July 23, 2009 11:00 AM

Embattled S.C. Gov., Family Go to Europe

(AP)  South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford and his family have arrived in London for a two-week European vacation.

Television station WBTV in Charlotte reports that Sanford, his wife and four sons boarded a U.S. Airways flight bound for London's Gatwick Airport on Wednesday evening. The governor initially had said they were leaving Thursday.

According to the airline's Web site, the flight landed at 2:13 a.m. EDT Thursday.

Sanford said he's leaving for the long-planned vacation with his wife and four sons in an effort to "get some things right in the family," one month after revealing an affair with an Argentine woman he later called his "soul mate." Sanford's wife, Jenny, and their four sons returned Monday from several days away as the couple works on their marriage.

Sanford told WBTV he expects to do soul searching on the trip. He says the process of redemption and forgiveness is slow.

The governor says he will return to work Aug. 5. He says he'll be in touch with his office at least once a day.

Sanford returned from a nearly weeklong disappearance June 24 to reveal he was in Argentina with his mistress, not hiking the Appalachian Trail as his staff had believed. He apologized for misleading his staff and has been apologizing ever since. He still won't say how he could've been reached in an emergency.

The two-term Republican governor declined to say where in Europe he'll be but said this time, the State Law Enforcement Division knows his schedule "every step of the way." And he pledged to contact his office at least daily, hourly if needed, so he will not put Lt. Gov. Andre Bauer in charge during his absence.

"This is how he should take vacations," said Sen. Kevin Bryant, an Anderson Republican and former Sanford ally.

Sanford has insisted he was reachable in Argentina through "a back channel way" by an adviser, who was not his spokesman or chief of staff. Records of phone calls made on his state-issued phone and e-mails received through the Freedom of Information Act did not show that Sanford was in touch. On Wednesday, Sanford again refused to elaborate.

"That's the nature of a back channel. I'm not going backward. I've moved on. I think the state's ready to move on, and I've said everything I'm going to say and have said about Argentina," he said.

Sen. Larry Martin has said Sanford needs to explain but now believes no such arrangement existed.

"If the person had existed, he would've been contacted by that back channel person more quickly than he was. It had already hit the international wire" that he was missing, said the Pickens Republican. He questions whether the governor called in because he saw himself on the news.

"At least we know where he's going to be this time. He told us he's leaving. I hope they have a good trip," Martin said. "Hopefully, we won't miss him."

Sen. David Thomas, R-Greenville, said his first reaction to the European trip was "astonishment he didn't cancel everything to stay in state and focus on state issues, since we've all been blown away." But then he changed his mind.

"One is torn in looking at this sorry saga," said the Greenville Republican. "If he's trying to re-establish his family relationship with his wife and get everything on track again - if this is what it takes - his family should come first."

Thomas' subcommittee plans to investigate whether Sanford spent state money to facilitate his affair. The first meeting is set for Friday. While the state's top police official, Reggie Lloyd, announced a week after Sanford returned that the governor did not misuse state money for visits with his Argentine mistress, he said his agency's review relied on self-reported information from Sanford.

Sanford said he considered canceling the European trip in light of the scandal, but it was too important for his family.

"This is our last year before Marshall goes off to college," he said of his eldest, a rising senior. "Every one of them had to pay for a part of it. The boys did lemonade stands and amazingly racked in hundreds of dollars. ... So I thought about pulling the plug, because obviously critics will criticize, and I understand that for being gone next week."

The governor, who has vowed to stay in office, said a longtime friendship with Maria Belen Chapur turned into an affair during a June 2008 state commerce trip to South America. While he called Chapur his "soul mate," he has been trying to reconcile with Jenny Sanford, his wife of 20 years.

That has included spending the July Fourth weekend with her and the boys in Florida, where her parents live, and leaving with Jenny last Wednesday to an out-of-state, undisclosed location. Since leaving for Argentina, Sanford's been out of the office for just over 10 work days.

He will be gone nine additional work days before returning Aug. 5.

