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For Bush, Loss of Jobs May Erode Support in South Carolina

August 18, 2003
 By MICHAEL JANOFSKY 




 

GREENVILLE, S.C., Aug. 12 - Lynn Mayson is an unemployed
machine operator here. Roger Chastain is president of a
textile company. While they travel in distinctively
different circles, they have quite a bit in common. 

Both are Republicans. Both were part of the Solid South
vote that helped George W. Bush win the White House in
2000. And, now, both say they are angry enough about job
losses in the region to vote for someone else in 2004. 

"Something's got to give," said Ms. Mayson, a mother of
three, as she left a state-run jobs center the other day.
"I'm not going to vote for Bush unless things change. The
economy has got to get better, and it's only going to do
that if someone makes something happen." 

Mr. Chastain, whose company, Mount Vernon Mills, has laid
off 1,000 workers in recent years, is part of a coalition
of textile executives who have formally complained to the
White House about trade practices they contend are driving
Americans out of jobs and manufacturers out of business,
while giving huge advantages to China and other countries. 

"Bush can forget about the Solid South," Mr. Chastain
said. "There's no Solid South anymore." 

The frustrations of Ms. Mayson and Mr. Chastain over the
slow pace of economic recovery, shared by a growing number
of Republicans in upstate South Carolina, have not reached
such a critical mass that anyone is predicting that
President Bush could lose the state next year. But the
Republican wall of support here is indeed showing cracks,
reflecting economic trends that Democrats say make Mr. Bush
vulnerable. Since the president took office, more than 2.5
million jobs have been lost across the country, a downturn
that administration officials contend is now turning
around. 

Mr. Chastain said problems had reached such a point that he
would consider voting for a Democrat, perhaps
Representative Richard A. Gephardt of Missouri, who is a
persistent critic of the North American Free Trade
Agreement, known as Nafta. Ms. Mayson said she would vote
for anyone with a plan to create more jobs. 

Does such talk signal a new South in the making? Probably
not yet. But Bush-bashing among Republicans is almost
unheard of in this part of South Carolina, one of the most
conservative areas in the United States. In winning the
region, Mr. Bush outpolled Al Gore by a ratio of almost two
to one. 

The trade issue has even become a major factor in the early
stages of a United States Senate campaign here, and could
affect a Congressional district race. Representative Jim
DeMint, a three-term Republican who angered many of his
constituents by voting for fast-track procedures for trade
agreements, is stepping down to run for the seat of Senator
Ernest F. Hollings, a six-term Democrat, who is retiring. 

Danny Varat, an adjunct professor of history at the
University of South Carolina in Spartanburg, said that if
the economy was ailing a year from now and trade policies
had not changed enough to help manufacturing in the state,
Republicans could have a hard time winning both the Senate
race and the Fourth Congressional District seat that Mr.
DeMint is vacating. 

As for the president, "If there's a faltering economy, he
bears the responsibility, and that has political
consequences," Mr. Varat said. "To the degree he could lose
the state? It's too early to assess that right now." 

Scott Stanzel, a spokesman for the Bush re-election
campaign, dismissed the idea of any problems for Mr. Bush
in South Carolina by defending him against critics of his
economic stewardship. Mr. Stanzel said the recent tax cuts
that Mr. Bush aggressively sought demonstrated his abiding
concern for the economy and the nation's jobless. 

"The president will not be satisfied until every American
looking for work can find it," Mr. Stanzel said, adding
that the tax cuts were "a victory for American workers,
their families and America's small businesses." 

Still, many industries here and elsewhere are reeling,
perhaps none more so than textiles and apparel
manufacturing, which today employ only about half the 1.5
million workers who had jobs in 1994, when Nafta went into
effect. Industry officials say that about half of those
losses have come since Mr. Bush was inaugurated, and in
upstate South Carolina, once the vital core of America's
textile industry, many major companies have cut back their
work forces or closed. This month, South Carolina's
unemployment rate reached 7 percent, the highest level in
more than nine years, compared with a national rate of 6.2
percent. 

Like his two-term predecessor, Bill Clinton, who twice
failed to carry South Carolina, Mr. Bush has argued that
free trade has been good for the country. Over all, the
region has attracted companies from nearly 20 other
countries in recent years. 

But economic experts in the state, like R. Carter Smith,
chief executive of the Spartanburg County Economic
Development Corporation, say the number of new jobs has not
matched those lost, keeping South Carolina among the
highest-ranked states in percentage of jobs lost during the
Bush years, at No. 3 behind Massachusetts and Ohio. 

Textile industry leaders blame the administration for not
demanding that China alter trade practices that enable
Chinese companies to sell goods cheaper in the United
States than American businesses do, making it harder to
compete. J. Richard Dillard, a spokesman for Milliken &
Company, a major manufacturer in the Carolinas, said Mr.
Bush promised such protections, called "safeguards," before
and after he was elected but had not followed through. 

"We've heard a lot from elected officials that free trade
creates jobs," Mr. Dillard said. "That's absolutely true.
It has created jobs in Mexico, China, Indonesia and
everyplace else in the world, but not here. We're tired of
it." 

They are so tired of it, he said, that for the first time
industry leaders are drawing a line in the cloth, insisting
that if the Bush administration does not narrow the trade
gap with China by the fall, company executives will
withhold support for Mr. Bush or even campaign for another
candidate. That was the principal message of two news
conferences the officials held in Greensboro, N.C., and
Spartanburg, although only Mr. Gephardt emerged as a
possibility. 

Among other major Democratic contenders, Senators John
Kerry of Massachusetts, Joseph I. Lieberman of Connecticut
and Bob Graham of Florida are strong supporters of free
trade. Howard Dean, the former governor of Vermont, and
Senator John Edwards of North Carolina favor balanced
approaches with stronger protections for American workers. 

Asked for a show of hands in Spartanburg to indicate how
many of the executives voted for Mr. Bush in 2000, all
indicated they had. Asked for a show of hands of how many
would be willing to abandon him in 2004, all indicated they
would. 

"This is an excellent opportunity for any elected official
to base their campaign on jobs," said Roy Baxley, chairman
of the South Carolina Cotton Board. "This is the time to
step up to the plate." 

Ms. Mayson said jobless people in the area could not agree
more. "I know he's trying," she said of Mr. Bush. "But too
many jobs are going overseas. What about the people here?" 

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/08/18/national/18SOUT.html?ex=1062207169&ei=1&en=8928163470dc503a


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