By The Editor | July 16th, 2007 | 13 comments

We don’t read the online version of the Wall Street Journal anymore because they have switched to a “paid subscription only” platform and we try to boycott all MSM news organizations dumb enough to make this fatal flub. That said, the first two paragraphs of this piece seem to set up South Carolina Republicans as the perfect anecdote of GOP-led failures in the South. High five!

The Republican-led South Carolina legislature was in the final throes of a bitter session last month when word of criminal charges against a high-ranking state official swept through both chambers.

A federal grand jury had just handed up an indictment against Treasurer Thomas Ravenel, scion of one of the state’s leading political families, for allegedly distributing cocaine. Mr. Ravenel, who had recently defeated a Democratic incumbent who held the office for 36 years, was the statewide chairman for former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani’s presidential campaign, in what has historically been a decisive early primary state. [VALERIE BAUERLEIN - Wall Street Journal]

We think that’s a little harsh, but few Republicans in the state will disagree that we have lost our way.

____________

UPDATE: We have posted more of the story below the fold.

Despite their control of nearly every elected statewide position and huge majorities in both houses of the legislature, South Carolina Republicans have been unable to deliver on significant campaign promises, including a program that would give state residents vouchers to help pay for private schools.

In May, a split among Republican blocs allowed a coalition of Democrats and some Republicans to engineer the selection of a Democrat for a rare opening on the state Supreme Court. The party’s once-tight control of state spending has weakened. The state’s current $6 billion budget now includes a $9 million grant fund for pet projects, such as festivals celebrating pork and catfish in various legislative districts. Last month, Senate leaders, angered by what they saw as an attempt to blame them for a budgetary logjam, crashed a news conference held by Gov. Mark Sanford and House leaders in a bid to tell their side of the story.

The squabbling has been made worse by scandals involving alleged personal misconduct. Last month’s indictment in U.S. District Court in Columbia of the 44-year-old Mr. Ravenel, a colorful Charleston developer known as T-Rav by friends on his MySpace page, followed by days a no-contest plea by a Republican state representative to charges of making threats against his estranged wife’s boyfriend.

Cockfighting Ring

Last year the state’s Republican former agriculture commissioner was sentenced to federal prison on extortion charges related to a cockfighting ring. The state’s 38-year-old lieutenant governor, Andre Bauer, another rising Republican star who was close to Mr. Ravenel, was pulled over twice for speeding, but wasn’t ticketed even though he was clocked on one occasion last year at 101 miles an hour.

The legislature just appropriated $90,000 a year so Mr. Bauer could have a driver and security detail. Mr. Bauer’s chief of staff said the lieutenant governor regrets the speeding incidents, but that they weren’t related to his getting a driver and security detail.

The day after Mr. Ravenel’s indictment, state Republican Party Chairman Katon Dawson issued a public scolding, warning members of his party that personal misconduct and legislative double-dealing were a threat to the party. He reiterated his plea in an op-ed article published July 3 in The (Columbia) State newspaper, saying he was getting constant calls and emails indicating an unprecedented “sustained unhappiness” with Republicans. Unless officeholders straightened up, he said, “grass-roots activists will not just revolt with their votes, they’ll revolt with their apathy — and that would cripple this country.”

South Carolina House Majority Leader James H. Merrill says his Charleston constituents frequently ask why he can’t get Republicans “to act like Republicans.”

“You’re going to end up alienating voters,” Rep. Merrill said. “You saw a little bit of it in Washington. That’s why every 20 years, the pendulum swings the other way.”

Mr. Giuliani, who already faces skepticism from Christian conservatives because he has been married three times and because of his moderate stance on abortion and gay rights, expressed shock at the Ravenel charges and named a new state chairman for his campaign. However, Mr. Ravenel’s father, former U.S. Rep. Arthur Ravenel Jr., remains a regional campaign chairman and one of Mr. Giuliani’s most visible supporters in the state.

Democrats already have seized on the elder Mr. Ravenel’s longstanding support of flying the Confederate flag at the South Carolina state capitol, and on references he made in 2000 to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Mr. Ravenel referred to the NAACP as the “National Association for Retarded People.” Mr. Ravenel said yesterday he wasn’t sorry about his remarks but didn’t mean to give offense to the retarded. He has previously said that he mistakenly transposed the name of the civil-rights organization with an advocacy group for the mentally disabled with which he worked in the past.

The elder Mr. Ravenel has another son with Down syndrome. Elliott Bundy, a spokesman for Mr. Giuliani, declined this week to comment on demands by Democrats that Mr. Giuliani condemn Mr. Ravenel’s previous remarks.

Treatment Program

According to his attorney, the younger Mr. Ravenel has embarked on a 30-day treatment program at an Arizona facility. Gov. Sanford has suspended him temporarily; under South Carolina law, he would automatically lose his office if convicted.

