Last November, South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford (R) took to the pages of The Wall Street Journal in an effort to publicly repudiate the ongoing talk about states increasing personal and national debt by accepting multi-billion dollar bailouts from Washington.
In an op-ed titled “Don’t Bail Out My State,” Sanford wrote:
I find myself in a lonely position. While many states and local governments are lining up for a bailout from Congress, I went to Washington recently to oppose such bailouts. I may be the only governor to do so.
But I suspect I’m not entirely alone, as there are a lot of taxpayers who aren’t pleased with Christmas coming early for politicians. And I hope these taxpayers make their voices heard before Democrats load up the next bailout train for states with budget deficits.
Though only written three months ago, the dollar amounts Sanford mentioned in his op-ed (”Washington…will borrow every dime of the $150 billion to $300 billion for the “stimulus” bill now being worked on”) seem like a quaint reminder of a pre-porkulus time long past. You have to admit, $150 billion sound like a drop in the bucket only days after all but seven House Democrats, and every Senate Democrat plus Republicans Arlen Specter, Susan Collins, and Olympia Snowe, voted for an $787 billion “stimulus” package that not one of them had read.)
In part because of Sanford’s vocal opposition to accepting bailout money from a federal government that simply borrowed the funds for the loan in the first place, Rep. James Clyburn (D-SC) inserted a clause in the “stimulus” bill that allows state legislatures to, through passage of a concurrent resolution, override Governors who refuse to accept bailout cash, and take the money anyway. Clyburn couldn’t be expected to allow even a portion of his state to get cut out of the free trip to the candy jar, you see, so he needed to make sure an actual fiscally-responsible executive like Sanford couldn’t put an ixNay on the andoutHay for the Palmetto State.
According to The Hill newspaper, in an early January meeting between Congressional Democrats and then-President-elect Barack Obama, “Clyburn complained to Obama that Sanford’s stance would hurt his rural, majority-black district that is suffering from high-unemployment.”
“If it were left up to [Sanford] we would get nothing,” Clyburn told Obama at the time.
House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-OH) has requested that the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service (CRS) look into the Constitutionality of the bill’s provision. Even if the so-called “Clyburn clause” (also known in legislative circles as the “Punish Mark Sanford provision”) remains in place, though, the South Carolina Democrat’s effort to ensure his district didn’t “get nothing” out of a bill that disburses borrowed funds by the billions to states and Democratic supporters to no clear purpose will have provided Sanford with the best of both worlds politically.
Without the Clyburn clause, the passage of the “stimulus” package – which will be signed by President Obama on Monday (or, if he keeps his word on the public review period he promised — an unlikely prospect — sometime between Wednesday and Friday) – would have put Sanford into the unenviable position of being caught between the Scylla of remaining principled by refusing billions in federal dollars earmarked for infrastructure, public works, and other (far less worthwhile) projects – and facing the political fallout that could have resulted from denying struggling portions of his state the “free” aid they think they need –and the Charybdis of abandoning that principled position and attempting to direct the torrents of borrowed cash flowing south from Washington to projects that would actually do some good for underfunded and underperforming areas of the state while attempting to publicly rationalize the decision to ditch his oft-repeated opposition to accepting bailouts funded by increasing debt.
Thanks to Clyburn, though, Sanford has been transported from a vulnerable position on the “stimulus” package to sole occupancy of the catbird’s seat – without having had to change his stance one iota or to take any action that would increase his political vulnerability. The Clyburn clause enables Sanford, secure in the knowledge that the Palmetto state’s legislature will almost certainly vote to overrule his decision, to refuse the nearly $10 billion available to South Carolina under the “stimulus” package.
Once he is overridden, Sanford will be in a position to make every effort to ensure those funds are used as responsibly as possible. Further, he will have been inoculated from the fallout that would have resulted from a decision either to abandon his principled stance and accept the funds himself or to deny his state the “free money” altogether — something which would have created a sizable backlash regardless of the ultimately unstimulative effect of the borrowed cash infusion.
If his state override provision remains intact, Clyburn will have won a small victory, as his state and district will not have been prevented from getting a piece of the borrow-and-spend “stimulus” pie. However, the winner of the war will be Mark Sanford – and he will have Clyburn to thank for providing him the ammunition, and the immunity, with which to achieve that.

Why would Sanford NEED "cover" anyway?
Adjoran Wednesday, February 18th at 4:46PM EST (link)He can’t run again, being in his second term.
