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Claudia Kennedy endorses Jim Rex

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

Campaign News

(HILTON HEAD) Lt. General Claudia Kennedy (Ret.) today became the latest high profile South Carolina leader to endorse Jim Rex for Governor. Citing his experience, his credentials, and his plan for moving South Carolina forward, the nation’s first female three-star general said she will work hard to ensure his election.

“South Carolina’s security is at risk in this election, and Jim Rex is the only candidate – Democrat or Republican – who has demonstrated the ability to lead in these uncertain and difficult times. His plan to create jobs at the intersection of effective public education reform, workforce readiness, and economic development is exactly what we need to turn this state around,” she said.

Kennedy was commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the U.S. Army in 1969. She served two tours in Germany and one tour in South Korea and focused much of her military career in the fields of intelligence and cryptology. On May 21, 1997, Kennedy became the first woman in the U.S. Army to hold a three-star rank. She served as Army Deputy Chief of Staff for Intelligence and is a member of the Military Intelligence Hall of Fame.

In 2008, Kennedy was mentioned as a possible running mate for then-Senator Barack Obama and was a featured speaker at the 2008 Democratic National Convention. She resides in Hilton Head, South Carolina.

“I am honored and humbled to have a pioneering leader like Claudia Kennedy in my corner,” said Rex.

Tags: Endorsements
Posted in News Posts | No Comments »

Win Dixie: The Old South is ripe for Democratic gains this November

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

Published on The New Republic
By Ed Kilgore

As we all understand, Republicans are about to have a pretty good election in November. Much of the GOP excitement revolves around congressional races that could unseat “red-state” Democrats who won during the 2006 or 2008 cycles, along with a number of incumbents (some of whom have decided to retire) who have been around much longer. Ground zero for the Republican tsunami is, of course, the Deep South, where in some areas John McCain did better in 2008 than George W. Bush did in 2004, and where every available indicator shows the president to be very unpopular among white voters.

But beneath this storyline, some odd and counterintuitive things are going on. In three Deep South states, Georgia, Alabama, and South Carolina, Democrats have a decent chance of retaking long-lost governorships, in part because of infighting among Republican candidates, and in part because Republican rule in those states has not been terribly successful or popular. It’s far too early to make predictions, but it’s possible that we’re in for a repeat of the astounding gubernatorial Trifecta that Democrats pulled off in those same three states in 1998. That event confounded widespread assessments that the South had become a one-party GOP region, and it could happen again, in even more unlikely circumstances.

Our own appraisal begins in Georgia, with one of the surprise winners of 1998, former Governor Roy Barnes. Barnes lost his reelection bid in 2002 to Sonny Perdue, a party-switching state senator, despite the power of incumbency and a huge financial advantage. Since then, Barnes has regularly admitted his mistakes. And, amazingly enough, in the latest Georgia gubernatorial poll, he’s running ahead of every single Republican candidate.

Meanwhile, Georgia Republicans, who have dominated state politics since 2002, are having some serious problems with their own gubernatorial bench. The consistent frontrunner in the polls, longtime insurance commissioner John Oxendine, is awash in ethics allegations about contributions from the insurance companies that he is responsible for regulating. His record is so blatantly bad that none other than Erick Erickson, the Georgia-based proprietor of the nationally influential, hard-core conservative web site RedState, has said he’d vote for Barnes if Oxendine is the GOP nominee.

Rather pathetically, the alternative to Oxendine and the favorite of some party insiders is Representative Nathan Deal of Georgia’s Ninth District (like Perdue, a party-switcher), who recently said he would resign his congressional seat after a health care vote to concentrate on his gubernatorial campaign. As it happens, Deal’s resignation managed to short-circuit a House Ethics Committee investigation into a no-bid state auto-salvage contract that was awarded to a company which Deal controls. The insider buzz in Atlanta is that Deal was motivated to resign, in part, because of panic among Georgia Republican pooh-bahs who worried that Oxendine would walk away with the gubernatorial nomination on name id alone.

The rest of the Republican gubernatorial hopefuls are struggling as well. The entire party, and several of the gubernatorial candidates, were tainted by association with disgraced former House Speaker Glenn Richardson, who was forced to resign after a lurid sex-and-lobbying scandal. The one candidate who seems ethically starchy, Secretary of State Karen Handel, has struggled to raise the money necessary to win, and also suffers from the perception that she’s the unpopular Sonny Perdue’s chosen successor.