"Most South Carolinians have a limited number of vacation days they can take, and after that, they just can't take anymore," said state Democratic Party Chairwoman Carol Fowler. "They have to go to work no matter what serious issues are going on in their family."

But Sanford said he's on the job, even if he's not in the office.

He plans to make phone calls while in Europe to help form two committees he hopes will come up with several items he and the Legislature can accomplish in his last session. The groups, to be announced in late August, would meet through September, he said.

"Wherever you are in this role, with the obvious exception to that which has caused the stir that it has, on some level or another you're working," Sanford said. "Jenny's oftentimes joked that if you add up the hours, I'm working for less than minimum wage."

Another important function of the trip, he said, is to "get the boys out of worrying about reading about dad in the newspaper or what somebody has to say about him on the news, so I think it will be healthy for us."

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by thebob-bob July 23, 2009 5:13 PM EDT
Sanford and a handful of other Republican philderers, all lived in a rightwing Frat house run a secretive society, "The Family".

Jeff Sharlet, a contributing editor of Harper's, wrote a book last year detailing "The Family." It was started by an immigrant preacher (Vereide) who in 1935 organized a small group of businessmen sympathetic to European fascism (and opposed to Communism), fusing the Far Right with his own polite but authoritarian faith.

"From that core, Vereide built an international network of fundamentalists who spoke the language of establishment power, a 'family' that thrives to this day. In private, they preach a gospel of 'biblical capitalism,' military might and American empire "'We work with power where we can, build new power where we can't.'"

The Family also supported the Bush Crime Family as it attempted to install a new fascist regime in the USA. The marriage of Church and State to impose order under the guise of being God's Chosen? Where have we heard this before. It always ends badly.
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by Sloughfoot July 23, 2009 12:34 PM EDT
i don't feel sorry for the stupid wife, (told she's not fullfilling his needs and stays with him) must really like the meal ticket and the lime light. Is South Carolina picking up this vacation tab also?
Looks to me like the wife and the State deserve him. The children, now they didn't have a choice but you can bet your bippy they never view their parents with the same respect again. And don't tell me she's doing it for the kids, that's as lame of an excuse as they come. It's her mink stole, house on the hill and royal vacations that keep her comming back.
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by ramseyjames July 23, 2009 11:40 AM EDT
If the people of SC are lucky > maybe sanford will not return at all! Thsi guy is nothing but a self-involved jerk that is trying to cover his real personallity > a cheating womanizer!
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by candid62-2009 July 23, 2009 11:10 AM EDT
A normal person who has had 6.5 yrs tenure at a company gets an average of 5 weeks - that's 25 days vacation with maybe a couple floating holidays. Then you add some comp time and sick leave.

Give the guy a break. Sure he made a mistake for those 4 business days he went to Argentina. When he went to Florida - it was July 4th weekend, no business days lost. Only last week when he left with his wife suddenly was 4 business days and now he's taking 10. Still short of a normal person's vacation.

The media is just having fun exaggerating on this story, making more of it then there is. The reporter from WBTV - now that is one classy reporter! He saw Jenny and the boys, left them alone and only went to Gov. Sanford and what is great is this reporter had moved on from Argentina - so whey can't all of you?
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by justcurious777 July 23, 2009 11:44 AM EDT
Gee, regarding the "normal people" who get 5 weeks vacation after 6.5 years of service, I'd like to know where they work. After 12 years of service, my place only offers 3 weeks...I must be in the wrong line of work.
by candid62-2009 July 23, 2009 12:06 PM EDT
you are justcurious. My company offers 3 weeks for the 1st year. Then 1 addtional the 3rd, 5th and 10th year.
by dzemog1 July 23, 2009 10:51 AM EDT
Um, excuse me, but does this Governor ever plan to spend time working in the state of SC? I get that he needs to grovel at the feet of his family, but that's not what he was elected to do. Had he not disappeared into the Argentine mist to play with his mistress for a week, he wouldn't NEED to grovel at the feet of his family. When will the citizens of SC stand up and demand the Governor do his job?
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by Marvin321 July 23, 2009 10:49 AM EDT
True National Lampoon European vacation. I feel sorry for his wife and the kids.
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