Even if his old House seat and both Senate seats were not held by Republicans who show no sign of retiring, Sanford hated Washington during his six years there (he was one of the few who honored their self-imposed “term limit”). The first year in DC, he slept in his office until finally finding a reasonably priced apartment to share with several other Republican congressmen. He never brought his family to DC or considered buying a home there, although as a wealthy man he could have easily afforded it. Instead, he kept his kids in their old schools and commuted home virtually every weekend.
While I believe he would be a strong candidate for national office, I doubt he will seek such for the above reasons. Even so, the single issue of his position on the “stimulus” bill would be unlikely to hurt his candidacy unless he reversed his stance, which would be unlikely.
Clyburn certainly was NOT looking out for Sanford by inserting the clause. He was making sure all the pork he packed into the bill for his own district gets through (knowing he could depend upon the “Republicans” in the legislature, who are like crack addicts when it comes to throwing money around).
I'm fairly certain you didn't actually read the post, Adjoran
Jeff Emanuel Wednesday, February 18th at 5:03PM EST (link)JE
Sigh!
skorrent1 Wednesday, February 18th at 4:59PM EST (link)As long as the actions of “conservative” politicians have to be driven by the search for cover to bring home the bacon to selected constituents even if it is bad for the country/state/district in the medium to long run, we fiscons have a lot of educating/persuading to do.
There was no "search"
Jeff Emanuel Wednesday, February 18th at 5:03PM EST (link)It’s just a case of a D being so driven to get some slop from the trough that he gave Sanford cover in the process — unwittingly, as I say above.
JE
SC and the 10th Amendment
DerKrieger Wednesday, February 18th at 8:00PM EST (link)SC is jumping on the 10th Amendment bandwagon and trying to pass legislation to preserve its sovereignty from federal encroachment. I read this: http://www.scstatehouse.gov/sess118_2009-2010/bills/3509.htm last night and then e-mailed all the sponsors. One of the reps e-maile me back and asked me to call his office to get his “special” e-mail address for like-minded constituents.
I wrote to them to urge that they put language in the bill that would prevent the Feds from forcing the state to take any money. This also applies to Obama’s overturning of welfare reform. If SC can refuse the money then perhaps they can also refuse to add to their welfare rules.
I also asked that they expand the language of the bill to protect South Carolinians from a nationalized health care plan as AZ tried to pass in Nov.
“In questions of power, let no more be heard of confidence in man, but bind him down from mischief by the chains of the Constitution.” - Thomas Jefferson
“I cannot undertake to lay my finger on that article of the Constitution which granted a right to Congress of expending, on objects of benevolence (OBAMACARE – mine), the money of their constituents.” – James Madison
Tell them how you feel
YankeeConservative Wednesday, February 18th at 8:56PM EST (link)go ahead … let em know http://www.recovery.gov/?q=content/contact
OK, and when they take me away to the Ministry of Truth,
Praying Wednesday, February 18th at 10:44PM EST (link)or some such place of punishment, we’ll all know why. I was respectful, but completely honest.
Join the RedState Strike Force
right now Sanford, DeMint look bad, later ???
its_a_right_wing_thing Wednesday, February 18th at 10:22PM EST (link)Right now, people like Sanford and DeMint are coming off as typical Republicans who just don’t “get it” and understand the very people they are elected to represent and are seen as out of touch. However, when these corporate bailouts (stimulus) fail, they are going to look like visionaries and their party will be rewarded justly come Nov. 2010.
Right now people are hurting and looking for answers and are hoping that the Democrats do what they sent them to D.C. to do and they are trying. Only their efforts are miguided. The auto bailouts didn’t work, why would this stimulus?
People elected Democrats for 2 reasons.
1, Obama was not Bush nor Republican
2. do something about the economy 59% of people polled right before the election admitted the ecomomy as their #1 issue. If they can’t change it, people will demand change again and Republicans will start making strides back into power sooner than later.
I used to predict that Republicans would make small gains in 2010 by default. They can’t continue to lose 25+ seats every election like they did in 2006+8 otherwise they literally would have no party in about 14 years. I expected a Gov. win here and there and maybe stop the bleeding in the Sen. by maybe picking up a seat or two for a postitive net gain and the house to either lose a handful of seats or less or possible get out of the election with a net gain of +1-2 or something but now with all the eggs in one basket there is the potential for voter backlash and a landslide come 2010 but more likely 2012 as people are still likely to give them more time.