Harrell attack
latest attempt by D.C. group to control S.C.
government
By CINDI ROSS SCOPPE Associate Editor
WHEN LEGISLATORS suddenly found themselves with extra tax revenue
this year, House Ways and Means Chairman Bobby Harrell decided it
was more important to spend $52 million of it eliminating the
so-called “marriage penalty” and slashing the estate tax than
re-hiring more laid-off teachers or further replenishing the
diminished ranks of Highway Patrol troopers or prison guards.
He convinced the House to pass a bill committing the state to
using surplus tax collections to make those cuts. When the Senate
passed a budget that used the money to help pay for essential
services, he led the House in amending it with the actual tax cuts.
Then he led House budget negotiators’ successful effort to win
Senate support for the cuts.
While he was doing all this, a Washington anti-tax group whose
only apparent S.C. priority up to that point this year had been
reducing that estate tax was putting the finishing touches on a TV
ad campaign calling Mr. Harrell “the face of wasteful government
spending in South Carolina.”
The ad drew harsh criticism from anti-tax groups in South
Carolina, who were blindsided by what they considered an unfair,
inaccurate and harmful attack.
What happened next was even more bizarre — and telling.
On Friday, the Washington group, Americans for Tax Reform, ran
full-page ads in The State to thank “the South Carolina legislators
who voted to cut taxes.” The ads, referring to Mr. Harrell’s $52
million cut, singled out Gov. Mark Sanford, House Speaker David
Wilkins and Sen. John Courson, and listed 63 other legislators as
“officials who fought for South Carolina’s hard-working
families.”
Mr. Harrell’s name was nowhere to be found. Neither were the
names of four of the other five budget negotiators, without whose
approval the tax cuts could not have become law.
That’s because the ad wasn’t actually about cutting taxes. It was
about the group’s “taxpayer protection pledge,” by which legislators
agree to take marching orders from Washington. Americans for Tax
Reform is best known for sponsoring the anti-tax pledge and then
pummeling any signer who later supports a tax increase it finds
offensive. Outside the Congress, South Carolina has been its biggest
success: a nation-leading 33 percent of senators and 40 percent of
House members have signed. But Mr. Harrell isn’t among them, so he
gets no praise for cutting taxes.
Americans for Tax Reform chief of staff Damon Ansell acknowledges
the newspaper ad was about the tax pledge. But despite his assurance
that the Harrell attack was part of the group’s campaign against
government-funded sports stadiums, there are indications that the
pledge was key to that ad as well.
Last week, Mr. Ansell sent an e-mail to Mr. Harrell’s office
recapping a phone conversation about the TV ad, which claimed Mr.
Harrell “secretly grabbed over $5 million to sponsor a football game
in Charleston.”
“Last night I said I would request a meeting with ATR’s executive
council to discuss this issue,” Mr. Ansell wrote. “And one of the
items that would come up is whether your candidate had signed the
pledge. I said if he was a signer it sure would make for an easier
discussion. Additionally I asked about the possibility of not
funding the (football) stadium in future years.” (The full text of
the e-mail is at www.thestate.com/mld/thestate/8755697.htm.)
Mr. Ansell says he was suggesting ways his group might look
favorably on Mr. Harrell in the future, not offering to pull the ad
in return for a pledge.
That may be true, but Rep. Bill Sandifer said that when he asked
Mr. Ansell not to run the ad to begin with, he got the impression it
never would have been made if Mr. Harrell had been a pledge signer.
That impression was bolstered in his mind when the ad ran in
Columbia, on days the Legislature was in town, and not in Mr.
Harrell’s hometown.
“I think it’s a scare tactic” aimed at other lawmakers, he told
me. “I don’t think it works, but that’s exactly what this is.”
Mr. Harrell says he has been overwhelmed by the support from Mr.
Sandifer and other House Republicans, more than a third of whom told
him they called the Washington group to protest. Several told him
they were rescinding their pledges.
“I’ve never signed any of those pledges,” Mr. Harrell said. “I
didn’t sign the anti-gambling pledge, the gun pledge. The only
people I’ve pledged my vote to is the 33,000 people I represent in
Charleston. I see my vote as an almost covenant with those people,
and I’m not giving it to anybody else.”
But Americans for Tax Reform doesn’t want legislators answering
to their voters. It wants legislators to answer to Americans for Tax
Reform.
The group doesn’t simply oppose tax increases. Its goal is to cut
taxes and government in the United States by half by 2025. To reach
that goal, you could eliminate all spending on public schools and
colleges in South Carolina, and eliminate Social Security and
Medicare — or else eliminate all other state, local and federal
spending. Take Mark Sanford’s word for it: You can’t get there by
merely cutting waste.
The group can only reach its extremist goal if it can control the
members of Congress and the members of the South Carolina General
Assembly and every other elected official throughout the
country.
But Mr. Sandifer, one of the most fiscally conservative members
of the House, thinks the attack on Mr. Harrell could backfire. He
certainly hopes so.
“We have an out-of-state group, not centered in South Carolina,
and their representatives in South Carolina didn’t even know about
this,” Mr. Sandifer said. “We’ve got people in another state trying
to tell South Carolina how to do its business. And I think every
single South Carolinian should be offended by that.”
Ms. Scoppe can be reached at cscoppe@thestate.com. |