All these Republican problems could eventually fade, and Roy Barnes must also navigate a Democratic primary against Attorney General Thurbert Baker, a law-’n-order conservative who is one of the nation’s longest-serving African American statewide elected officials (as well as two other lesser but credible opponents). Nevertheless at present, Barnes—or Baker, if he could somehow upset Barnes—looks entirely viable for November.

Next door in Alabama, you’d think that the Democratic gubernatorial frontrunner, Congressman Artur Davis, wouldn’t stand a chance. He’s a member of the much-hated United States Congress; he’s African American; he’s a close personal friend of Barack Obama; and he’s frequently been tagged, like the president, as an Ivy League-educated, twenty-first-century–style black politician. But the sparse public polling available shows Davis in a very strong position for the general election, assuming that he dispenses with a primary challenge from state agriculture commissioner Ron Sparks, who’s been struggling to raise money. Davis, who has long nursed gubernatorial ambitions, carefully tailored his congressional record to Alabama public opinion: He voted against health care reform in the House, and he was also the first Congressional Black Caucus member (and, for that matter, the first one on the Ways and Means Committee) to call for Charlie Rangel to step aside from his powerful chairmanship.

Meanwhile, there is no real frontrunner in the Republican gubernatorial primary, which bids fair to become an ideological flame war. Back in 2002, the “establishment” candidate, state Senator Bradley Byrne, made the fatal mistake of voting for a-tax reform initiative that was soundly defeated in an emphatic expression of Alabamians’ mistrust of government. Tim James, son of former conservative Democratic and Republican Governor Fob James, was one of the main opponents of that initiative, and he will bring it up constantly. Meanwhile Christian Right warhorse Roy Moore, the famous “Ten Commandments Judge,” is actually running second to Byrne in early polls. All of the dynamics in the race will pull the GOP candidates to the hard-right, while Artur Davis continues to occupy the political center; and his candidacy will almost certainly boost African American turnout to near-2008 levels. That means anything could happen in November.

South Carolina is often thought of as the most Republican of Southern states. But Mark Sanford, the disgraced incumbent governor, has complicated his party’s prospects. Meanwhile, an ideological civil war is brewing that reflects the growing tension between the state’s two Republican senators, right-wing bomb thrower Jim DeMint and the more moderate Lindsey Graham (Graham, long suspect among home-state conservatives for his friendship with John McCain and his occasional bipartisanship, has recently been formally censured by two of South Carolina’s county GOP organizations for a variety of sins). As in Georgia and Alabama, the Republican gubernatorial field is a mess: Nobody is a frontrunner and all the candidates are stampeding to the hard right. And I do mean hard right. In a sign of the times, Lieutenant Governor Andre Bauer, who has few friends in the state’s Republican establishment, delivered a speech comparing recipients of subsidized school lunches to “stray animals” who should no longer be fed unconditionally. While he took a few shots from fellow Republicans for his indiscreet language, nobody disputed, and some praised, his basic premise that any form of public assistance corrupts its recipients and should come with some sort of reciprocal obligation.

The frontrunners in early polls are Bauer and Attorney General Henry McMaster. Upstate Congressman Gresham Barrett, who must overcome the opprobrium of voting for TARP, is close behind. Meanwhile, Sanford’s protégé, state Representative Nikki Haley (who was even endorsed by the governor’s ex-wife), is trying to push the campaign hard right by opposing any expenditure of federal stimulus dollars in this high-unemployment state. At a recent candidate forum, when the rivals were pushed to call themselves “DeMint Republicans” or “Graham Republicans,” Bauer and Haley flatly identified with DeMint, while McMasters and Barrett dodged the question.

On the Democratic side, a Rasmussen poll in December showed the front-running Democrat, State School Superintendent Jim Rex, actually beating Bauer and running within single digits against other GOP candidates. (State Representative Vincent Sheheen is also a credible Democratic candidate). Again, anything could happen, but the assumption that Republicans have a lock on this state’s elections is as dubious as the same assumption back in 1998.

So, at a time when Democrats are despairing of good news, it’s important to understand that the donkey isn’t quite dead, even in the Deep South. There are consequences to Republican extremism and malfeasance in office. And, when GOP candidates battle for first place on the crazy train of contemporary conservatism, it’s Democrats who stand to benefit.

