State's Four Freshmen Congressmen Find Spotlight Together
Circumstance has put the quartet front and center nationally
The comparisons to pop culture icons are inevitable. The Fab Four. The A-Team. The Four Tops. This year the four freshmen Republican congressman from South Carolina—Trey Gowdy (4th District), Tim Scott (1st), Mick Mulvaney (5rd) and Jeff Duncan (3rd)—have found themselves in the national spotlight to a degree that is unprecedented.
And they haven't wilted from it.
The group was sent to Washington as part of the Tea Party-led tidal wave of voter discontent which threw out dozens of incumbents across the nation and returned the House of Representatives to GOP control.
The historic nature of the 2010 vote is evident in the victories of the South Carolina freshmen.
Gowdy upset longtime incumbent Bob Ingles in the primary and cruised to victory in the general election. Duncan replaced the retiring Gresham Barrett, a fixture in South Carolina politics.
Mulvaney is the first Republican to represent his district since the 19th century.
Scott and Florida’s Allen West were the first black Republicans elected to the House from a southern state since Reconstruction.
Once the group arrived in Washington they did not exactly blend into the woodwork. There was an adjustment period before they started making their respective marks, but their connection to each other made it easier to do so.
“Coming up together as freshmen and learning Washington has helped us forge a friendship that I think will last forever,” Duncan said.
“We were able to depend on each other,” Scott said.
That dependence has been fortified during the foursome’s steady criticism of the National Labor Relations Board’s fight with Boeing. Maintaining a united front works to the benefit of the state in Gowdy’s opinion. “South Carolina is a small enough that it would be disingenuous for us to try to convince one part of the state that its interests are dramatically different than another part of the state,” Gowdy said.
Fairly early on, the freshmen realized that they might clash with party leadership. Mulvaney explained: “South Carolina has always been a fiscally conservative state,” he said. “And fiscal policy is where we parted with leadership. Every place else we’ve been right with them.”
That parting was crystallized during the debt ceiling debate in the summer. The four broke with party leadership in a public way and found themselves in the national spotlight. They became regulars of the cable news circuit, with Mulvaney making a particularly memorable appearance on the Chris Matthews show on MSNBC. They were criticized by Republicans and Democrats alike and vilified in much of the national media. But they held their ground while the debt ceiling bill passed.
“I’m far less concerned with what the New York Times or the Washington Post thinks than what we think of ourselves,” Gowdy said. “The national narrative that I dispute is that there were threats made by leadership or that strong language was used to change our minds.”
It won’t be the last time the group disagrees with House leadership. According to Mulvaney, the debt ceiling bill coming from the “Super Committee” next month has more spending than the budget proposed by Congressman Paul Ryan of Wisconsin. “You’ll see us push against it,” Mulvaney said.
On a personal level, the debt ceiling debate only served to bring the South Carolina freshmen closer together.
“We’re friends,” Duncan said. “We all supported each other when that was happening.”
Each rep is quick to praise the other three. As an example of the support that Duncan alluded to, Gowdy recounted an instance where Mulvaney traveled to the Lowcountry to meet Scott’s constituents and explain to them why Scott’s vote on a certain bill was completely plausible.
Mulvaney did this even though he disagreed with Scott on the issue in question.
Though none of the four dissuades associations with the Tea Party, they prefer to use the term True Conservatism when describing their ideology.
They agree on many issues, but Gowdy insisted they don’t vote as a bloc.
"There is an awful lot of communication before a vote where we talk about where we stand,” he said. “The notion that we always vote the same can be easily disproven.”
Where they will most certainly agree is on amending the corporate tax rate. “We have to agree on the rate,” Scott said. “And we need to figure out how to close those loopholes.”
A by-product of their work on that legislation will be an even stronger sense of camaraderie. “It’s not required that we like each other personally,” Gowdy said. “But it certainly helps.”
Note - Still photos in video courtesy of AP and Jeff Duncan.
