SC Gov. Sanford set to reject stimulus millions

Ruff Ryder

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NEW YORK — South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford has been the leading voice among Republican governors who have criticized President Barack Obama's $787 billion economic stimulus plan as a pork-laden boondoggle that will plunge the country further into debt. It's won him praise from many conservatives and boosted his national profile, fueling speculation he will run for president in 2012.

http://www.comcast.net/articles/news-national/20090313/Sanford.Stimulus/
 
Dangerous political move there. I know this guy is PRAYING the economy doesn't recover. If the rest of the states that have taken the stimulus package recovers, while SC does not. He's going to be out of a job.
 
He can't reject parts of it or the entire thing.

The federal govt does not allow rejection of parts of the funds. Its take it or leave it.

He can't even leave it because the legislature passed a law allowing them to accept it.

He's a lying scumbag piece of shit who has no shot at any house except an outhouse. This is what he's doing when SC's unemployment is 2nd in the nation - only behind Michigan - 10.4.%
:hmm:

The muthafucka should be exiled from the country.
 
Dangerous political move there. I know this guy is PRAYING the economy doesn't recover. If the rest of the states that have taken the stimulus package recovers, while SC does not. He's going to be out of a job.
Nah bruh wrong take. This guy has done his two terms here. He's looking at being the next GOP pres candidate with his bizarro dem routine.

By summer he wont be able to walk the streets. 2nd worst unemployment in the country and this state never had a fuckin automotive industry boom to look back at.
 
source: McClatchy

White House slaps down Sanford on stimulus plan

WASHINGTON — White House Budget Director Peter Orszag on Monday rejected South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford's request to use up to $700 million of his state's economic stimulus funds to pay down state government debt.

Sanford thanked the White House and said he would send the Obama administration another, "more narrowly tailored" request Tuesday to use stimulus money to reduce his state's debt.

Sanford also accused President Barack Obama of playing a "game of good cop, bad cop" by allowing the Democratic National Committee to begin Monday airing a TV ad criticizing the governor for opposing the $787 billion stimulus, which the president signed last month.

Orszag, responding to a letter Sanford sent to Obama last week, said the $787 billion stimulus bill Obama signed into law last month doesn't allow governors to use money intended for other purposes to instead make debt payments.

"During this severe economic downturn, Congress and the president wanted to provide states and localities with emergency funding in order to prevent the layoffs of teachers, police officers and other vital public servants," Orszag wrote to Sanford.

After citing two specific clauses of the stimulus law, Orszag said:

"Congress has not authorized the executive branch to waive any of the above statutory requirements governing the State Fiscal Stabilization Fund. Accordingly, states' spending . . . must satisfy the statutory requirements."

South Carolina Senate Democratic leader John C. Land III thanked Obama on Monday and accused Sanford of "playing political games while our state suffers."

South Carolina's unemployment rate is 10.4 percent, the nation's highest after Michigan.

A clause in the stimulus bill, crafted by Rep. Jim Clyburn of South Carolina, the No. 3 Democrat in the House of Representatives, authorizes legislatures to seek stimulus funding if governors fail to do so by April 3.

Republican legislators in the state's GOP-controlled General Assembly have advanced a measure to accept South Carolina's share of the stimulus money.

Clyburn praised the White House decision.

"South Carolina's needs are numerous," Clyburn said. "The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act provides sufficient flexibility for states to address those needs as they see fit. I hope the (state) legislature will move forward with plans to draw down recovery funding to meet our needs."

Sanford, who confronted Obama over the stimulus plan in a Dec. 1 meeting of the then-president-elect and 46 governors, last week became the first governor to reject some of the stimulus money. Texas Republican Gov. Rick Perry then followed suit.

"We appreciate the White House's response, as it represents a far more constructive form of dialogue than did the DNC attack ad now running in South Carolina," said Joel Sawyer, Sanford's spokesman.

"It's time for the president's game of 'good cop, bad cop' to end, and therefore we again ask him to end these ads so we can engage in a productive dialogue on the merits of our request," Sawyer said.
 
:roflmao3::roflmao3:

source: McClatchy

Sanford gives in on stimulus, will seek funds for S.C.

