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Serious questions remain for Mark Sanford

By: Byron York
Chief Political Correspondent
June 25, 2009

South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford reacts to a question from the media as he leaves a family home Thursday, June 25, 2009, on Sullivan's Island, S.C. The family is staying at the beach front property after the Governor admitted to having an affair with a woman from Argentina. (AP Photo/Mic Smith)

A few days ago, when South Carolina governor Mark Sanford was missing in action and thought to be hiking the Appalachian Trail, I emailed a well-connected political type in the state to ask what was going on.

"All sorts of rumors are flying, from a Susan Boyle sort of meltdown to domestic issues," came the response. "Mostly the latter, or maybe a combination. Much talk of a girlfriend in the mix."

Sanford's news conference Wednesday afternoon proved the rumors right. But even after the governor's revealing and unscripted confession, several important questions remain.

The most serious is whether Sanford’s frame of mind will allow him to carry out his duties as governor. His passionate love affair with an Argentine woman appears to be a classic case of a middle-aged man who wants out of his life.

"I don't hate my job," Sanford told Ginny Smith, the reporter who caught him at the Atlanta airport Wednesday on his return from Argentina. But Smith, writing in The State, South Carolina's most influential newspaper, says Sanford told her he was "close to hating it."

So if the governor is "close" to hating his job, is there anything about confessing the affair that would make his responsibilities any less onerous? Or is he right back where he was before he headed to South America?

A second question is why Sanford traveled to Argentina in the first place? Did he go to break up with the woman or -- well, who knows? It seems obvious that Sanford was in an escapist mood -- not a good thing for a man with constitutional responsibilities -- and he seemed to be running away from life in the state capital.

A third question is whether Sanford had any intention of revealing the affair to the public. At the airport, Gina Smith asked Sanford whether he had been alone in Argentina. "Yes," Sanford answered. Then, according to Smith, Sanford "cut me off, saying he could see where the interview was going and he did not want to discuss the situation further."

"I always will wonder if the story would have broken if I had failed to catch him in the airport," Smith concluded. It's possible Sanford was coming home under the delusion that he could keep the affair secret.

It was only after The State got in touch with the governor's office, saying it had copies of several incriminating emails between Sanford and the Argentine woman, that Sanford scheduled a news conference and confessed. In that news conference, Sanford was asked whether he had been alone in Argentina. "Obviously not," he answered.

A fourth question concerns Sanford's emotional state. Other politicians caught messing around have stressed how little their affairs meant to them. Sanford, by contrast, appears to be a man still deeply, if unhappily, in love. "What's so different about this, as opposed to Edwards and Ensign and Spitzer and all the other adulterers in politics is this was a more serious relationship," one well-connected South Carolina politico told me. "He was in love with her, and still may be."

A fifth question involves the false information put out by the governor's office while he was in Argentina. "There was an evolving set of facts out of the governor's office," another Republican insider told me. "Everything that came out of the office conflicted with something that was previously said." Did Sanford involve his staff in a cover-up? Or did he leave them in the dark for days? Neither scenario looks good.

The final, and perhaps most troubling, question involves Sanford's performance of his duties as governor. Sanford was known as a man who liked to occasionally get away by himself. "What was different this time was he wasn't responding to text messages or cell phone calls," the first insider told me. Will South Carolinians want to keep a governor who believes he can just disappear?

A number of social conservatives have said that Sanford's survival in South Carolina depends on whether he is able to reconcile with his wife. The Palmetto Council, an important local social conservative organization, issued a statement saying Sanford "told the truth with apparent contrition -- and contrition is a start."

That might satisfy some Sanford supporters. But when it comes to the serious business of state government, it's not nearly enough.



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Barbara

Jun 26, 2009

Read the e-mails he wrote poetic and romantic notes to her and her to him this was not a sleazy affair. Leave them alone it's personal between him his wife and "the Other woman". Things happen you can't always control how you feel for someone.

