S.C. GENERAL
ASSEMBLY
Rumors plague speaker hopefuls
By Aaron Gould
Sheinin Knight
Ridder
COLUMBIA - Perceived threats of
retribution and rumors of private deals have begun to pepper the
increasingly tense race for House speaker - a position that is not
even vacant yet.
When - or if - President Bush nominates Speaker David Wilkins,
R-Greenville, to be the next U.S. ambassador to Canada, the race to
claim his gavel likely would become even more intense.
Wilkins has refused to discuss what he calls rumors of his
pending departure.
But while there has been no on-the-record confirmation that
Wilkins is going to be named envoy to our neighbor to the north, the
four candidates to succeed him are operating under the assumption
that it is just a matter of time before that happens.
Four Republicans are jockeying for the votes of the other 119
members of the House:
Doug Smith of Spartanburg, House speaker pro tem
Bobby Harrell of Charleston, Ways and Means Committee
chairman
Jim Harrison of Columbia, Judiciary Committee chairman
Harry Cato of Greenville, Labor, Commerce and Industry Committee
chairman.
House Democrats, who have 50 members compared with 75
Republicans, cannot realistically expect to elevate one of their own
to the speaker's chair, but they could have a significant effect on
which Republican wins.
All four Republicans expressed optimism for their campaigns.
"I feel good about it," Smith said, "I feel really good."
"I feel good about it," Harrell said.
"I've tried to be open, fair and inclusive," Harrison said.
"I feel good about where I am," Cato said.
Several House members, and a few of the candidates, think the
race eventually will come down to two finalists: Harrison and
Harrell.
While no official vote count has been taken, several lawmakers
said they think Harrison and Harrell are nearly tied. If the vote
goes to a second or third ballot, some say Harrison might have an
edge.
"Until Harry and Doug are out, it's all spread out," said Rep.
Dan Tripp, R-Greenville. "Once it's a two-man race, Harrison is in
the lead."
Harrison said, "It will develop into a two-man race, with Bobby
and I."
Harrell did not make assumptions. "There are four guys in the
race."
Harrell was involved in a dispute with a fellow Republican last
week that led him to explain a perceived threat of retribution.
Republican Rep. Gloria Haskins of Greenville said Harrell asked
for her vote last week and she explained she was committed to
Harrison.
"He said: 'I understand. You do whatever you have to do. But I'd
appreciate your support, and by the way, are you going to run for
re-election next year?'" Haskins said. "And I said, 'Oh yes, I
am.'"
Haskins said she took Harrell's question - "Are you going to run
for re-election?" - to be a threat.
In the language of politics, such a query could be construed as:
"If you don't support me, I'll work against you in the next
election."
That's how Haskins took it.
"He was very raw, yeah," Haskins said. "I know the language
around here. I was stunned. I was hurt."
Harrell said he absolutely did not threaten Haskins, whom he
called a friend. Haskins' late husband, former Speaker Pro Tem Terry
Haskins, also was a friend, Harrell said.
Harrell said Haskins is getting remarried soon and he wondered if
she would choose to run again.
"Oh Lord, then I need to call her," Harrell said when told of
Haskins' feelings. "I wouldn't do anything to hurt Gloria."
Harrell did call Haskins. Afterward, Harrell said, "She
understands; it's resolved now."
The next day, though, when asked about her follow-up conversation
with Harrell, Haskins said, "I guess I'll just have to take his
word" that he was not threatening her.
Harrell's wife, Cathy, said Friday that she had asked her husband
to inquire if Haskins planned to run again.
Cathy Harrell said she and Haskins spoke recently about Haskins'
plans to remarry, "but I forgot to ask if she was going to run
again," Cathy Harrell said.
"It's my fault Bobby asked her that," Cathy Harrell said.
Harrison has had his own problems with negative publicity the
past few days. He came under fire last week over the brewing
controversy regarding criminal domestic violence legislation and the
snickering in his committee over the bill.
While no one knows if Harrison's involvement in the issue hurts
his bid for speaker, it is unlikely to help.
Harrison said he does not think the flap will hurt him because
his colleagues know the personalities involved and that he has tried
to work through the problem.
Smith, too, faces the prospect of unhappy colleagues over his
strong support for the tuition tax-credit bill, called "Put Parents
in Charge" by supporters. Some House members do not want to have to
vote on the bill, but Smith keeps pushing it.
Cato has not been involved in much controversy the past several
years.
He was, however, a major backer of the Confederate flag and tried
in 2000 to block the compromise bill that eventually led to the
banner being lowered from the Statehouse dome.
Harrell said rumors of threats and private deals are making the
rounds of the House.
"I've heard that I've promised the Ways and Means chairmanship to
four different people, that I'm going to expand the committee to 40
slots," Harrell said.
There are now 25 positions on the budget-writing committee,
considered the most influential and prestigious of House committees
because of its oversight of state spending.
Harrell said he has made no such promises.
That would be a bad idea, others said.
"I don't know of any specific deals," Cato said. "I do know if
any of the candidates were making deals, I'd be seriously
disappointed."
House Majority Leader Jim Merrill, R-Charleston, said he and
Wilkins worked to prevent deal-making.
"It's the quickest way for one of the candidates to undermine
themselves," Merrill said.
A spokesman for Gov. Mark Sanford said the governor is not
backing any candidate.
"That is the prerogative of the members of the House to determine
who their speaker is," said Chris Drummond, Sanford's communications
director. |