Published on The New Republic (http://www.tnr.com)

Tags: democratic candidates for governor
Posted in News Posts | No Comments »

Aiken Superintendent Endorses Rex

Monday, March 8th, 2010

Campaign News

(COLUMBIA) – State Superintendent of Education Jim Rex today received the endorsement of Aiken School District Superintendent Beth Everitt.  She joins forty-eight of the state’s school district superintendents, who, in an unprecedented move, have come together to voice their support for Rex as he seeks to become South Carolina’s next Governor.

Other district superintendents endorsing Rex are:

Dr. Ivan Randolph – Abbeville County School District
Dr. Ora Lee Watson – Allendale County School District
Mr. Thomas T. Chapman – Anderson School District Two
Ms. Phyllis Schwarting – Bamberg School District One
Dr. Jake Sello – Bamberg School District Two
Dr. Teresa Pope – Barnwell School District 19
Dr. Anthony Parker – Berkeley County School District
Dr. Nancy McGinley – Charleston County School District
Dr. William James – Cherokee County School District
Dr. Phillip McDaniel – Chester County School District
Dr. Rose Wilder – Clarendon School District One
Mr. John Tindal – Clarendon School District Two
Dr. Lela Williams – Colleton County Schools
Dr. John Kirby – Dillon School District Three
Mr. Ray Rogers – Dillon School District Two
Mr. Jerry Montjoy – Dorchester School District Four
Mr. Joseph Pye – Dorchester School District Two
Dr. Mary Rice-Crenshaw – Edgefield County School District
Dr. John Morris – Florence School District Five
Dr. Bertha McCants – Florence School District Four
Mr. Larry Jackson – Florence School District One
Ms. Beth Wright – Florence School District Three
Mr. Robert Sullivan, Jr. – Florence School District Two
Dr. Darrell Johnson – Greenwood School District 55
Ms. Fay Sprouse – Greenwood School District 51
Dr. Deonia Simmons – Hampton School District Two
Dr. Larry Heath – Jasper County School District
Dr. Cleo Richardson – Lee County School District
Dr. Karen Woodward – Lexington School District One
Mr. Chester Floyd – Lexington School District Three
Dr. Linda Lavender – Lexington School District Four
Mr. Michael Lupo – Marion School District One
Dr. Frank Roberson – Marlboro County School District
Dr. Sandra Calliham – McCormick County School District
Dr. Thomas Sparks – Orangeburg School District Four
Dr. Cynthia Cash-Greene – Orangeburg School District Three
Dr. Stephen Hefner – Richland School District Two
Dr. David Mathis – Saluda County School District
Dr. Ron Garner – Spartanburg School District One
Dr. Jim Ray – Spartanburg School District Three
Dr. Zona Jefferson – Sumter School District 17
Dr. Frank Baker – Sumter School District Two
Dr. David Eubanks – Union County School District
Ms. Linda Huell – Williamsburg County School District
Ms. Alexia Clamp – Williston School District 29
Dr. Keith Callicut – York School District Four
Dr. Vernon Prosser – York School District One
Dr. Marc Sosne – York School District Two

“I am gratified by the outpouring of support from educators across South Carolina, who are on the front lines every day working to improve the lives of children and families,” said Rex last week.  “They know, as I do, that in order to move South Carolina forward, create jobs, and build our economy, public education must remain our state’s top priority.”

Tags: Endorsements
Posted in News Posts | No Comments »

SC Democratic Gubernatorial Candidate Jim Rex Speaks About the Issues

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

Originally posted in www.politicsispower.com.
By: Douglas A Wilson, Editor and Chief

Today, The Rex Campaign held a conference call for SC Bloggers. This was an opportunity for members of the blogger sphere to hear from Dr. Rex and receive a clear understanding of were he stands on the issues. Politics is Power was among the blog sites that was invited to participate. We (politics is power) asked Dr. Rex a number of questions including were he stood on the “Corridor of Shame”, Cigarette Tax, the Confederate Flag, and the reputation of SC. Rex is currently the State Superintendent of Education and is seeking the Democratic Nomination for Governor this June.

When asked about the “Corridor of Shame”, Mr. Rex highlighted the improvements to J.V. Martin Junior High School. The school received 23.5 million in a low-interest, 40-year loan and a $4 million grant toward a new school. This was granted by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. These funds come from the stimulus package. Rex noted that this is a great step in the right direction and other crumbling schools in the state must be addressed. He stated that the SC must step up to fund education properly and equally. Rex has a comprehensive plan entitled “Begin in 10”. This plan will provide flexibility for school districts to work through budget constraints by furloughing teachers and cutting back on assessment tests for certain students. Mr. Rex went on to say that several needs will be added to this plan such as helping children whom have not mastered English as well as special needs children. Rex believes that Begin in 10 will have a great impact on all schools especially ones in the Corridor of Shame.