 

kens

Jun 26, 2009

Oh please. In South Carolina the governor is nothing more than a titular title. The legislature has all of the power and holds all of the cards. No wonder Sanford hates the "job." (or is that pronounced "Jobe"?) The lack of a strong chief executive is part of the reason South Carolina is #50 in most everything meaningful. If I were Sanford, I'd firm up a good one-year visa to Argentina and live there with the babe. By this time next year people won't even remember what all the stink was about.

 

LeChat

Jun 26, 2009

Too bad he imploded. I've seen him on several television interview programs and was favorably impressed. Now the Republican Party will need to find someone else to do battle with the socialists that infest our government.

 

WM

Jun 26, 2009

I do not understand the notion that as long as he "reconciles" with his wife, no harm-no foul. This is a call for pretense. It is the notion that as long as everyone is willing to fake reality, we can pretend everything is really alright. What if the wife doesn't want to reconcile? Does that mean he is unacceptable, but if he can convince her not to file for divorce, his career is safe? A man's political career, and a voter's alternatives, are supposed to hinge on the personal decision of an individual woman?

 

JPatton

Jun 26, 2009

My heart goes out to Jenny Sanford. One look at her expression and you can tell she's feeling the brunt of a full-on betrayal. You know an Oprah episode isn't far away. I hope she can reconstruct her life and move on.

 

craftetc@gmail.com

Jun 26, 2009

If I were him I'd quit the job and move to Argentina to be with the mistress, then marry her once the wife is finished divorcing me. He's term limited, can't run for any other office now and rich enough that he doesn't have to work for a living so why not?

Of course, I've never wanted to be a politician in the first place so maybe career politicians would see things differently.

 

Joe

Jun 26, 2009

What do you bet that Sanford is done-marriage over, mistress dumps him and career ruined. He was obviously devastated and you can't rejoice seeing that kind of suffering. Sad for his family and his constituents too.

 

MarkF

Jun 26, 2009

What's interesting is that the newspaper down there had these so-called incriminating e-mails all along. That brings up some interesting questions. One, if they had them all along then why did they pretend not to know where he was? Wasn't it obvious that this woman was somehow involved in this disappearance? Why did they hold all this back? Two, how did they get these e-mails? Was it through electronic eavesdropping? Or was it through someone who has also access to the governor's e-mail? If it is the former, then is not that also illegal? And if so, then what other sorts of confidential information do they have? If it is the latter, then isn't there the chance the governor could be blackmailed by someone who has access to his personal e-mail?

 

Bear Perney

Jun 26, 2009

Joe: I would bet that you're right.

MarkF: It should be common knowledge now that anytime you send an email you must assume you are sending it to the world. Sanford and his mistress forgot or didn't know that simple fact.

 

Jeff

Jun 26, 2009

Byron,
Good article. I am dying for an RSS feed for your pieces. Is there a way to subscribe to your stories?

 

Scarlett

Jun 26, 2009

I would hate to be Jenny Sanford. In the event of "reconciliation," she will always, in her secret heart, wonder if her husband is longing for another woman. Mark Sanford is obviously deeply in love with someone else. No amount of therapy or "reconciliation" can make that go away. If one understands the Irish concept of "Anam Cara" one sees that there are loves that transcend institutions and society. Sometimes we don't meet that person at the "right" time in our lives. I'm not being romantic about this---it is just a mystery of human nature. Jenny needs to say goodbye. For her own soul and the souls of those four beautiful boys.

 

Miss Orange

Jun 26, 2009

MarkF, can't remember where I read it, but the newspaper wouldn't publish the e-mails until they could verify them. When Sanford confessed, they had their verification. It was plain responsible journalism.

 

hinckley

Jun 26, 2009

Why should anyone BELIEVE Sanford went to Argentina to "break off" the affair?

He's a serial liar AND a politician (redundant?) and the ONLY reason we know what we know is because he was CORNERED into admitting as much.

 

taxlady

Jun 26, 2009

I feel bad for his family. His wife has shown a lot of class. His rambling press conference gave way more information than we needed. That being said, his actions were irresponsible and he should resign.

 

TP

Jun 26, 2009

I will not cast the first stone. This is a family tragedy and a national one as well. How will we (conservatives) ever find our way without leaders with personal integrity. My heart goes out to Gov. Sanford's family and to our Nation. Can we please have leaders whom we can trust? Conservatives and moderates are looking for intelligent "principled spines" with integrity. If I wanted the other, I'd vote democratic. No offense, but they accept anything (no foul,therefore, no harm)

God bless the USA!

