COLUMBIA--In the six months that Republican
Gov. Mark Sanford has been in office, few of his major legislative
priorities have taken effect.
Political observers say it's all been part of the learning curve for
Sanford, a former U.S. congressman and businessman who had no previous
experience in state government.
Communication problems could be the reason Sanford's agenda moved
slowly this session, said Winthrop University political scientist Scott
Huffmon.
"I think in the beginning, there was not as much communication between
the governor and the Legislature as there should have been," Huffmon said.
Sanford said he and his staffers are learning how to better communicate
with lawmakers.
"Did we get it perfect? No. But I'd say our legislative team is coming
along," Sanford said.
The complaints about lack of communication came after Sanford's first
vetoes.
In February, Sanford vetoed a bill affecting Charleston County election
offices, saying it was illegal local legislation. The veto upset a number
of lawmakers who said Sanford did not contact members of the delegation to
tell them the veto was coming as previous governors had done, Huffmon
said.
Lawmakers also griped when Sanford vetoed a bill that would spend
$500,000 to create a memorial for law enforcement officers on Statehouse
grounds. Sanford said the money could be spent elsewhere in this tight
budget year.
Rep. Bobby Harrell, R-Charleston, said if the governor would have
talked early on with House leaders about his disapproval, two days of
floor debate on the issue could have been avoided. But Harrell said the
situation is improving.
"As the session progressed, we began to have more and more contact,"
Harrell said. "I expect that to continue. He's a little different as a
governor and he's not used to dealing with the Legislature."
A real estate developer, Sanford served as congressman for the coastal
1st District from 1995 to 2001.
"I'm the first governor in 50 years who isn't a product of the
Legislature," Sanford said. "I think that if you're new to a system, and
given the number of different moving parts in this system, frankly, it is
impossible to communicate with every single part."
Lawmakers seem to be giving Sanford some slack during the learning
process.
"He's new at this," said Sen. Robert Ford, D-Charleston. "He's done a
great job as far as being new at the process. But he's got some growing
pains."
Perhaps because of those growing pains, Sanford's agenda has not moved
far this session.
Early on, Sanford, who defeated incumbent Democratic Gov. Jim Hodges in
November 2002, pushed education reform, government restructuring and tax
reform.
He supported bills that would add conduct grades to student report
cards and give school districts flexibility to spend funds.
A key piece of Sanford's agenda has been restructuring. He said state
government costs too much to run and isn't as efficient as it should be.
Sanford has acknowledged that the bill involves major reform and would
not be resolved in the first half of the General Assembly's two-year
session. But he said he has received positive feedback from lawmakers and
is encouraged about the legislation's prospects for next year.
The biggest defeat this year has been a proposal to cut income taxes
and raise the state's cigarette tax by 53 cents a pack. Sanford thinks he
has the votes to get the bill passed next year.