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Article published Aug 3, 2003
Courting S.C. Democrats takes conservative
approach
JENNIFER HOLLAND
Associated
Press
ORANGEBURG -- The retired Rev. Eugene Wright thought a
Democrat was a Democrat until he moved to South Carolina 15 years ago.The
Baptist minister wanted to use his experience from 40 years of activism in
Washington, D.C., to organize a local group of clergy and address the needs of
young people, such as jobs, culture and recreation."I'm sad to say that didn't
materialize," said Wright, 81. "The leadership was not ready for change. They
were stuck in the Democratic conservative mode."As nine Democratic presidential
candidates bring their criticism of the U.S. war in Iraq, support of labor
unions and benefits for same-sex couples to South Carolina, Wright says a good
question is whether the White House hopefuls could be at odds with what people
think of as typical Democrats.During the next six months, Democrats in South
Carolina will get a lot of attention leading up to the state's presidential
primary Feb. 3. It's the first test in the South and in a state with a large
population of black voters.Like other Southern states, South Carolina has held
onto remnants of the old, conservative Democratic Party, staying away from
issues that have become commonplace in other parts of the country."It's the kind
of thing where even your most liberal South Carolina Democrat might say, 'Well,
I believe in keeping abortion legal in principle, but I might not agree with
it.' And that's a far cry from a Massachusetts Democrat," said Scott Huffmon, a
political scientist at Winthrop University.Sally Howard, an Horry County member
of the state Democratic Party's executive committee, said among Democrats
there's a wide range of opinions on social issues.But "financial and fiscally,
we'd probably be every bit as conservative as a Republican," she said.Religion
also folds into Democratic ideology in the South, Huffmon said. "That naturally
breeds slightly more conservative attitudes on social issues."Bill Moore, a
political scientist at the College of Charleston, said to keep in mind that many
Democratic activists came from black churches."The issues like prayer in school,
for example, black Democrats are strongly supportive. The issue of gay rights,
you find them not supportive," Moore said.State Rep. Gilda Cobb-Hunter,
D-Orangeburg and a former House minority leader, said Democrats in South
Carolina like to think that they're different than other Democrats across the
country."That's based on the perception of Democrats as these left-leaning
liberals, which is not the case," she said."My advice to all of the presidential
candidates has been to talk about issues that working people care about," she
said. "I don't want Democrats to get sidelined by discussions of civil unions
and labor unions and all of that."Waring Howe, a Charleston County member of the
state Democratic Party's executive committee, said candidates likely won't focus
on gay rights or abortion, but they have to talk about them while in South
Carolina."There are a whole lot of very diverse subgroups, constituency groups
in our party, than there is in the Republican Party," he said. "To not mention
some of those issues would perhaps say to those subgroups that we don't know
you're there, we don't care about these issues that affect you on a daily
basis."Rice University political scientist Earl Black said there is a different
strategy to tackle South Carolina's primary than the other early voting states
of Iowa and New Hampshire, but it's not conservative verses liberal.The critical
difference for candidates in South Carolina will be among black people, which
make up almost 30 percent of the population and could account for half of those
who vote in the primary, he said."That means the stakes are going to revolve
around which of the Democratic field can demonstrate an ability to connect to
African-American voters," Black said.As Charlton Hannah waited for customers at
the People's Barber Shop in Orangeburg on Wednesday, he said he was still
deciding which Democratic candidate to support."I think Democrats all want the
same thing: equal rights, better paying jobs, which means a better living, and a
better education system," said Hannah.He's not interested in hearing about the
candidates' other views. "As long as it doesn't affect my family or me
negatively, it doesn't matter," Hannah said.