| Gov. Mark Sanford on Stimulus, Economy | | Print | |
| Written by Patrick Krey | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Sunday, 15 March 2009 21:00 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Before Sanford was governor, he spent six years in Congress where he earned straight “A” ratings from the National Taxpayers Association, the National Rifle Association, and the Gun Owners of America. He was also often one of the few dissenting votes alongside Congressman Ron Paul. That is not to say that Governor Sanford voted exactly like Ron Paul. The New American's Freedom Index (then referred to as the “Conservative Index”) score for Sanford’s time in Congress was a cumulative 78 percent whereas Ron Paul consistently scores 100 percent. In more recent times, Sanford has been praised by the American Conservative Union as the "Most Conservative Governor in America." Gov. Sanford took time out of his schedule to sit down and talk with The New American about the economy, President Obama, and how America can return to its constitutional roots. Governor Mark Sanford: I would summarize it this way. You break your leg tomorrow, and they can give you a bunch of anesthetics which will make you feel okay. You won’t be able to feel the pain. It’ll feel like it’s fine but it’s still broken. With those anesthetics, you might even be able to walk on it and not feel the pain, but you’re liable to do more harm to yourself. And no matter how you cut it, how many pills or shots you take, it’s going to take six weeks to heal your broken leg. So, we have a problem in that debt has grown at three times the rate of the economy in the last 15 years, and we’re going to go through a deleveraging. And it’s going to be painful, and there’s no getting around that. You can take a bunch of medicines that might make it feel like we’re not deleveraging and make it feel as if the problem is going away, but that’s not reality. Gov. Sanford: It’s going to happen. It’s not a question of him “allowing” it to happen. It’s going to happen. First, you need to be honest with the American public with where we are and how we got to the problem we’re in. The bottom line is that through Fed policy and easy money, through Freddie and Fannie, or through requirements on banks to lend to folks who had no capacity to pay it back, there has been a lot of government action that led us to where we are. And now we’re going to pay the piper for those actions. There’s no free lunch in life. It’s something my wife and I have tried to teach our four boys. It’s something we all learned through the school of hard knocks in life. There are consequences to every action. Gov. Sanford: We’re going to go through stimulus legislation with a fine-tooth comb in looking at what makes sense and what doesn’t make sense, and we’re going to come out with where we are on that. It will be examined philosophically and practically, and we’re not through with our deliberation on that. I can unequivocally say we will not be accepting all the money. [For an update on the governor's decision, click here.] TNA: Obama's deficit spending is worrisome, but the unfunded liabilities of U.S. entitlements, like Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid are a ticking time bomb getting ever closer to detonation as the baby boomers retire. How do you propose America deal with the upcoming entitlement problem? Gov. Sanford: David Walker is the former comptroller general of the United States and he joined up with Pete Peterson on something of a fiscal wake-up tour around the country talking about the course we’re on and how unsustainable it is. I would say we’ve got to act soon because time is not in our favor on this one. It’s pretty simple. There’s no easy way out. You’ve got to cut benefits or raise taxes. Or you can do what we’ve been doing: borrowing money, but borrowing money is just a deferred tax. I fall under the school that says if you look at the larger notion of the competitiveness of this country versus other economies around the globe, we will never become more competitive by raising taxes and taking more from the private sector and putting it into the public sector. Gov. Sanford: I think the answer is that our economic conditions are going to drive a change there. Paul Kennedy wrote an interesting book called The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers, and he talked about how economic supremacy was a precursor to military supremacy and that any government who tried to sustain one without the other ultimately fell. The Soviet Union ran very significant military expenditures that they couldn’t sustain based on where their economy was — what Kennedy called “imperial overstretch.” It’s the tendency of every national power to at some point get there. Britain got there many years ago. We got there a long time ago. Gov. Sanford: I’ve really not looked at that one. I’m a southern governor watching the budget in South Carolina and have not really looked at that one. Gov. Sanford: Yes, I think the Founding Fathers were remarkably wise men who were painstakingly detailed in looking at the nature of man, looking at the needs for checks and balances within our political system and instituting them. A lot of the things we’ve gotten into … I remember myself and Tom Campbell being lonely votes against the war in Bosnia because it was really not the constitutional power of the president to send people off to war and because the body bags don’t go back to the Pentagon but to the congressional districts across this country. I do believe America has slipped to where we are as a result of this. Once you move away from the playbook that says government is limited in these ways, there is no end to all the “good” that government can or might do. I do think that adhering to the constitutional moorings is not only important from a standpoint of a limited focus and functioning federal government, it’s also important to the sustainability of our Republic. Gov. Sanford: I love the concept. I think it’s going to take more than just a couple of state legislative bodies passing resolutions to draw a lot of attention. It will take a lot of people marching not just on their state houses but also on Washington, D.C., insisting that the Constitution be obeyed, because until that happens, those provisions will be quietly ignored and the federal government will continue to grow. See also "Obama & Sanford Spar Over Stimulus Funds."