The Republican turmoil has raised some Democratic hopes that parts of the South may no longer be as lockstep in support of the Republican Party. But Donald L. Fowler, a former chairman of the Democratic National Committee and the husband of Carol Khare Fowler, South Carolina’s Democratic Party chairwoman, cautions that Republican fatigue doesn’t yet necessarily portend broad Democratic comebacks, particularly in South Carolina.

He says it would require a major demographic shift, such as an influx of people from other parts of the country, and a major economic change, such as a depression, to change the landscape.

“At least where we are now, Democrats don’t have the wherewithal to take advantage of the split in the Republican Party,” Mr. Fowler said. [Political Woes Dog Republicans Across the South, VALERIE BAUERLEIN - Wall Street Journal]


13 Responses to “WSJ rips S.C. Republicans”

  1. 1.
    Posted by You can run on 07/16/07 at 3:09 pm

    ..but you can’t hide.

    If Ravenel is convicted of distribution of cocaine, he can serve as much as 20 years in prison. I would say that it is more likely that he will cut a “plea deal” to serve a short amount of time behind bars along with probation.

    If Ravenel cuts a “plea deal”, in other words, “pleads guilty” then the Feds should insist that he roll over on a “Bigger Fish” If he does not roll over, then he should do some serious jail time with the rest of the “Cocaine Distributors”.

  2. 2.
    Posted by steve on 07/16/07 at 7:05 pm

    Why do you think his “dealer” is in jail and he is not? If you think Tommy will do a minute in prison, you are delusional.

  3. 3.
    Posted by west_rhino on 07/17/07 at 8:52 am

    Given the MSM’s fifth column inch of fifth columnists, I’m not at all suprised that WSJ skipped the (failed) Lt Gov candidate that lobbied for cockfighting intrests since he’s a Dem, though one suspects that will, in a pharisical dunning of the “backwards South” in general backhandedly surface once the SC Dem primary selects one other than teh annointed of the WSJ.

  4. 4.
    Posted by g on 07/17/07 at 10:56 am

    Thomas Ravenel is a joke. He is a disgrace to the Republican Party. I was proud to vote against him in the 2006 election. That was the first Democrat I ever voted for. Thomas Ravenel was the worst candidate possible for the job.

  5. 5.
    Posted by rickybobby on 07/17/07 at 11:35 am

    steve get your facts right.

    The dealer is in jail on a STATE cocaine charge that T-Rav had no part of. T-Rav and the dealer both received the same bail after their arraignment in Federal Court.

    And West Rhino the WSJ is conservative compared to the rest of MSM and has the most conservative editorial page in America. Try reading it sometime.

  6. 6.
    Posted by Peas N Carrots on 07/20/07 at 9:23 am

    “T Rav”, “Hashmere”, and “Blogger Bauer”, are like Peas N Carrots

  7. 7.
    Posted by Anonymous on 07/24/07 at 8:33 am

    “Addiction is a treatable disease,” I hope Sierra Tuscon cured Thomas Ravenel of “Cocaine Distribution Disease”,
    while he was out by the pool, horseback riding, and playing golf.

  8. 8.
    Posted by Anonymous on 07/24/07 at 8:34 am

    … and distributing a quantity of cocaine.

    IT DOESN’T SAY ANYTHING ABOUT: “He was just sharing with friends” or “He was not selling cocaine” IT DOESN’T SAY THAT!

    He was indicted by the Grand Jury for “cocaine distribution”.

  9. 9.
    Posted by Anonymous on 07/24/07 at 8:38 am

    The Cocaine trade changes the financial, social, and moral fabric of a community, and it places everyone in danger, big time. It causes an exponential increase in the crime rate, i.e. Criminal Domestic Violence, Rape, Murder, Armed Robbery, Malicious Injury to Property, etc… the list goes on and on. Not to mention the illegal drug trafficking and distribution. Has Thomas Ravenel caused harmed to other people? He11 Yes! Has he caused damaged the reputation of the State of South Carolina? He11 Yes! Has he caused damage to the reputation of the Republican Party? He11 Yes! For anyone to say that Ravenel is just having a cocaine party and sharing with friends and not harming anyone is in denial.

  10. 10.
    Posted by Anonymous on 07/24/07 at 8:45 am

    Republican Lieutenant Governor Andre Bauer, who ran on the statewide GOP ticket with Ravenel last year, told NewsChannel 15, “Thomas is a friend of mine, and you don’t leave friends in a difficult time.

    Republican Lieutenant Governor Andre Bauer, who ran on the statewide GOP ticket with Ravenel last year, told NewsChannel 15, “Thomas is a friend of mine, and you don’t leave friends in a difficult time.

  11. 11.
    Posted by Anonymous on 07/24/07 at 8:46 am

    The U. S. Attorney said that “Thomas Ravenel was sharing Cocaine with friends”

  12. 12.

    Anonymous – You feel better now?

  13. 13.
    Posted by Ima on 07/29/07 at 1:14 pm

    Spinach Wins First Prize Unfortunately Andre Bauer Does Not

    http://melsruminations.blogspot.com/2006/04/spinach-wins-first-prize-unfortunately.html

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