Kambrell Garvin | |
State House: | South Carolina |
District: | 77th |
Term Start: | November 12, 2018 |
Predecessor: | Joe McEachern |
Birth Date: | 2 October 1991 |
Birth Place: | Columbia, SC, United States |
Profession: | Attorney |
Alma Mater: | Winthrop University Johns Hopkins University University of South Carolina |
Party: | Democratic |
Spouse: | Monique Patton |
Kambrell Houston Garvin is an American injury attorney and politician from South Carolina. He serves as a Democratic member of the South Carolina House of Representatives, representing House District 77, Richland County, Columbia, SC. He was first elected in 2018.
Kambrell Garvin was born in Columbia, SC. He was raised by his single mother, Dr. Sonji Garvin Baxter. At a young age, Garvin developed a speech impediment, and his mother changed her career path and became a speech pathologist to help her son.[1]
Garvin studied Political Science with a minor in African American Studies and Sociology at Winthrop University, receiving a BA in 2013. He then went on to complete a Masters of Science in Education from Johns Hopkins University School of Education in 2016. He spent three years as a public school teacher in Walterboro, South Carolina.
In May 2019, Garvin received a J.D. from the University of South Carolina School of Law. He since became an attorney at McGowan, Hood & Felder, LLC.[2] In 2022, he launched his own law firm.[3]
Garvin first got involved in politics at the age of 10, when he organized his first voter registration campaign. He participated in various political campaigns, rallies and political conventions throughout his teen and college years, mostly around education and social justice issues. He was a member of Teach for America, a non-profit organization aiming to end educational inequity.
Garvin first ran for office in 2018, when he challenged Democratic incumbent Joe McEachern in the Democratic Primaries for House District 77 when he was 26 years old. After a close first round, Garvin went on to defeat McEachern in the runoff by a 70 to 30 percent margin. Garvin then won in the General election and began his term as state representative in January 2019.[4]
As state legislator, Garvin proposed a bill that would prohibit job application from including questions related to convictions of a crime. He introduced a bill to the SC House which would make it illegal to discriminate based on hair, akin to the CROWN Act in California.[5] Garvin has served as Vice Chairman of the Richland County Legislative Delegation.[6] He is Treasurer of the House Minority Caucus.[7]
Garvin endorsed Elizabeth Warren in the 2020 Democratic Party presidential primaries. He became a surrogate for her campaign in the South Carolina Primary.[8] He said he supported her for her many progressive proposals, and her student debt cancellation plan in particular.[9] [10]
See also: 2024 United States state legislative elections.
On August 22, following the death of District 19 Senator John L. Scott Jr.,[11] the Office of the President of the South Carolina Senate announced that the date of the special election to fill the seat would be January 2, 2024. Filing would take place between September 1 and 9, 2023, with primaries held on October 24 and a run-off set for November 7.[12]
On August 29, 2023, Garvin announced his intention to run for State Senate District 19 seat.[13] [14] He officially filed on September 1, 2023.[15] Garvin came in second place in the Democratic Primary on October 24.[16]
Garvin is married to Monique Patton Garvin. The couple resides in Northeast Columbia, SC.