Republicans to keep
majority in S.C. Senate
By JEFF
STENSLAND Staff
Writer
Republicans retained control of the state Senate on Tuesday, but
there were several close races.
Most returning senators are familiar faces, but some new members
will be coming to Columbia in January when the Senate convenes.
The results in some of the most-watched races:
• Former Democratic House member
Joel Lourie defeated Republican Ken Wingate in the bid to replace
retiring Republican Sen. Warren Giese, R-Richland, in District
22.
Wingate ran an aggressive ad campaign against Lourie, who won a
late endorsement from Giese’s son, Richland County prosecutor Barney
Giese.
• Sen. Phil Leventis, D-Sumter,
won his re-election fight in District 35 against Republican lawyer
Dickie Jones. Leventis, a critic of Gov. Mark Sanford, fought
against an amendment to take minibottles out of the state’s
constitution.
• In a rematch from four years
ago, Danny Verdin, R-Laurens, fought off James Bryan in the District
9 race. Verdin, a former commander in the Sons of Confederate
Veterans, won Bryan’s seat in 2000.
• In another repeat of 2000, Glenn
Reese, D-Spartanburg, faced County Council member Steve Parker for
the District 11 seat. Reese was leading late Tuesday with many
precincts still unreported.
The Senate’s most powerful members will be returning to
Columbia.
Notable Republican incumbents who won re-election are Judiciary
chairman Glenn McConnell, R-Charleston; Finance chairman Hugh
Leatherman, R-Florence; and soon-to-be Education chairman John
Courson, R-Richland.
Prominent Democrats headed back in January include John Drummond,
D-Greenwood; John Land, D-Clarendon; and Tommy Moore, D-Aiken.
Some of the new faces headed to Columbia include:
• Kent Williams, D-Orangeburg, who
ran unopposed after defeating incumbent Maggie Glover in a
contentious primary fight.
Williams fought off both Glover and businessman Tim Norwood after
the initial primary results were thrown out by election officials
because of fraud allegations.
• Chip Campsen, R-Charleston, a
former aide to Sanford. He defeated Republican state Sen. John Kuhn
in a runoff election earlier this year.
Campsen, along with Jones from Sumter and Richland’s Wingate, ran
campaigns in which they allied themselves closely with Sanford.
This election could be a test of whether the governor’s
popularity has coattails and also could determine how successful he
will be in working with the Senate.
Sanford’s relationship with the Legislature has been strained,
culminating with the governor bringing live pigs to the General
Assembly last spring to protest what he said were pork barrel
projects.
While state elections took a back seat to the U.S. Senate contest
between Jim DeMint and Inez Tenenbaum, the Legislature is expected
to tackle big issues in the year ahead.
One of the most important involves potential changes to Senate
rules that would make filibusters less likely.
Senators grappled with numerous filibusters last session—over
seat belts, minibottles and university building projects. Some were
frustrated that key legislation withered on the vine as a
result.
The Senate also likely will weigh in on Sanford’s proposal to
restructure state government, tax relief and education funding. |