Jim Clyburn

Politician

Birthday July 21, 1940

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Sumter, South Carolina, U.S.

Age 83 years old

Nationality United States

#26213 Most Popular

1895

He and other black politicians strongly opposed the 1895 state constitution, which essentially disenfranchised most African-American citizens, a situation the state maintained for more than half a century until federal civil rights legislation passed in the mid-1960s.

Clyburn graduated from Mather Academy (later named Boylan-Haven-Mather Academy) in Camden, South Carolina, then attended South Carolina State College (now South Carolina State University), a historically black college in Orangeburg.

He joined the Omega Psi Phi fraternity and graduated with a bachelor's degree in history.

For his first full-time position after college, Clyburn taught at C.A. Brown High School in Charleston.

1940

James Enos Clyburn (born July 21, 1940) is an American politician and retired educator serving as a Democratic member of the U.S. House of Representatives from South Carolina.

1953

A distant relative of his was George W. Murray, an organizer for the Colored Farmers Alliance (CFA), who was a Republican South Carolina Congressman in the 53rd and 54th U.S. Congresses in the late 19th century.

1965

Due to prior racial discrimination before the Voting Rights Act of 1965, the Supreme Court required the 6th district, which had previously included the northeastern portion of the state, to be redrawn as a black-majority district.

The 6th was reconfigured to take in most of the majority-black areas near Columbia and Charleston, as well as most of the Black Belt.

Five-term incumbent Robin Tallon's home in Florence stayed in the district, but he chose to retire.

Five candidates, all of whom were African American, ran for the Democratic nomination for the seat.

Clyburn's campaign was led by NAACP activist Isaac W. Williams.

Clyburn won 55% of the vote in the primary, eliminating the need for a runoff.

As expected, he won the general election in November handily, becoming the first Democrat to represent a significant portion of Columbia since 1965 and the first Democrat to represent a significant portion of Charleston since 1981.

1968

In the aftermath of the 1968 Orangeburg massacre, when police killed three protesting students at South Carolina State, West appointed Clyburn as the state's human affairs commissioner.

1969

Clyburn became involved in politics during the 1969 Charleston hospital strike.

After assisting the settlement of the protests at the Medical University of South Carolina, he became involved in St. Julian Devine's campaign for a seat on the Charleston city council in 1969.

Clyburn came up with the campaign's slogan, "Devine for Ward Nine".

When Devine won the race, he became the first African American to hold a seat on the city council since Reconstruction.

Clyburn later credited that campaign as the reason he got into electoral politics.

1970

The Orangeburg massacre and civil-rights protest predated the 1970 Kent State shootings and 1970 Jackson State killings, in which the National Guard at Kent State, and police and state highway patrol at Jackson State, killed student protesters demonstrating against the U.S. invasion of Cambodia during the Vietnam War.

1971

After an unsuccessful run for the South Carolina General Assembly, Clyburn moved to Columbia to join the staff of Governor John C. West in 1971.

West called Clyburn and offered him a job as his advisor after reading Clyburn's response to his loss in the newspaper.

After West appointed Clyburn as his advisor, Clyburn became the first nonwhite advisor to a governor in South Carolina history.

1990

After the 1990 census South Carolina's district lines were redrawn.

1992

He served in this position until 1992, when he stepped down to run for Congress.

1993

Currently in his 16th term, Clyburn has served as the U.S. representative for SC's 6th congressional district since 1993.

His congressional district includes most of the majority-black precincts in and around Columbia and Charleston, as well as most of the majority-black areas outside Beaufort and nearly all of South Carolina's share of the Black Belt.

Clyburn is the dean of South Carolina's congressional delegation.

2007

He previously served as House Majority Whip between 2007 and 2011 and between 2019 and 2023.

Clyburn served as the third-ranking House Democrat, behind Nancy Pelosi and Steny Hoyer, from 2007 until 2023, serving as majority whip behind Pelosi and Hoyer during periods of Democratic House control, and as assistant democratic leader behind Pelosi and Hoyer during periods of Republican control.

2011

Clyburn also served as House assistant Democratic leader from 2011 to 2019 and again from 2023 until he stepped down in 2024.

Since John Spratt's departure in 2011, aside from the single term served by Joe Cunningham, Clyburn has been the only Democrat in South Carolina’s congressional delegation.

2018

After the Democrats took control of the House in the 2018 midterm elections, Clyburn was reelected majority whip in January 2019 at the opening of the 116th Congress, alongside the reelected Speaker Pelosi and Majority Leader Hoyer, marking the second time the trio has served in these roles together.

In the 2022 midterm elections, Republicans gained control of the House, and Pelosi announced her retirement as leader of the House Democratic Caucus.

On the same day, Hoyer announced he would not seek his leadership position.

Clyburn announced that he would seek the House Assistant Democratic Leader position, rather than that of Democratic Whip.

2020

Clyburn played a pivotal role in the 2020 presidential election by endorsing Joe Biden three days before the South Carolina Democratic primary.

His endorsement came at a time when Biden's campaign had suffered three disappointing finishes in the Iowa and Nevada caucuses and the New Hampshire primary.

Biden's South Carolina win three days before Super Tuesday transformed his campaign; the momentum led him to capture the Democratic nomination and later the presidency.

Clyburn was born in Sumter, South Carolina, the son of Enos Lloyd Clyburn, a fundamentalist minister, and his wife, Almeta (née Dizzley), a beautician.