CHARLESTON - Gov. Mark Sanford said
Tuesday that his administration will continue the fight against pork
barrel legislation and said the threat of a lawsuit has value.
"I'm not naive enough to think we'll ever eliminate pork, you
won't," Sanford said following a speech to a civic club in
Charleston. "But can you have a more narrow range of pork so that at
least when some of the legislators take a vote it's on at least a
so-called topic."
Sanford threatened to sue the legislature last month after they
overrode his veto on a massive economic-development bill. He said
the bill ran up against a constitutional requirement that bills deal
only with one topic. What started as an economic-development measure
ended up with more than a dozen amendments that, among other things,
authorized bond money for universities, allowed USC Sumter to offer
four-year degrees and created a four-year culinary arts program at
Trident Technical College in Charleston.
The lawsuit threat led to the governor calling a closed meeting
with the House Republican caucus last week, during which some heated
exchanges occurred, lawmakers said.
"My role is to constantly challenge the status quo...." Sanford
said Tuesday. "I've had conversations with the House and the Senate
leadership. Needless to say, they are going to be more circumspect
in bills going forward.
"There's a value to knowing the threat of a lawsuit is still out
there or knowing that we'll raise it again in a tighter time to get
at the objective we're after, which is more narrowly defined
legislative bills."
Sanford, formerly a congressman from Charleston, had little
experience in state politics before becoming governor last year.
South Carolina's constitution gives the legislature more power than
the governor, and he has had an uneasy relationship with the
lawmakers from the beginning. Political observers have said
Sanford's stands on principle, like the one he took regarding the
economic- development bill, have cost him goodwill with the
legislature.
Sanford said Tuesday that for now, his administration told
legislative leaders "we will walk with you guys to a legislative
remedy and see if we can't get something there."
The governor didn't think the controversy had affected his
relationship with lawmakers.
"A guy who you see 180 degrees apart one day may be the guy whose
vote you need the next day," he said.
"The funnel through which you bring about any of this legislative
change is the legislature. And the Catch-22 is there is a real need
to shake up the political system and challenge it, to nudge it,"
Sanford said.
One legislator agreed to tape last week's caucus session for The
(Columbia) State. The newspaper agreed not to name the legislator.
The taping was legal under state law and parts of a transcript were
published.
The taping was "unethical," Sanford said. "There ought to be a
code of conduct in the war of ideas, or the battle of ideas."