COLUMBIA, S.C. - During a campaign debate last
year, GOP gubernatorial candidate Mark Sanford berated then-Gov. Jim
Hodges, a Democrat, about the lack of diversity in jobs he
controlled.
Now that he's governor, however, Sanford says he's having a tough
time finding black people willing to take pay cuts to come work for
him. And, he says, he's facing the fact that many qualified blacks
also are Democrats.
While black legislators say they expect the governor's Cabinet
and senior staff to reflect the racial makeup of the state,
Sanford's spokesman Chris Drummond says the governor won't be bound
by numbers or quotas in filling those jobs.
"When you make those kinds of promises during the campaign or on
the stump, obviously it puts you in a position that you're going to
have to deliver once you're in there," said Rep. Jerry Govan, an
Orangeburg Democrat and chairman of the Legislative Black
Caucus.
Sanford said he would announce more of his top staff and Cabinet
positions this week, a process that's been slowed down as "we've
tried to be affirmative in our actions."
"They're talented, bright, but ultimately have a different
political process," Sanford said of most black Democrats.
There needs to be "philosophical alignment, you also have to have
a degree of comfort," Sanford said.
Culturally, he said, "it's as normal to be white and Republican
as its been to be black and Democrat."
Qualified blacks may have "rooted political involvement in the
other party," he said. "If you have rooted political involvement,
that probably makes it very, very difficult for me as a Republican
elected official," Sanford said.
Sanford should move away from political considerations, said Sen.
Robert Ford, D-Charleston. "What he should understand is he cannot
govern as a Republican now. He's got to govern as a governor of
South Carolina," Ford said.
When Hodges was elected, Ford and other members of the
Legislative Black Caucus complained that he was crossing party lines
and hiring Republicans for key jobs.
As it turns out, that was the right approach, Ford now says.
"Once you become elected, that party stuff's supposed to go out the
window," he said.
Apart from the politics, there's the bottom line of taking a
lower-paying job to work for the governor.
"We've had any number of situations where we've gotten to the
99-yard line and ... folks have said, 'I can't take the pay cut,'"
Sanford said. For instance, a person making $160,000 in the private
sector may balk at an offer of a $106,000 state salary, he said.
"They say, 'I like you. I really believe where you're coming
from. But I don't like you that much,'" Sanford said.
"I do not buy into the fact that there's not a pool a pool of
qualified African-American candidates who are willing to serve their
state," Govan said. "We have the same level of expectations for Mark
Sanford as we did for Jim Hodges."
Govan said that if Sanford is having problems finding candidates,
the caucus can help but the governor hasn't asked.
Sanford would do well to hold onto some of the black staff
members that are now losing jobs in the transition, Ford said.
"They've got people now who have those jobs that he could keep. Once
you become governor, that doesn't mean you've got to kick everybody
out just because you're a Republican or Democrat," he said.
Ford pointed to Evelyn Williams, a black woman who had served as
Hodges' ombudsman. Williams was told Friday she had no job, Ford
said. "You're talking about one of the best ombudsmen in the
country, but she's out of a job because she's a Democrat," he
said.
Sanford's office did not immediately respond to a question about
whether Williams was
fired.