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CD
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... Mark, good answers, but answer the question on Georgia and Russia. If your philosophy of limited gov is sound the answer is obviuos. |
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anonymous
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... Governor Mark Sanford Cries Uncle ….Please Stop! Please Stop! SANFORD ASKS OBAMA TO STOP AD On Friday, the Democratic National Committee is airing that blasts South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford’s opposition to $700 million in stimulus funds for his state. “South Carolina is facing tough times,” the ad goes, “but Gov. Sanford is playing politics instead of doing what’s right. Turning down millions in recovery act funds, putting politics ahead of health care, jobs and schools.” Well, Sanford is now asking for Obama to stop the DNC ad. “My opposition to the stimulus bill,” he said in a statement, “was based on the merits as I saw them and has been well-chronicled, but rather than engaging our administration in that debate, Obama’s Democratic National Committee instead chose to launch a political attack ad against us for not supporting the stimulus plan exactly as the Obama administration saw fit. What may fit in one state may not fit in another, and accordingly I think tailoring stimulus responses makes sense.” Sanford adds, “I don’t think this approach of targeting ads against anyone who sees an issue a little differently represents the kind of so-called ‘change’ many people were voting for in November. In his inaugural, President Obama proclaimed ‘an end to the petty grievances and false promises, the recriminations and worn-out dogmas, that for far too long have strangled our politics.’ It’s in that spirit that I’d respectfully ask him to end this ad, as it shatters the idea of change he so well articulated this fall — and to ask his Democratic National Committee to put an end to this mudslinging and get back to an honest debate about the future of our country.” http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2009/03/16/1838083.aspx |
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Michael Rebmann
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Nice Interview Sanford shares an important quality with Ron Paul. When either of them speak, it is in plain, easily understandable English and it makes sense. The people who oppose them try to fish for crazy convoluted reasons why their ides won't work, but can't justify their own positions with logic and history. |
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anonymous
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... "I think it's time for Mark Sanford to quit being pen pals with the White House and take the money" State Democratic Party Chair Carol Fowler says Governor Mark Sanford needs to spend less time writing letters to President Barack Obama about stimulus funds and more time finding jobs for South Carolinians. WATCH THE VIDEO ON THIS LINK http://www.wolo.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=3142:robins-pkg&catid=43:local-news&Itemid=50 |
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anonymous
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... 2008 South Carolina Constitution ARTICLE XV. IMPEACHMENT SECTION 1. Power of impeachment; vote required; suspension of officer impeached. The House of Representatives alone shall have the power of impeachment in cases of serious crimes or serious misconduct in office by officials elected on a statewide basis, state judges, and such other state officers as may be designated by law. The affirmative vote of two-thirds of all members elected shall be required for an impeachment. Any officer impeached shall thereby be suspended from office until judgment in the case shall have been pronounced, and the office shall be filled during the trial in such manner as may be provided by law. When the Governor is impeached, the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, or, if he be disqualified, the Senior Justice, shall preside, with a casting vote in all preliminary questions. http://www.scstatehouse.gov/scconstitution/a15.htm |
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anonymous
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... Fourth man arrested in connection with Thomas Ravenel cocaine case Federal agents have made a new arrest in the Thomas Ravenel cocaine scandal http://www.postandcourier.com/news/2009/mar/19/fourth_man_arrested_connection_thomas_ra75745/ |
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anonymous
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... Anti-Mark Sanford Rally Planned for April 1, 2009 …angry state residents and state legislators are now facing the prospect of drafting two budgets — one that includes $700 million in federal stimulus funds over the next two years, and one that doesn’t. Sen. Hugh Leatherman says what the Legislature must do, given the uncertainty over whether the state can accept the federal money without the request of Gov. Sanford, who has said he won’t take the money. In a letter to the governor, Leatherman called the situation “chaos” and warned of dire consequences for state schools and prisons without the stimulus money. “Overriding your decision could lead to chaos in the courts,” Leatherman wrote. “Failure to override your decision most assuredly would lead to chaos in the budget.” Rep. Jim Clyburn contends that the U.S. Department of Education could bypass both the governor and legislators to help South Carolina schools directly. Leatherman’s view that the matter could be headed for the courts might be the most clearheaded. That can’t be good for anyone: It would mean that even if South Carolina eventually gets the money, it could be long after it’s most needed. Opponents of Sanford’s position plan to hold a rally on Wednesday, April 1, in front of the State House. The rally will run from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. |
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anonymous
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... FACEBOOK MEMBERS CALL FOR THE IMPEACHMENT OF MARK SANFORD http://www.wistv.com/global/video/flash/popupplayer.asp?ClipID1=3604848&h1=Sanford's stance has plenty of people talking, Jack Kuenzie reports&vt1=v&at1=Political&d1=183300&LaunchPageAdTag=Political&activePane=info&rnd=14072793 |
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Governor Mark Sanford (R) of South Carolina has been a vocal critic of President Barack Obama’s stimulus plan, and in the process has become one of the most prominent fiscal conservatives in the country. Recently, he made national news when he announced his plan to accept the stimulus funds but sought a waiver from the president to use 25 percent of it to pay down state debt rather than spend it on suggested programs (the other 75 percent is determined by formulas). If Obama doesn’t grant the waiver, Sanford has said he will reject the funds.