By James Rosen | McClatchy Newspapers
WASHINGTON — Gov. Mark Sanford will comply with a midnight Friday stimulus deadline and become the last governor in the nation to seek millions of dollars in federal economic-recovery funds for his state, aides said late Thursday.

Sanford will continue contesting $700 million in education and law enforcement money for South Carolina, but his 11th-hour move to meet the deadline buys time for schools fearing mass teacher layoffs and draconian cuts.

Sanford's month-long fight over stimulus money placed South Carolina in the national spotlight and put him at loggerheads with President Barack Obama.

"Tomorrow the governor is going to send the (Section) 1607 certification for everything except the stabilization funds," Sanford's spokesman, Joel Sawyer, said Thursday evening. "The governor will apply for that (additional) money if the General Assembly is willing to compromise and pay down some debt with it."

<SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00"> Obama has twice rejected Sanford's written requests to use $700 million in State Fiscal Stabilization Fund money to pay off state government debt instead of its stated use to help school districts retain teachers and modernize old schools or build new ones.</SPAN>

White House officials confirmed for the first time Thursday that a 45-day deadline in the $787 billion stimulus bill, which Obama signed into law on Feb. 17, applies only to governors' initial requests for the money — and not to states' formal application for it.

State leaders in Columbia and Washington had thought that midnight Friday was the deadline for actually claiming the $700 million in disputed funds.

Obama aides cheered Sanford's decision to protect most of $8 billion in stimulus funds slated for South Carolina.

"We are pleased with reports that Governor Sanford will join the other 49 governors — Democrats and Republicans — in filing a certification to accept Recovery Act money," said Kenneth Baer, a spokesman for White House Budget Director Peter Orszag.

"The Recovery Act will create or save 3.5 million jobs (nationwide), and we do not want to see the citizens of any state denied the help that it can provide," Baer said.

Obama has claimed that the stimulus package will create or preserve 50,000 jobs in South Carolina, whose 11.4 percent unemployment rate is the nation's second highest after Michigan's.

Sanford will likely continue to tussle with state general assembly leaders from his own Republican Party over his insistence that at least some of the disputed $700 million pay off debt, despite $1.1 billion in state budget cuts already imposed this year because of revenue shortfalls.

Sanford's expected move is an implicit acknowledgement that he'd erroneously claimed for weeks control over only the $700 million in education funds, not over the entire $8 billion package.

In fact, Sanford's failure to request the stimulus funds by midnight Friday would've imperiled all $8 billion reserved for his state.

The stimulus package, an ambitious bid by Obama to jolt the economy, provides $8 billion to South Carolina for Medicaid payments, road and bridge repairs and construction, unemployment benefits, police, tax cuts and a host of other needs.

"The action we are taking tomorrow is perfectly consistent with where we've been throughout the stimulus debate," Sawyer said late Thursday.

In a day filled with brinksmanship, Rep. Jim Clyburn, the House Majority Whip, warned that Sanford was jeopardizing South Carolina's share of the funds.

"Does Governor Sanford intend to meet the minimal prerequisite certification requirement in order to reserve the right for the state to seek funds in the future?" a Clyburn written statement asked. "Or will he put all economic stimulus funding in jeopardy?"

In a letter to Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham on Wednesday, Orszag said that state legislatures lack the authority under the stimulus law to apply for State Fiscal Stabilization Fund money.

Clyburn had crafted a provision in the law that was intended to give legislatures such power and to bypass governors who oppose using federal deficit spending to revive the economy.

Orszag's letter suggests that the Obama administration wouldn't recognize or act on a state resolution applying for the disputed $700 million.

That fact keeps the onus on Sanford to apply for the money, though he now has 75 days — 120 days from the stimulus law's enactment — to do so.

Even if Sanford and the legislative leaders can reach a compromise, it's uncertain how any of the $700 million could be used to pay down state debt after Orszag's explicit instruction, in two letters to him, that the law doesn't permit such use.

Education Secretary Arne Duncan said the Obama administration is working with Clyburn to craft new legislation in Congress that would provide the $700 million to South Carolina should Sanford fail to apply for it in time.

(John O'Connor of The State in Columbia, S.C., contributed to this article.)
 
Republican South Carolina Gov. Is Against The Stimulus Package

Unless it is his package that gets stimulated!

:roflmao::roflmao::roflmao::roflmao:
 
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