 

Carolina

Jun 26, 2009

Trust me, if he is in love - it will be a long time before he is thinking straight. Been there, done that - screws you up (especially in middle age) for years. I would say, 5-8 years before he starts thinking like a normal person. Middle age love is the hardest to get over. He is in a sense, kind of insane right now. I don't mean literally, but a form of insanity.

 

Lion

Jun 26, 2009

Who cares this is between three people his wife himself and God.

 

caconservative

Jun 26, 2009

Scarlett is correct, this is obviously a very deep and serious love affair. We never know when we may meet that 'once in a life time' person but we must not act on these desires if it means betraying commitments already made.
Mr. Sanford seems on the brink of an emotional breakdown, it is painful to watch his anguish and his wife's obvious pain.
If they are to survive as a family they must have some privacy and our prayers. South Carolina will have to sort out if he remains Governor.

 

Tight5

Jun 26, 2009

Affair...family tragedy...emotional breakdown...blah, blah, blah.

The story here should be his dereliction of duty in disappearing for several days with no apparent notification of either his staff or the Lt. Governor. If he won't resign he should be impeached for that alone.

 

tnxplant

Jun 26, 2009

Love? Romantic, poetic? Maybe for a 14 year old boy with his first infatuation, but not very impressive for an adult(chronologically, that is).

What always drives this type of infidelity is the exciting fear of being caught, the infrequency of contact, the adolescent belief that somehow "we" have discovered something no one else in the world has. And of course something as mundane as marriage or the ordinariness of everyday life would ruin it.

Mr. Rochester in Jane Eyre:
"I had not, it seems, the originality to chalk out a new road to shame and destruction, but trode the old track with stupid exactness not to deviate an inch from the beaten centre."

 

looking closely

Jun 26, 2009

The "crime" here wasn't Sanfords' infidelity. That's between him and his family.

It was his abdication of his executive responsibilities as Governor for a week while he flew out of the country incommunicado.

For THAT reason, its difficult to trust him to hold the reins of power now. So if there is any reason for him to step down, THAT's the reason.

 

Valdez

Jun 26, 2009

Shake them all these bums out now! It doesn't matter what his reasons are. He is an elected official and therefore must conduct himself to a higher standard than the governed. See ya Mark, you dope. If your wife does take you back she's a saint and you truly don't deserve her magnanimity.

 

conservativeguy

Jun 26, 2009

I am really sad that our leaders, some of them at least, seem to have no moral leadership. It is true of Republicans and Democrats. Neither has a corner on this so I do not understand why they play the blame game.

I really feel for his wife and kids. They are, no doubt, feeling very betrayed at the moment, which is understandable.

Seems to me that if the Governer was going to take a trip and wish not to be found, he should designate someone to fulfill his role in the Statehouse. To leave and not let anyone know where he is seems to me to be neglect of responsibility.

 

Carolina girl

Jun 27, 2009

The State newspaper is about defunct...and very liberal...so I cannot shake the feeling that it was all a political/sleazy setup. Unless one has experienced Jenny's grief, those young reporters are going to get their experiences in about 20 years. Hope their leakers will be kinder than they were. Can't anyone think about the sons???

 

solid ground

Jun 28, 2009

What is so sad is that this is a tragedy for everyone involved. I feel a great deal of compassion for his wife and children who are scarred by this whole affair. It is sad that a man cannot remain faithful to his commitment to his wife and children. If he cannot remain faithful in this area, can he remain faithful to his duties in government? I don't think so.

 

harmonygal

Jun 28, 2009

my heart is heavy for his family. but, also, for those of us he is supposed to govern. it is unforgivable that he left his duties for 6 days. if one of us were to leave our job for 6 days without permission or any communication, do you think we could expect to come back to our job. most companies have a 3 day rule. if you don't show up for 3 days without communication, you're out of there. you are considered to be 'quit without notice'. the same should apply to mark sanford. he is of the law, but not above the law.

 


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