On March 16, the South Carolina Workers Party, which is ballot-qualified, nominated Claudia De la Cruz for president. She is also the presidential nominee of the Party for Socialism and Liberation, and also very likely to be the nominee of the Peace and Freedom Party of California.
This is the first time the South Carolina Workers Party has ever nominated anyone for president. In the past it was the Labor Party, and even when it was under its old name, it never before entered a presidential race.
De la Cruz is the first Marxist presidential candidate ever to be on a government-printed ballot in South Carolina. The Communist Party never received any votes in South Carolina, even though back then South Carolina had private ballots, not government-printed ballots. The Communist Party never had the organizational strength in South Carolina to print up private ballots and distribute them to any voters, so no Communist presidential candidate ever received even one vote in the state. The Communist Party ran in the presidential elections of 1924, 1928, 1932, 1936, 1940, 1968, 1972, 1976, 1980, and 1984.
The Socialist Workers Party was never on the ballot in South Carolina either.