Dr. Rex also supports the Cigarette Tax. He believes that half of the funds from this tax should go to reforming education and the other half to improving Medicaid which will help to create 20,000 jobs in the healthcare sector. Dr. Rex also stated that he would form a commission/panel to address the state’s tax laws and see were it can be improved. When asked about the controversial issue of the Confederate Flag Mr. Rex stated that the issue is more than just the flag. He believes that there needs to be a discussion on diversity and how it is good for SC. He went on to say that within 90 days of becoming governor, he will launch a two hour panel discussion on ETV with Whites, Blacks and Hispanics to discuss diversity and race and ways to improve in these areas. Rex’s goal is to show that we can talk about race in SC openly. He went on to say that if he is able to find in his research as governor that the Confederate Flag is one of the causes of the state’s economic woes, he will inform the people of SC and back it up with facts as well as fight to make change.

When asked about how to improve the reputation of the state, Rex said he will create a marketing plan that will promote the state’s vital resources and encourage business/families to move here. This plan will target individuals/businesses nationally and internationally. Rex’s believes that SC can compete equally and aggressively with other states like Michigan whom created a similar plan to improve their standings and to encourage people and business to come.

Our job at politics is power is to bring the facts and let you decide. If you are voting in the Democratic Primary on June 6th in SC and would like to learn more about Jim Rex, please visit www.jimrex.com. We also encourage you to visit the other candidate’s sites as well. (www.vincentsheheen.com, www.dwightdrake.com).

Tags: Corridor of Shame
Posted in News Posts | No Comments »

And then there were 48…

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

Campaign News

Revered veteran superintendent Chester Floyd joins the Rex team

(COLUMBIA) – State Superintendent of Education Jim Rex today received the endorsement of veteran educator Chester Floyd, currently the superintendent in Lexington School District Three.  Previously, Floyd served as the superintendent of the Berkeley County School District.  He joins forty-seven of the state’s school district superintendents, who, in an unprecedented move, came together last week to voice their support for Rex as he seeks to become South Carolina’s next Governor.

Other district superintendents endorsing Rex are:

Dr. Ivan Randolph – Abbeville County School District
Dr. Ora Lee Watson – Allendale County School District
Mr. Thomas T. Chapman – Anderson School District Two
Ms. Phyllis Schwarting – Bamberg School District One
Dr. Jake Sello – Bamberg School District Two
Dr. Teresa Pope – Barnwell School District 19
Dr. Anthony Parker – Berkeley County School District
Dr. Nancy McGinley – Charleston County School District
Dr. William James – Cherokee County School District
Dr. Phillip McDaniel – Chester County School District
Dr. Rose Wilder – Clarendon School District One
Mr. John Tindal – Clarendon School District Two
Dr. Lela Williams – Colleton County Schools
Dr. John Kirby – Dillon School District Three
Mr. Ray Rogers – Dillon School District Two
Mr. Jerry Montjoy – Dorchester School District Four
Mr. Joseph Pye – Dorchester School District Two
Dr. Mary Rice-Crenshaw – Edgefield County School District
Dr. John Morris – Florence School District Five
Dr. Bertha McCants – Florence School District Four
Mr. Larry Jackson – Florence School District One
Ms. Beth Wright – Florence School District Three
Mr. Robert Sullivan, Jr. – Florence School District Two
Dr. Darrell Johnson – Greenwood School District 55
Ms. Fay Sprouse – Greenwood School District 51
Dr. Deonia Simmons – Hampton School District Two
Dr. Larry Heath – Jasper County School District
Dr. Cleo Richardson – Lee County School District
Dr. Linda Lavender – Lexington School District Four
Dr. Karen Woodward – Lexington School District One
Mr. Michael Lupo – Marion School District One
Dr. Frank Roberson – Marlboro County School District
Dr. Sandra Calliham – McCormick County School District
Dr. Thomas Sparks – Orangeburg School District Four
Dr. Cynthia Cash-Greene – Orangeburg School District Three
Dr. Stephen Hefner – Richland School District Two
Dr. David Mathis – Saluda County School District
Dr. Ron Garner – Spartanburg School District One
Dr. Jim Ray – Spartanburg School District Three
Dr. Zona Jefferson – Sumter School District 17
Dr. Frank Baker – Sumter School District Two
Dr. David Eubanks – Union County School District
Ms. Linda Huell – Williamsburg County School District
Ms. Alexia Clamp – Williston School District 29
Dr. Keith Callicut – York School District Four
Dr. Vernon Prosser – York School District One
Dr. Marc Sosne – York School District Two

