Is Sanford too lovesick to govern?
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| Atlanta
South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford hasn鈥檛 budged on his vow to remain in office despite laying bare his heart about his trysts with an Argentine lover and encounters with other women.
But some political observers say the love affair and the furor around it has clouded Governor Sanford鈥檚 judgment, leaving him too distracted and politically damaged to last much longer as the Palmetto State鈥檚 chief executive.
Sanford has turned important business of the state into 鈥淭he Mark Sanford Show,鈥 says veteran political observer and lobbyist John Crangle.
鈥淗e鈥檚 lost contact with reality,鈥 says Mr. Crangle. 鈥淗e seems to go up and down like a yo-yo: One minute he鈥檚 involved in the transports of love and romance, and the next thing he鈥檚 crying in Argentina for five days. He鈥檚 really on a roller coaster, and I鈥檓 concerned.鈥
The lovesick governor is somewhat unusual among political sex scandals, which don't generally involve waxing lyrical about 鈥渕agnificent, gentle kisses,鈥 as Sanford did in e-mails to Maria Belen Chapur, the former TV reporter with whom he had an affair for at least a year.
So, will this affair affect Sanford's future or not?
Andy Brack, publisher of the S.C. Statehouse Report, says he thinks 鈥渢he pressure is now off鈥 Sanford, and he should be able to serve out his term.
But more than half of the Republican-controlled state Senate has called for Sanford鈥檚 resignation. And some say the governor is losing the grass-roots support 鈥 including retirees, rural voters, and evangelicals 鈥 he relied on in making unpopular decisions such as his attempt to reject federal stimulus dollars, a fight he eventually lost in court.
鈥淚鈥檓 concerned about his mental well-being,鈥 state Senate Majority Leader Harvey Peeler Jr. told The State newspaper in Columbia, S.C. Mr. Peeler has called for Sanford to step down.
Sanford鈥檚 contradictory statements, such as admitting that Ms. Chapur is his 鈥渟oul mate鈥 while saying he wants to fall back in love with his wife, may not be helping his case.
In an interview with the Associated Press this week, Sanford revealed that he鈥檇 seen Chapur more often than previously noted and had 鈥渃rossed lines鈥 with other women during his career. He described his affair with Chapur as 鈥渁 love story. A forbidden one, a tragic one, but a love story at the end of the day."
It鈥檚 of course impossible to know what exactly Sanford is thinking. But psychologists say that heightened states of emotion can impact how people perceive the world around them.
鈥淓motion can help our decisionmaking, and it can also make it worse,鈥 says Douglas Wedell, a psychology professor at the University of South Carolina, Columbia, who studies judgment and decisionmaking.
Meanwhile, a preliminary investigation has cleared Sanford of any potential criminal acts such as misappropriated state funds during his transnational trysts. There are provisions in state law to remove a mentally unstable governor, but that鈥檚 unlikely to happen.
And forcing Sanford to resign could create another leadership crisis. Lt. Gov. Andr茅 Bauer has also shown some volatile qualities, some critics say, citing two stops this past year for driving more than 100 miles per hour.