Cornell Davis
1:24 pm on Wednesday, October 12, 2011
There need to call these four "the freshman dirtybags", because that's what there are. The republican party is fill of racist idiots, who want to destroy this country and then blame the President.
Greg Adams
10:38 am on Friday, October 14, 2011
Why the hateful rhetoric Cornell? Let me see, a group of elected officials that insist of obeying the Constitution, that judge people by the content of their character you call racist. You are quite the baiter. I will pray for you.
Barbara Bates
12:24 pm on Friday, October 14, 2011
Please explain to me how you can call Tim Scott a racist. He believes that all people are equal.
Tom Dowd
4:02 pm on Wednesday, October 12, 2011
These four representatives are the laughing stock of Washington politics. They were elected to office by people in the poorest, most uneducated and most fanatical right wing voters in America. These "boys" are sort of like a group of hack used car salesmen. Gowdy is a "goofball". He's been told in no uncertain terms that he will never be given any type of leadership position by the GOP while he is in congress.
Jeff Duncan is simply a "good ole boy" that know little to nothing about virtually anything other than being an auctioneer. In reality, he's a bumbling fool. Tim Scott is a person that is being used by the Republicans in South Carolina to show that they have a young black man brainwashed into their way of thinking. Mulvaney is a representative for an area of SC that has over 16% unemployment. He has done nothing to help his constituents but say , "it looks like we will have little hope for improvement anytime soon.”
These four jokers need to be kicked out of office and replaced with folks that can help the country, not obstruct any chance of improvement.
Mimi
8:12 pm on Wednesday, October 12, 2011
The problem I have with these four people is that are nothing but puppet heads for the Koch snorting brothers. They certainly don't get much respect for trying to turn the entire country into the sewer state they are suppose to represent. I find it insulting that these people forget about the other party that they are suppose to represent. This Republican stance of regurgitate the same failed policies that got us in this mess in the first place only show the lack of intelligence or common good of the country. The only thing I could support these twits is on spending cuts, however the government needs money to spend and they should be focused like a laser on the corporate welfare, medicare fraud, fairer taxes FOR ALL not just the 1% on the top. Allocating money to what is needed in THIS country instead of policing the world and nation building everywhere except here. Stop the FRAUD in the military budget, trim the benefits for military contractors. Stop wasting time attacking woman, light bulbs, styrofoam plates, and naming post offices or Shria law. This people have accomplished NOTHING beneficial to anyone. Kick them out in 2012
George Grace
10:28 pm on Wednesday, October 12, 2011
Until the "four twits" take on the defense Dept I have no respect for them. they're tap dancing around the edges until they do that. And I don't expect them to do that because they are Repub's.
Barbara Bates
9:30 am on Friday, October 14, 2011
I am very proud of our four freshman congressmen. They have done what they told the voters that they would do. They haven't gone to DC and been sucked into the DC way of life. They spend time in their own districts so they know what is going on there. Tom Dowd, Mulvaney isn't responsible for the high unemployment in his district. How can you excuse Spratt? He was in that seat for many years and never thought he would be voted out. But he was voted out. There is hope that things will improve. You didn't mention Jim Clyburn's "Corridor of Shame" and the unemployment there. He will probably never be voted out of office. He thought he didn't even need to campaign in 2010. And he didn't at first, but realized he better at least make a couple of appearances. The Republican Party didn't give Jim Pratt any help in his campaign. The Tea Party and 9/12 Groups helped him as much as possible. It is sad for the State of South Carolina to have a "Corridor of Shame" that the entire nation knows about. Clyburn is grooming his daughter to replace him. I am sure that she will be elected. When will these people wake up? You didn't mention what you didn't like about Tim Scott. He was given a seat on one of the most important committees as a freshman-the first time ever. The house leadership probably thought they could completely control Tim. They were wrong. He decided not to join the Congressional Black Caucus because he didn't go to DC to divide the nation by race.