“I am gratified by the outpouring of support from educators across South Carolina, who are on the front lines every day working to improve the lives of children and families,” said Rex last week.  “They know, as I do, that in order to move South Carolina forward, create jobs, and build our economy, public education must remain our state’s top priority.”

Tags: Endorsements
Posted in News Posts | No Comments »

Education leaders endorse Jim Rex

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

Campaign News

(COLUMBIA) – State Superintendent of Education Jim Rex today received the endorsement of forty-seven of the state’s school district superintendents.  In an unprecedented move, more than half of the state’s eighty-five superintendents came together to voice their support for Rex as he seeks to become South Carolina’s next Governor.

“Jim Rex knows how to connect the dots between public education, workforce development, job creation, and growing our economy,” said Rose Wilder, Superintendent in Clarendon School District One.  “That’s why so many of us are speaking with one voice when it comes to this race for Governor.  This isn’t about Democrat or Republican, conservative or liberal.  This is about who can get the job done, and that’s Jim Rex.”

Those endorsing Rex are:

Dr. Ivan Randolph
Dr. Ora Lee Watson
Mr. Thomas T. Chapman
Ms. Phyllis Schwarting
Dr. Jake Sello
Dr. Teresa Pope
Dr. Anthony Parker
Dr. Nancy McGinley
Dr. William James
Dr. Phillip McDaniel
Dr. Rose Wilder
Mr. John Tindal
Dr. Lela Williams
Dr. John Kirby
Mr. Ray Rogers
Mr. Jerry Montjoy
Mr. Joseph Pye
Dr. Mary Rice-Crenshaw
Dr. John Morris
Dr. Bertha McCants
Mr. Larry Jackson
Ms. Beth Wright
Mr. Robert Sullivan, Jr.
Dr. Darrell Johnson
Ms. Fay Sprouse
Dr. Deonia Simmons
Dr. Larry Heath
Dr. Cleo Richardson
Dr. Linda Lavender
Dr. Karen Woodward
Mr. Michael Lupo
Dr. Frank Roberson
Dr. Sandra Calliham
Dr. Thomas Sparks
Dr. Cynthia Cash-Greene
Dr. Stephen Hefner
Dr. David Mathis
Dr. Ron Garner
Dr. Jim Ray
Dr. Zona Jefferson
Dr. Frank Baker
Dr. David Eubanks
Ms. Linda Huell
Ms. Alexia Clamp
Dr. Keith Callicut
Dr. Vernon Prosser
Dr. Marc Sosne
Abbeville County School District
Allendale County School District
Anderson School District Two
Bamberg School District One
Bamberg School District Two
Barnwell School District 19
Berkeley County School District
Charleston County School District
Cherokee County School District
Chester County School District
Clarendon School District One
Clarendon School District Two
Colleton County Schools
Dillon School District Three
Dillon School District Two
Dorchester School District Four
Dorchester School District Two
Edgefield County School District
Florence School District Five
Florence School District Four
Florence School District One
Florence School District Three
Florence School District Two
Greenwood School District 55
Greenwood School District 51
Hampton School District Two
Jasper County School District
Lee County School District
Lexington School District Four
Lexington School District One
Marion School District One
Marlboro County School District
McCormick County School District
Orangeburg School District Four
Orangeburg School District Three
Richland School District Two
Saluda County School District
Spartanburg School District One
Spartanburg School District Three
Sumter School District 17
Sumter School District Two
Union County School District
Williamsburg County School District
Williston School District 29
York School District Four
York School District One
York School District Two

“I am gratified by the outpouring of support from educators across South Carolina, who are on the front lines every day working to improve the lives of children and families,” said Rex.  “They know, as I do, that in order to move South Carolina forward, create jobs, and build our economy, public education must remain our state’s top priority.”

For more information, visit Jim Rex on the Web at www.jimrex.com.

