By Bobby Harrell
This election season, you are hearing an outpouring of political
rhetoric. One of the biggest political sound bites is Gov. Mark
Sanford's claim that your General Assembly is growing government by
astronomical figures. That simply is not true. Fortunately, we are
not like the federal government. We are required by our state
constitution to have a balanced budget.
The Office of State Budget is a nonpartisan agency that provides
all budget numbers for the House, the Senate and the governor.
According to its numbers, since 1994 when Republicans took control
of the House of Representatives, government growth has been held to
an annual rate of 4.2 percent. Even with this year's budget surplus,
the Office of State Budget said this year's increase is a little
over 9 percent.
Many of you remember the slow economy we recently experienced and
how the General Assembly cut agency budgets deeply. Our entire
nation went through the economic downturn. North Carolina, Georgia,
Florida and Tennessee all raised taxes to deal with the loss of
revenue. South Carolina did not. We cut our budget and lived within
our means. Several members of the General Assembly, including me,
have been named Friends of the Taxpayer by the S.C. Taxpayers
Association for holding the line on taxes.
Our governor does the legislators, who stood their ground during
that difficult time, a terrible injustice when he spreads the
rhetoric he is spreading today. Making those hard, budget-cutting
decisions and refusing to increase taxes is what has led to our
economic resurgence.
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The governor threatened to call legislators into an extraordinary
session to address his vetoes at a cost of almost $100,000 a day to
the taxpayer. He said this was necessary so voters could see how
their representatives voted before primary election day. The fact
is, only 26 out of 124 representatives have a primary opponent, and
senators aren't even up for re-election this year. For more than 20
years, the Legislature has waited at least two weeks to come back
and deal with the governor's vetoes. That allows time to review them
before taking them up.
Every member of the House has voted on everything in the budget,
not once, not twice, but three times. There was a weeklong debate on
the House floor in March. The budget came back from the Senate in
early May. Then, in late May, the House voted on the Conference
Committee report on the budget.
The reality is, the governor's campaign wanted to make a press
splash before his primary election, even if it cost taxpayers
$100,000 a day to do so.
It is sad to see a member of my own party base his re-election
campaign on running against a Legislature that is controlled by his
political party. Targeting the General Assembly makes for an easy
sound bite. Most voters like their representative, but don't like
the Legislature. Gov. Carroll Campbell would have loved to have
Republicans in control of the General Assembly. He did amazing
things when all the Republicans had was just over one-third of the
House seats.
The problem is, Gov. Sanford needs the same people he is
attacking to later support proposals he makes to the General
Assembly. We have asked the governor many times to work with us;
those cries have fallen on deaf ears. Just when you think you are
getting somewhere, his office sends out an attack press release, or
they announce a fly-around.
This year, we have done almost everything the governor has asked
of us. He asked us to fully repay all our state's trust funds. We
did.
Gov. Sanford endorsed the House conference committee's position
on property tax relief, and we passed it.
He asked us to use some of our surplus revenue to provide
additional tax relief, and we did. We have lowered the sales tax on
groceries from 5 percent to 3 percent effective Oct. 1 and
eliminated all sales tax for the two days after Thanksgiving.
He asked us to set aside some of the surplus revenue into a
contingency fund. We set aside $71 million in a new rainy-day fund,
which is in addition to the $278 million our other two existing
rainy-day reserve accounts already contain.
All totaled, over $1 billion in this year's budget is being used
for tax relief, trust fund repayment and rainy-day funds. That is
one out of every six dollars in our state budget.
We have a lot of work to do in our state. Our unemployment rate
was the third-best in the country when Carroll Campbell and David
Beasley were governors. Now our unemployment is the third worst in
the country. Our per capita income was on the rise when Campbell and
Beasley were governors; now it is not. We passed the LIFE
scholarship and the Education Accountability Act, and now nowhere
near enough attention is being given to education.
What we need today is less rhetoric and more leadership. The
governor frequently quotes Thomas Friedman's book "The World Is
Flat."
Dale Carnegie wrote the book "How to Win Friends and Influence
People." Life is about relationships; so is the General Assembly.
Leadership is about being able to influence people. The title of Mr.
Carnegie's book tells how to accomplish that. |