Republicans
maintain control of Legislature
JIM
DAVENPORT Associated
Press
COLUMBIA, S.C. - Democrats have gained a seat
in the state Senate, the body they lost control of four years
ago.
Among the Senate's 46 seats - all up for grabs Tuesday - 21 races
were unopposed and incumbents held 18 of those.
The most notable contested race in the upper chamber was the
battle between Democratic Rep. Joel Lourie and Ken Wingate, a
Republican ally of Gov. Mark Sanford, for an open seat in
Columbia.
Through Oct. 13, the two candidates had poured a combined
$683,655 into the contest, making it the Statehouse's most expensive
race this year. The candidates were expected to break the
million-dollar mark by Tuesday.
Unofficial vote totals showed Lourie won with 56 percent of the
vote to Wingate's 44 percent.
Lourie said he felt like he had taken "on the lions. I was a
little bit disappointed and surprised to see the governor take such
an active role in this race."
Wingate's loss was a blow to Sanford, who appeared in ads for the
candidate, said House Democratic Leader James Smith of Columbia.
Sanford "didn't have the clout to deliver in a largely
conservative district," Smith said.
Democrats had promised vigorous fights to take back seats lost to
party switchers in the Senate, but that did not materialize. Greer
Sen. Verne Smith's switch after the 2000 elections came with a big
push from President Bush, but Smith ended up with no Democratic
opponent Tuesday.
Neither Sen. Luke Rankin, a Myrtle Beach lawyer who switched to
the GOP this spring, nor Sen. Billy O'Dell of Ware Shoals, who
switched parties a year ago, faced well-financed challengers.
Unofficial results showed Rankin with 74 percent of the vote to
Democrat Jara Uzenda's 26 percent and O'Dell beat Democrat Jay West,
62 percent to 38 percent.
By early Wednesday, it appeared that the Republican control had
dropped to 26-20 from 27-19.
Even if an incumbent politician switches parties, it's tough to
beat them in an election, College of Charleston political scientist
Bill Moore said. Those party switchers have looked at the numbers in
their districts before deciding to change. "The switching, in part,
was political expediency," Moore said.
In the House, 82 incumbents ran without opposition and five
newcomers were unopposed. Democrats picked up a seat there, too,
trimming the Republican majority to 74-50, down from 75-49 when the
House adjourned last June.
Going into Tuesday's elections, Smith expected to take back two
seats lost when Reps. Bubber Snow of Hemingway and George Bailey of
St. George bolted to the GOP this spring. Smith said he also hoped
to regain the seat of retiring Rep. Harry Stille, a Due West
Republican who switched parties in 2001.
Unofficial results showed Snow losing to Democrat Carl Anderson,
who won with about 60 percent of the vote, and Bailey defeating
Democrat Lachlan McIntosh, 52 percent to 48 percent.
"They threw the whole kitchen sink at him, and the bottom line is
we still beat" McIntosh, said House Majority Leader Jim Merrill,
R-Daniel Island.
Smith said Republicans dumped more than $100,000 into the Bailey
race in the last week. "They really spent a tremendous amount of
money to secure that seat," Smith said.
In Stille's district, Democrat Paul Agnew got 52 percent of the
vote to Republican Sammy Lewis' 46 percent, according to unofficial
returns.
When it was all done, Republicans emerged with one less seat than
they had at the end of the session.
But "we're up one from where we started this time two years ago,"
Merrill said. "It was a fantastic night."
"It sounds like he's trying to wear those rose-colored glasses,"
Smith said. "We'll start out with one more Democrat than where we
were
before." |