June 3, 2010 10:35 AM

S.C. Lt. Gov: Sanford Shouldn't Resign

By
CBSNews
(AP)  The man who would replace South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford if he resigned over his affair with a woman in Argentina said Friday he wasn't calling for the governor's resignation, and would try to help him through the next year and a half.

Lt. Gov. Andre Bauer, a fellow Republican, told The Associated Press that he spoke to Sanford on Thursday and "could tell he had done a lot of soul searching." The two, who have not been allies and don't run on the same ticket, didn't discuss the possibility of the governor stepping down.

"Mark Sanford is still my governor and regardless of what his decision is, I'm going to stand by and try to help him," Bauer told AP in his first interview since Sanford admitted to the affair Wednesday.

While others have called for Sanford's resignation, the governor planned a meeting of state agency heads Friday.

Sanford disappeared to Buenos Aires last week, returning Wednesday to reveal the affair and publicly apologize to his wife and four sons, his supporters and constituents. He also resigned as chairman of the Republican Governors Association.

Sanford said he left his staff with the impression he was heading off for some solo hiking on the Appalachian Trail, a bogus story that they relayed to reporters who began asking where the governor had gone.

He didn't tell the lieutenant governor where he was, and Bauer said he was rebuffed by Sanford's staff when he tried to find out. Sanford faces questions about whether he broke the law when he disappeared without transferring power.

The governor has not addressed the legal questions, but Sanford on Thursday said he would pay back an undisclosed amount for the nine-day trip to Brazil and Argentina for which taxpayers paid $12,000 last year. That includes $8,687 for Sanford's plane ticket, and $453 in lodging.

"I made a mistake while I was there in meeting with the woman who I was unfaithful with," the governor said in a statement.

That revelation came a day after a rambling news conference during which a pained Sanford admitted to three romantic rendezvous with the woman. Sanford spent most of his time Thursday visiting with his family at their coastal home on Sullivans Island. Asked whether he was resigning, Sanford shook his head no as he departed.

"I right now am focused on the important part of this - the family in this circumstance," he said.

His wife told reporters she was "going to worry about my family and the character of my children" and said as she left for dinner and a boat ride with the boys that her husband's career was his concern. "He'll have to worry about that," she told reporters as she drove away.

Bauer and the Sanfords have had a cool relationship.

Jenny Sanford threw her support behind Bauer's rival in a GOP primary runoff for lieutenant governor in 2006, and the governor and Bauer have disagreed over whether the state's No. 2 needs security detail. Sanford's vetoes of the funding were overridden by lawmakers.

Bauer said it was not his place to judge the governor.

"I'm not jumping on the bandwagon, immediately saying let's relieve the governor of his duties," Bauer said.

Sanford, barred by state law from running again, leaves office in 2010. If he were to resign, Bauer - expected to run for the top spot - steps into the office. Other candidates are also jockeying for the job.

"Clearly it would give me an advantage," Bauer said of a Sanford resignation. "If it weren't so, there wouldn't be so many people thinking about running for governor concerned about it."

There are deep misgivings about Bauer, though. He spent much of the 2006 campaign recovering from injuries suffered when a plane he was flying crashed. He was also injured politically by news that he had been let off for speeding after troopers stopped him. He was elected the nation's youngest lieutenant governor in 2002 at age 33.

AP
Add a Comment See all 19 Comments
by rushlimpdrug June 26, 2009 6:51 PM EDT
Perhaps the gov should look for a brothel closer to home.
Like, let's say oh, maybe Lousyana?
I'm sure there is a Senator somewhere that could recommend
one from that state.
Reply to this comment
by fred-mertz June 26, 2009 1:26 PM EDT
"Mark Sanford is still my governor and regardless of what his decision is, I'm going to stand by and try to help him," Bauer told the AP

So THAT'S what they mean by "family values'! Like the Mafia, the GOP is a tight-knit group. At least, until the heat turns up too much, and then they turn on their own.

Clinton got a couple of b[e]low j.obs, and the unscrupulous b2st@rds impeached him, and Mark Sanford voted for impeaching Clinton! But if a republican has a long-term affair, lies to cover it up, abandons his job to visit his hooker without telling his state where he is or how to contact him, abandons his wife and kids ON FATHER'S DAY to go sleep with his HO, and makes us pay for it all with our tax monty, it's OK with the repukes, because "he had done a lot of soul searching"!

The GOP is slime, through and through. They have NO morals, they have NO principles, they only value money. They are TOAST! A mere footnote in history.
Reply to this comment
by DoubleHappiness88 June 26, 2009 1:23 PM EDT
Would YOUR employer tolerate a disappearance? Politicians work for US.
They need to be reminded of it. Sanford should not be allowed to resign. He should be terminated by impeachment.

I do not care whom politicians bed. It is important, however, that politicians do not place themselves above their employers, WE, THE PEOPLE.

Mark Sanford has violated the trust of his employers and likely committed crimes in the use of taxpayer money to facilitate his absence for duties and his sexual escapades.

Sanford should not resign. He should be terminated.
Reply to this comment
by scabbard2 June 26, 2009 1:16 PM EDT
Resign, heck no. This guy is more entertainment than anything on television. I really enjoy the repubs and the demos commentary on why he is or is not fit. Michael Jackson may save his hide by taking over the media. Great stuff hugh??
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by pjk12354 June 26, 2009 1:00 PM EDT
No politician, Mark Sanford included, ever does the right thing unless it serves the interests of those whose money put them in office.
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by MohatmaJeebus June 26, 2009 12:52 PM EDT
Of course the other hypocrite Republicans don't think he should resign. Their sanctimoneous "moral legitimacy" only applies to the other party. Rank hypocrites. Over and over and over again.
Reply to this comment
by ubrew12 June 26, 2009 12:34 PM EDT
The unspoken rule is that Democrats take the perp walk (Bill Clinton, and Eliot Spitzer) and Republicans get off (Larry Craig, Newt Gingrich, and this guy). Thats because (chortle) the Republicans are the part of moral values. LOL.
Reply to this comment
by artorus June 26, 2009 12:27 PM EDT
Let it slide. There's worse things he could have done besides putting his dick in extramarital *****. And let's not turn this into a partisan squabble, this isn't a rep or dem issue, it's a male issue. Men like variety. It would be nice if he recognizes this and abandons all the sanctimonious nonsense that characterizes US politics.
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by cs4466 June 26, 2009 12:20 PM EDT
Sanford: Hypocrite extraordinaire! Highly qualified to be a republican. Isn't that just pathetic?
Reply to this comment
by koko98-2009 June 26, 2009 12:04 PM EDT
He has come this far as a hypocrite, why should he stop now.
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