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Home Front: Politix
Sanford confidant Davis confers with Sanfords, staff
2009-07-02
Sen. Tom Davis, Gov. Mark Sanford's former chief of staff, said Wednesday he has spoken with both the governor and First Lady Jenny Sanford about the governor's future. Davis, in a statement, said only after those conversations and conversations with Attorney General Henry McMaster and SLED Chief Reggie Lloyd will he take a public position on Sanford's future.

"Obviously I have tremendous concern for my friends, Mark and Jenny Sanford and their family, but I also have a job to do as an elected official," said Davis, a Beaufort Republican. "Before any important decision I make comes due diligence, and I owe it to my constituents to perform that due diligence before taking a public position on an issue as important as whether to call for the resignation of a duly-elected statewide official."

"Accordingly, I have met today with the governor and members of his staff; I have had telephone conversations with my friend, Jenny Sanford; I have talked with the governor's legislative supporters and opponents; and I have talked with key reform leaders who have been fighting for the issues I believe in -- fiscal responsibility, limited government, market principles and individual liberty."

On Wednesday afternoon, Senate President Pro Tempore Glenn McConnell became the latest -- and one of the most significant -- members of the S.C. legislature to say the governor should consider stepping down after admitting to an affair.

In a statement, McConnell encouraged Sanford to do the right thing: "Neither I nor my colleagues in the General Assembly can require that the Governor resign," McConnell said in his statement. "That decision is his alone. I do believe, however, that the Governor has lost the support of the people that is needed to govern. Therefore, I would ask the Governor to look in his heart and decide whether with his family situation and the public uproar over what he has done and said locally and nationally whether he can lead our state for the remainder of his term."

Ten Republican state senators have asked the governor to step down, while others say they are leaning in that direction. The Associated Press is reporting that 14 Republican state senators are supporting a resignation, which is a majority of the 27 GOP members.
Posted by:Fred

#4  Man up, conduct a professional handover, step down and end the sophomoric drama. You're doing the party and the State of South Carolina no good, no good at all. Worst of all, Barry and his cadre love it!
Posted by: Besoeker   2009-07-02 14:05  

#3  So, just because it is 'common enough' behavior, it's ok? I am sick and tired of the hypocrisy in this country. Than man is scum. Besides the infidelity, he vanished for several days. The fucking governor of a state was just gone, no one knew where he was. Not only that, he was using TAXPAYER money to fund his little affair. Sickening. And more sickening that people are defending him. If he was democrat you hypocrits would be demanding that he step down. And he should step down. He is a disgrace.
Posted by: AllahHateMe   2009-07-02 10:52  

#2  He needs to just shut up.
Posted by: OldSpook   2009-07-02 10:13  

#1  You stay right where you are, Sanford. Doing a clinton is not strange for the political class even as sad as it is. Just stay off the cameras for a while. Could you afford to just do governer work for awhile? And shut up and lay low and fix infrastructure and stuff?
Posted by: newc   2009-07-02 00:36  

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