Tags: Endorsements, Public Education
Posted in News Posts | No Comments »

Education at the forefront of SC governor’s race

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Originally published on SC NOW.com.
By: Dr. Paul DeMarco

Seeing a political candidate up close is an important part of how I vote.  Whenever possible, I try to see candidates in person; nothing replaces the intuition I get being in the same room.

John Edwards radiated confidence to the point of cockiness; Joe Biden can be verbose and overeager.  When I met Barack Obama at the 2007 South Carolina Jefferson-Jackson Dinner he radiated …well, fa-tigue. He spoke well, but when I approached him at his table during dinner (this was before he had Se-cret Service protection) he looked beat. However, he managed a smile and we engaged in a short con-versation about health care reform.

In those few seconds, I managed to gather that this was a serious, substantial candidate who had a grasp on the issues I cared about.

I’ve had the privilege of being in the same room with S.C. Superintendent of Education Jim Rex on multi-ple occasions. Each time I’ve come away with the same impression: this is a man who cares about our state and who has the experience and talents to move us forward.

I first met him at the 2006 Galivants Ferry stump meeting when he ran for State Superintendent of Edu-cation.  He was one of the last to speak and by the time he rose to the outdoor podium (on the steps of the country store) it was dark and the crowd had thinned, but he was undeterred. On the way to the lectern, he asked Inez Tenenbaum, then the current state superintendent, for one of her shoes. Based on her reaction, this wasn’t staged.  He held up the tiny pump (Inez is a petite woman) and quipped, “These are going to be some big shoes to fill!”

That interaction and others like it have convinced me that Rex is a decent, likeable human being who is less concerned about personal gain, party affiliation, or power than he is about the future of our state.  He has been a solid superintendent, guiding the state through a difficult period. Despite the Department of Education’s budget being cut by 20 percent during his term, our schools have improved SAT scores and increased on-time graduation rates faster than any state in the nation.

In my book, his biggest accomplishment was his defeat of the pro-voucher forces. Rather than playing defense, he created a public school choice program that took the wind from the sails of those who hoped to divert public money to private schools.

The Rex school choice program promotes alternatives such as charter schools, magnet schools, single-gender programs, and Montessori schools within the public school system.

His current proposal to raise the cigarette tax to the national average (from 7 cents to $1.34) is an illus-tration of his willingness to take tough stands on difficult issues. Contrast this with one of the Republican front-runners, Henry McMaster, who recently vowed that he would not raise the tax under any circum-stances.

Nobody likes new or higher taxes, but this is a move that 74% of South Carolinians said they supported in a 2008 poll.

Also Rex’s plan to split the money between health care and education makes eminent sense. Part of the money would be used in the short term to prevent further cuts in education. In the future, when educa-tion funding is restored, then all the proceeds will go to health care.

In 2008, the General Assembly passed a 50-cent cigarette tax increase, but the governor vetoed it. Rex has faced some legitimate criticism for deciding to run for governor. Why, some have asked, would he give up a likely win in a second race for superintendent for a crowded and uncertain race for governor? Mark

Sanford’s veto of the cigarette tax and Henry McMaster’s vow to do the same are the answer.

Swimming upstream in an administration that doesn’t believe in public education has frustrated Rex.  But with Rex as governor, public education will once again assume its place as the paramount issue.

But don’t just take my word on it.  Jim Rex is coming to Marion on March the 9.  Come and see for yourself.  For details, go to jimrex.com and click “Events” or contact me at pvdemarco@bellsouth.net.

Tags: education, Public Education
Posted in News Posts | No Comments »

Rex rejects GOP view that SC must accept special interest status quo

Friday, February 12th, 2010

Campaign News

(COLUMBIA) In a debate today sponsored by the SC Hospital Association and featuring Democratic and Republican candidates for Governor, Andre Bauer charged that Jim Rex is “a dreamer” to think that Columbia would take action to raise the cigarette tax to the national average because, according to him, that’s now how things work in Columbia. McMaster also reiterated his opposition to the proposal that would create jobs, improve health care, and keep 48,000 classroom teachers from losing a week of pay.

