 children, Mary Brown "Bee" and George Murrell III. Young, Young and Reiter, 1993-98.

  3. Nov 8, 2022 · G. Murrell Smith Jr. (Republican Party) is a member of the South Carolina House of Representatives, representing District 67. He assumed office in 2000. His current term ends on November 11, 2024. Smith (Republican Party) is running for re-election to the South Carolina House of Representatives to represent District 67.

  4. Apr 28, 2022 · Representative G. Murrell Smith, Jr. (R-Sumter) was nominated and elected by. fellow House members to take over as House Speaker at the end of the regular. session. UPDATE: House has voted...

  5. Speaker - G. Murrell Smith, Jr. [R] District 67. (H) P.O. Box 580, Sumter 29151. (C) 506 Blatt Bldg., Columbia 29201. Speaker of the House Office. Speaker Pro Tempore - Thomas E. "Tommy" Pope [R] District 47. (H) P.O. Box 471, York 29745. (C) 505 Blatt Bldg., Columbia 29201. Majority Leader - David R. Hiott [R] District 4.

  6. Apr 29, 2022 · April 29, 2022. SMITH | ROBINSON announced that attorney G. Murrell Smith, Jr., has been elected as the South Carolina Speaker of the House of Representatives. “It is with great humility and an enormous sense of responsibility that I accept this position,” says Speaker-elect Smith.

  7. Dec 6, 2022 · Speaker Murrell Smith was unanimously elected along with the other chamber leaders during Tuesday’s House organization session. It gave the Republican from Sumter an opportunity to give his broad goals for a chamber that added seven Republicans, giving the party more than two-thirds of the House seats for the first time.

  1. People also search for