7/2/09

Gov. Mark Sanford: Number One Songs, Then & Now





When Mark and Jenny Sanford got married on Nov. 4, 1989, the number one song in the U.S. was “Listen to Your Heart” by Roxette.

Sometime later – about 12 or so years later – the heart he was listening to was saying "Argentina." And, as far as we can tell – and based on what the SC governor says – his heart is still in Argentina.
Where his heart is, though, is not the concern of our state’s citizens. Where his head is – now that is of concern to the citizenry.

Based on his actions, his heart and his head - and all of the rest of him - have been in Argentina lately.

His personal life is his business. We’ve never had a perfect elected official and we never will. We elect them, imperfections and all.

But when we elect our officials, while we may not expect perfection, we most certainly expect them to carry out the duties of their respective offices.
That is where Mark Sanford failed the state of South Carolina.

His betrayal of his wife, his absence from his four sons on Father’s Day – those are not impeachable offenses, although they most likely brought to a standstill his presidential ambitions.
His failures as husband and father are the business of the Sanford family. His failure as governor is of public concern, and rightly so.
Some officials claim that Sanford is so head-over-heels “ga-ga” in love with his Argentinean soul mate that he is not thinking clearly and can’t effectively govern even with his return to the state. A few are suggesting a chemical imbalance and mental instability, among other things.
Does being “ga-ga” in love mean the governor is incapacitated to the extent that he cannot effectively govern? I don’t know.
But he was definitely incapacitated geographically and unable to govern when he left the country for five days, slipping away from his own security and making himself unreachable by any living soul in the United States. There is reason to question his judgment, his decision-making skills, his concern for the state.
Some pundits say, “Oh, well, there was no emergency, so everything is okay.”
That there was no actual emergency does not excuse Sanford.
South Carolina has faced emergencies before: several hurricanes over the years, riots, the recent Myrtle Beach wildfires, for example. Anything could happen without notice: a train derailment, an airplane crash, a disease outbreak.
Maybe Sanford, who still declares that Maria in Argentina is his soul-mate, is thinking about that famous line from the movie Love Story: “Love means never having to say you’re sorry.”
He might do better to quote Marlon Brando in the 1954 movie On the Waterfront: "I coulda had class. I coulda been a contender. I coulda been somebody, instead of a bum, which is what I am, let's face it."
Or perhaps he should just go by the title of this week’s Billboard chart-topper. It’s by The Black Eyed Peas: "The E.N.D."

4 comments:

skywind said...

Listens attentively to our mind, that is our innermost feelings sound.

Grampy said...

My opinion is. When you are looked up to by people you have to act responsibly. Love is blind, baloney. He was thinking or not thinking about politics and his own selfish feelings for this lady. No thoughts about his family or his other responsibilities.
Sorry but that is the way I feel.

Syd said...

I too am not going to judge his personal life but think that his indiscretions and violation of state policy need to be reckoned with. It might be better if he does go to Argentina and follow his heart.

Unknown said...

I agree 100%. I really don't care who or what politicians do in their private lives, as long as they are compentent on the job. I'm not a resident of South Carolina, but I think he has let his constituents down.

 
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