When my National Review comes to my mailbox, I
immediately turn to the "The Week" section and then skim
through the rest of the magazine to see what I will want to
sit down to enjoy later. This week I started my routine and
was stopped immediately by a smiling caricature of Governor
Mark Sanford. Pick up the April 25 issue and you’ll find an
article about our anything but ordinary governor on page 20
entitled, "A Carolina Kid."
If you are a conservative, you should already have your
subscription. If you don’t get one. My favorite contributors are Jay
Nordlinger, John Derbyshire, and Jonah Goldberg. However, it
pays to read Ramesh Ponnuru, Byron York – and, of course, Mr.
Buckley.
I’ll whet your appetite with a few snippets from the piece
on Sanford by John J. Miller. Then you can go pick up a copy
yourself and read the rest.
Miller leads off by going back to 2002 when Sanford ran
against incumbent Jim Hodges. It relates to today because if
you remember, Hodges attacked his opponent by attempting to
scare voters by "exposing" Sanford’s plan from his
congressional days when he sought to allow workers to invest a
percentage of their payroll taxes into personal accounts.
Sound familiar? Miller points out that Hodges’ tactic didn’t
work.
Since then, he has gone on to become one of the
best new governors in the country, ranking near the top of
the Cato Institute’s latest fiscal-policy report card and
putting himself in position for an easy reelection next
year.
He even mentions the "Draft Sanford for
President 2008" website started by a Maryland college student.
It hasn’t stopped with that one – as a search of Google reveals.
Miller steps away from conjectures of the future to focus
on the early days of the Governor’s foray into politics. That
beginning led him to Washington in 1994. That is when the
legend of "penny pincher" Mark Sanford begins. We’ve heard
most of the anecdotes before. Miller offers an example.
To cut down on paper costs, his staff used the
letterhead of Rep. Andrea Seastrand, a California Republican
who was defeated for reelection in 1996. "We found reams and
reams of her stationery sitting in the hallway and decided
to put it in our fax maching, " says Scott English, a
longtime Sanford aide. "I think we finally ran out in
December 2000." Sanford’s office ultimately returned more
than $1.2 million in unused funds.
Of course, all
this was not without controversy. Some called Sanford’s
actions grandstanding, peculiar and even weird. Some found his
fiscal conservatism to be extreme and it led to a number of
attacks on the freshman congressman.
Sanford voted against a bill to perserve
Underground Railroad sites (he hates blacks!), against the
reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act (he hates
women!), against a breast-cancer stamp (he hates women with
breast cancer!).
The last several paragraphs deal
with Sanford’s views of the current Social Security debate. It
also brings up some of the more controversial aspects of his
tenure; the Air Force Reserve issue and bringing pigs to the
State House. Mr. Miller must not have heard of the horse and
buggy – he doesn’t mention it.
Mark Sanford is a populist. I agree that he should easily
take reelection if he seeks it. Yes, I know the legislature
doesn’t like the way he treats them. However, most people love
it. I bet if a poll were to be taken contrasting the
popularity of the Governor vs. the legislature, Sanford would
win.
That isn’t to say he is perfect. It is great to be an
idealist and to say what you mean and mean what you say.
However, unless the office of Governor receives more power,
all of Sanford’s great ideas are worthless without the help of
the legislature. Sure, if Sanford had the populist groundswell
to put pressure on the members of the legislature to follow
his lead or get voted out of office, it could possibly be
done. That just isn’t going to happen.
As it is, those of us who like to watch South Carolina
politics find our drawing-out-of-the-lines governor to be a
breath of fresh air. As Miller writes in conclusion:
If seven Republicans run for the 2008 Republican
presidential nomination, some media wag is bound to label
them "the seven dwarves." Conservatives hoping to find
someone not so dwarfish may want to check out that "Draft
Sanford" website.
Until then, we’ll keep him.