Beaufort News

Cromer leading Scallate in Beaufort mayoral contest. 843 votes separate them

City of Beaufort Mayor Phil Cromer, center, chats with his supporters at his re-election watch party at Beaufort Yacht and Sailing Club on Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024, on Lady’s Island in Beaufort. Cromer was won the mayoral race against Josh Scallate.
City of Beaufort Mayor Phil Cromer, center, chats with his supporters at his re-election watch party at Beaufort Yacht and Sailing Club on Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024, on Lady’s Island in Beaufort. Cromer was won the mayoral race against Josh Scallate. dmartin@islandpacket.com

Phil Cromer had an 843-vote lead over Josh Scallate with most of the votes counted in Beaufort’s mayoral race in Tuesday’s election, based on unofficial election results.

The results include 100% of the precincts reporting but do not include absentee ballots, which still had not been counted as of 12:50 a.m. Wednesday.

The campaign to lead the city of 14,000 residents for the next four years pitted the youngest and oldest members of the City Council and competing visions. Scallate argued new leadership was needed. Cromer touted his experience.

With 100% of the precincts reporting, Cromer had 3,158 votes, or 57.25% to Scallate’s 2,315 votes or 41.97%, a difference of 843 votes.

Cromer’s first act as mayor-elect?

Take a beach vacation, beginning this week.

“This has been an exhausting campaign,” Cromer said Tuesday evening, before the vote count had been finalized, at his election party that drew about a 100 supporters to the Beaufort Yacht and Sailing Club.

City of Beaufort Mayor Phil Cromer, center, chats with his supporters at his re-election watch party at Beaufort Yacht and Sailing Club on Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024, on Lady’s Island in Beaufort. Cromer was won the mayoral race against Josh Scallate.
City of Beaufort Mayor Phil Cromer, center, chats with his supporters at his re-election watch party at Beaufort Yacht and Sailing Club on Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024, on Lady’s Island in Beaufort. Cromer was won the mayoral race against Josh Scallate. Drew Martin dmartin@islandpacket.com

If his lead holds, his first real act as mayor will be meeting will council members, including Scallate and Mitch Mitchell and Neil Lipsitz, who also were reelected, and Mike McFee to say, “alright, this is a clean slate. It’s about Beaufort. It’s not about us.”

Scallate was proud of the campaign he ran. He knocked on doors, went to countless meet and greets, hustled and did his best to refute attacks he said were frustrating.

“We gave it our best shot and that’s all you can do,” Scallate said at an election night party at Shellring Ale Works, before the outcome was known. “The rest is up to voters.”

Josh Scallate awaits election results with his supporters, including his son, Jake, at the Shellring Ale House Tuesday evening.
Josh Scallate awaits election results with his supporters, including his son, Jake, at the Shellring Ale House Tuesday evening. Karl Puckett kapuckett@islandpacket.com

Cromer, 74, retired from local politics in 2022 after serving two terms on City Council from 2014 to 2022. But he was lured back to run for mayor after Stephen Murray resigned before his term expired. Cromer, a retired town manager who also worked for the South Carolina Municipal Association, then won a special election in December 2023.

During the campaign, Cromer said he wanted to ensure that the city’s history, natural environment and architecture are protected. “You have to preserve what’s special about your community,” he said.

Scallate, 33, a firefighter, joined the council in 2022 but he decided to run for mayor with two years remaining in his term arguing the city needed better leadership on infrastructure and growth issues and better communication with the public.

The city’s failing Waterfront Park infrastructure; its attempt renegotiate an unfavorable lease with a private party that manages the city marina; rapid development; and hurricane preparation emerged as issues during the campaign.

Phil Cromer
Phil Cromer Submitted photo

If his lead stands, Cromer must now lead a city that has been beset at times with infighting over development in the city’s historic downtown and other issues.

“There’s quite a bit to do,” Cromer said.

But the Waterfront Park infrastructure problems rise to the top of heap in Cromer’s view. Engineers need to come up with options and then the city needs to go after state and federal funding to pay for it, he said.

The city’s rapid growth, which he says is outstripping the city’s infrastructure, is also a priority, Cromer said.

During the campaign for a full term as mayor, Cromer played up his experience and temperament and said he would encourage civility but Scallate said he wasn’t pleased with some of the accusations and actions of Cromer’s supporters. One example: An accusation that Scallate signed the controversial marina lease with Safe Harbor Marinas, which he did not.

“I just don’t like being accused of things that aren’t true,” Scallate said.

Josh Scallate
Josh Scallate Courtesy

He wants to see the city make it easier for the public to access information and be more proactive in getting information to the public so residents are less susceptible to misinformation.

This story was originally published November 5, 2024 at 11:59 PM.

Karl Puckett
The Island Packet
Karl Puckett covers the city of Beaufort, town of Port Royal and other communities north of the Broad River for The Beaufort Gazette and Island Packet. The Minnesota native also has worked at newspapers in his home state, Alaska, Wisconsin and Montana.
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