COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - South Carolina
Democrats took aim Tuesday at Republican Gov. Mark Sanford, praising
legislators for overriding vetoes and putting together a budget that
adequately funds education, law enforcement and health care agencies.
"We really had a good session, despite the lack of leadership by Gov.
Mark Sanford," said Senate Minority Leader John Land, D-Manning. "The
Democrats, working with levelheaded, responsible Republicans, effected the
best budget that we have seen in years in this South Carolina General
Assembly."
While Sanford worked to cut funding
for public education, Land said, Democrats and Republicans worked together
to pass the first budget in years that put as much money into schools as
required by the Education Finance Act.
Sanford vetoed more than $28 million from public college budgets - cuts
in four-year and technical school programs represented a third of his
vetoes. He also proposed cutting $1 million from the Department of
Education for testing. Those were overridden along with all but a handful
of the governor's more than 100 vetoes.
Sanford's spokesman Will Folks said even after the vetoes there was
$190 million in new money for education, $80 million for Medicaid, $37
million for law enforcement and $185 million "for the General Assembly to
spend on whatever it wanted."
Sanford's budget vetoes show fiscal responsibility, Folks said.
"We've been very clear on where we stand as to changing the status
quo," he said. A "growing number of legislators" are also on board with
those efforts, he said.
Some of Sanford's vetoes show a lack of understanding of the needs of
South Carolinians, said Sen. Tommy Moore, D-Clearwater, who has announced
he will run for governor in 2006.
"When you start talking about vetoing Special Olympics and you start
talking about vetoing poison control centers, that's pretty calculated and
cold-hearted to people who can't help themselves," Moore said.