This is a printer friendly version of an article from
www.goupstate.com
To print this article open the file menu and choose
Print.
Back
Article published Aug 3, 2003
Bush
organizing S.C. fund-raiser
Associated
Press
GREENVILLE -- President Bush plans a campaign stop in South
Carolina this fall to raise money for his 2004 re-election.The $2,000-a-person
Republican event, which will be held at the Palmetto Exposition Center in
Greenville, is expected to bring in nearly $800,000 for President Bush 2004.A
date and other details have not been set. Neither the White House nor the
Bush-Cheney campaign would comment.South Carolina House Speaker David Wilkins
went to Washington this past week to discuss details of the fund-raiser with
campaign officials."We're excited," said Wilkins, who led the Bush campaign in
South Carolina in 2000. "The Bush family has a great love for South Carolina,
and South Carolina has a great love for them."Vice President Dick Cheney spoke
in Columbia on Monday at a fund-raising lunch, which raised $300,000 for the
president's re-election campaign.First lady Laura Bush will attend another
Bush-Cheney fund-raiser in October at the Florence home of Kate and Eddie Floyd,
former chairman of the University of South Carolina board of trustees.In 2000,
the Bush campaign raised more than $1.2 million in South Carolina.To date,
Bush-Cheney has raised more than $35.1 million for the 2004 presidential
campaign, according to records filed with the Federal Election Commission.Both
Bush and Cheney have visited South Carolina several times since the 2000
campaign.Cheney was in Columbia in June 2002, to raise money for the party and
for then-U.S. Rep. Lindsey Graham, who ran a successful campaign for the U.S.
Senate seat held by Strom Thurmond.The vice president traveled to Columbia on
July 1 for Thurmond's funeral. He also attended the funeral of U.S. Rep. Floyd
Spence of Lexington in 2001 and delivered the main eulogy.Bush visited the state
three times in 2002 to campaign for Graham and Gov. Mark Sanford. He also
delivered the May commencement address at the University of South
Carolina.Sponsors of the Greenville event are Wilkins and his wife, Susan; the
Floyds; Anne and John Rainey, chairman of the state Board of Economic Advisors;
and former state GOP chairman Barry Wynn of Spartanburg.