In response, Rex issued the following statement:

“It’s naïve for Republicans like Andre Bauer and Henry McMaster, who have been running things in Columbia for years – and running our state into the ground in the process – to think that the voters will accept the special-interest-driven, do-nothing status quo in November. That kind of thinking is exactly why we need change in our leadership. I have put forward a plan to create thousands, if not tens of thousands, of good jobs in the health care sector and help families meet soaring medical bills. In response, the only things coming from career politicians in Columbia are excuses and a stubborn unwillingness to find solutions or take any action that will inconvenience their special interest friends. My proposal is a doable plan of action already taken by most states in the country – and I have yet to see any plan put forth by Mr. McMaster or Mr. Bauer that would accomplish a fraction of what my plan does. South Carolinians are hurting and they expect action from Columbia – not patronizing explanations of why they can’t do the people’s business.”

Tags: cigarette tax
Posted in News Posts | 2 Comments »

McMaster opposes Rex’s cigarettes plan

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

Originally posted in The State.
By: John O’Connor

A leading Republican candidate for governor said Monday he would not support raising South Carolina’s cigarette tax – the nation’s lowest – under any conditions.

Attorney General Henry McMaster, spurred by a weekend of back-and-forth discussion on the issue with Democratic gubernatorial candidate Jim Rex, said Monday he would not support raising the tax, spokesman Rob Godfrey said.

Rex has proposed raising the tax by $1.24 a pack to the national average, using the more than $200 million raised to pay for health care and to avoid requiring teachers to take a week of unpaid leave.

The two men have agreed to debate the issue.

The cigarette tax is an issue in the governor’s race. Lawmakers passed a tax hike in 2008 only to have it vetoed by Republican Gov. Mark Sanford. Lawmakers fell short of the two-thirds support needed to override that veto.

About three-quarters of state residents support raising the tax to $1 a pack, from its current 7 cents a pack, according to a 2008 survey by the Republican-leaning polling firm Public Opinion Strategies. The poll was conducted for the S.C. Tobacco Collaborative, a coalition of nonprofit and public health groups that support raising the cigarette tax to cut smoking rates.

Sanford has said he would support a cigarette tax increase if it included an equal tax cut somewhere else in the budget. But Godfrey said McMaster opposes any cigarette tax increase.

“Henry McMaster is not raising taxes under any circumstances,” Godfrey said, noting McMaster had signed a national anti-tax pledge. “It’s a good way to make a bad economy worse.”

Rex spokesman Zeke Stokes said raising the cigarette tax could provide a boost to the state’s health care industry, particularly rural hospitals struggling to stay open amid state budget cuts.

The federal government would match every dollar the state puts into health care with up to four dollars, Stokes said.

“We’re leaving a lot of money on the table,” Stokes said, estimating the federal match at from $500 million to $700 million. “An infusion of cash could help (the health care industry). Jobs are a huge, huge part of this.”

In a news release Saturday, Rex noted McMaster has accepted $10,500 in campaign contributions from two tobacco companies.

McMaster thinks the cigarette tax debate points out a fundamental difference between Republicans and Democrats, his spokesman said.

“Dr. Rex wants to raise taxes to fund government spending,” Godfrey said. “Henry McMaster wants to cut taxes to create prosperity.”

McMaster has said comprehensive tax reform is a key part of improving the state’s economy, but Godfrey said the no-tax pledge applies to tax reform as well. That means tax reform could not include rescinding any of the state’s sales tax exemptions – for twine, newsprint, certain prescription drugs and other items. Those exemptions are worth $2.7 billion a year, according to the Board of Economic Advisers.

Lawmakers have asked a state panel to study the state’s tax code and suggest ways to make the system fairer and more stable. Those recommendations are expected later this year.

Stokes said Rex is not proposing to raise property, income or business taxes. He also criticized McMaster, saying he has provided no specifics for his jobs plan.

“Calling us liberals is not an economic plan,” Stokes said. “Saying we have to cut taxes to create jobs is not an economic plan.”

Tags: cigarette tax, McMaster, Public Education, SC Governor's Race
Posted in News Posts | No Comments »

Rex Campaign Opens Headquarters Tonight

Monday, February 8th, 2010

Campaign News

(COLUMBIA) – State Superintendent of Education Jim Rex, along with his wife Sue, will be on hand tonight for the grand opening of his campaign headquarters in Columbia.  The event will begin at 6 p.m.

Rex will make remarks, including addressing the weekend attack launched by Republican candidate for Governor Henry McMaster regarding Rex’s plan to increase the state’s cigarette tax to the national average.

What: Rex Campaign Headquarters Grand Opening Event
Where: 1529 Hampton Street, Suite 110
Columbia, SC
When: 6:00 until 8:00 p.m.

Tags: Campaign Headquarters, cigarette tax
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