The
Greenville News
By
Dan Hoover and Andy Paras
November 10, 2003
President Bush brought a message of "economic
vitality" to BMW Manufacturing Corp., where he
shared a stage today with employees and company suppliers
while a crowd of several hundred guests and workers
looked on.
The president acknowledged the pain that the present
economy has brought to the textile industry but said,
"you just got to know there are programs to help
people transition" to new and better paying jobs.
Refering to the improving economic data released
last week showing an increase in jobs, Bush said "that's
positive, for somebody looking for work. We're here
to talk about making it better."
Presidential strategist Karl Rove, standing nearby,
clapped vigorously as Bush concluded and said, "He
hit a home run."
Bush arrived at Greenville-Spartanburg International
Airport aboard Air Force One at about 3:45 p.m. and
spoke briefly on the tarmac with a Greenville volunteer
coordinator and an Anderson family before going to
BMW.
Gov. Mark Sanford, U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, U.S.
4th District Rep. Jim DeMint and South Carolina House
Speaker David Wilkins met Bush at the airport and
also went to BMW. First Lady Laura Bush was campaigning
in Maine.
Robin Longino, a project coordinator for Hands On
For Greenville, gave Bush a t-shirt and chatted briefly
with him. Hands on Greenville has 1,200 volunteers
who paint schools, clean parks and provide other community
services. Bush has promoted volunteerism, including
the creation of the USDA Freedom Corps.
Bush also met on the tarmac with the Comen family,
whose son, Ben, was written about in Sports Illustrated
last month. Ben Comen competes as a runner at T.L.
Hanna despite having cerebal palsy. Bush asked to
meet the family after reading the article. A staff
member called the family Sunday and asked that they
meet him at the airport.
The family gave Bush a Hanna sweatshirt, just as
someone gave Bush's father a Hanna sweatshirt when
he was president.
"He just congratulated me and told me he's a
runner," Ben Comen said.
"What advice did he give you guys?" the
mother asked Ben and his twin brother Alex after Bush
had left the airport.
"Listen to our mother," they said.
Bush engaged in a town-hall-like meeting with BMW
employees for about 30 minutes. Most of the conversation
centered on jobs.
At the Spinx station on State 101 near the BMW plant,
about 50 people gathered to see the presidential motorcade
as it passed. A teen sat on the hood of a car and
two families stood in the back of pickup trucks.
Bush passed by at about 5 p.m. on his way to a $2,000-per-plate
dinner at Palmetto Expo Center. With the gleaming,
high-tech BMW assembly facilities as a television
backdrop, gave Bush "the opportunity to say that
we can build jobs, that the economy is starting to
turn around and investment does in fact trickle down
into jobs at some point," said Brad Gomez, a
University of South Carolina professor who specializes
in the presidency.
Bush visit comes three days after the Labor Department
announced glowing new job creation figures, a shot
in the arm for an administration under fire over the
loss of jobs since it took over. However, the report
showed also that the manufacturing sector continued
to shed jobs.
In-state Democrats didn't let Bush's visit go by
unnoticed.
Joe Erwin, chairman of the state Democratic Party,
said Bush was remiss for presiding over a "jobless
recovery" and failing to address the plight of
the 128,000 South Carolinians who are unemployed and
the loss of 58,000 manufacturing jobs since he took
office.
Erwin, a Greenville advertising executive, said the
administration "is very quick to flaunt its role
as a global military superpower, but when it comes
to trade agreements, it negotiates with all the might
of a third-world country. Bad (trade) legislation,
has cost South Carolina dearly, since it forces us
to compete against countries with sub-standard wages,
lax environmental laws, and devalued currencies."
In Washington, the Todd Malan, executive director
of the Organization for International Investment,
praised Bush for using BMW to highlight the contributions
of international investment. The group represents
U.S. subsidiaries of companies headquartered abroad.
"The global economy is not a one way street
and the President's trip to the BMW facility is a
wonderful way for people to see just one of the many
examples of how the country benefits from international
investment," Malan said.
The fund-raiser was expected to generate more than
$1 million for the Bush-Cheney re-election campaign,
which broke the $94 million mark with a Winston-Salem,
N.C., event on Friday.
Guests were to dine on wild field greens with vinaigrette
dressing, lemongrass chicken with mixed vegetables,
and chocolate mousse.
While Democrats and some industry leaders have criticized
Bush for what they said was glossing over the accelerating
decline of the region's textile industry, his selection
of BMW, the hub of the region's growing automotive
industry, as the site of remarks on the economy had
symbolic overtones.
The BMW stop was a late addition to his schedule.
As an official presidential event, it allows for a
portion of the costs of the trip to be shifted from
the Republican National Committee to the taxpayers,
a move that administrations of both parties have used
for years.
About two hours before the president arrived, Spartanburg
County Sheriff's deputies swept the parking lot near
the FedEx building with look like miniature German
shepherds and towed a white Camaro away.
Tommy Watson, chief of the Greenville Spartanburg
Airport Police Department, said the dogs reacted to
the car but officers could not find anything. It was
towed as a precaution.
The president is scheduled for an early evening departure
from GSP.
It is Bush's sixth visit to South Carolina since
taking office in January, 2001, and the first since
he campaigned in Greenville in March 2002 for then
Congressman and now Sen. Graham.
Bush and his presidential father have close ties
to the state and its Republican establishment. In
1988, then-Gov. Carroll Campbell's organization propelled
the elder Bush to a primary victory that quickly steered
him to the presidential nomination after an upset
in the New Hampshire primary. Those same GOP elements
repeated the favor in 2000 after the younger Bush
was upset in New Hampshire by Sen. John McCain of
Arizona.
President Bush carried South Carolina with 57 percent
of the vote in winning the White House three years
ago.
Copyright 2003 The Greenville News
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