
          South_Carolina Senate Remains Totally White
          By Derfner, Mary FrancesMary Frances Derfner
          Vol. 3, No. 1, 1980, pp. 14-15, 22
          
          "It's about time we elected a Black State Senator," declared the posters and the handouts on the street. Many South Carolinians, both Black and White, agreed that Bill Saunders, Charleston broadcasting executive and director of the Committee on Better Racial Assurance (COBRA), a human services agency, should become South_Carolina's first Black state senator since Reconstruction. Saunders's record included voter_registration drives in the 1950s, original membership on the State Human Affairs Commission, work as principal mediator in the 1969 Charleston hospital strike, and extensive service on task forces and committees working on problems of youth, the elderly and handicapped, health_care, education, economic_development and crime. As Director of COBRA, a group designed in part to establish a bridge between Charleston's Black and White communities, Saunders had worked with all elements of Charleston and Georgetown Counties, and seemed an ideal candidate.
          Saunders won the hotly contested June primary and runoff elections and became the Democratic nominee for State Senate Seat 1, Charleston and Georgetown Counties, with the support of what he describes as "one of the best coalitions ever put together in Charleston," involving "the whole nine yards" of the population. Active in the Saunders campaign were South_Carolina Governor Richard Riley, Charleston local businessmen and civic leaders, and, says Saunders, more people who gave $2 and $5 contributions than were involved in any campaign of its size in local history. Despite this broadbased support, Bill Saunders lost to Charleston County Republican Party Chairman Glenn McConnell, receiving slightly less than 46 percent of the district wide vote.
          Local Republican and Democratic party officials cite the "coattail
effect" of Ronald Reagan's presidential victory and the mood of the
electorate as the main reasons for the defeat of 

Democratic candidates, including Bill Saunders, within Charleston and
Georgetown Counties. Both parties also agree that the Republicans
out-organized the Democrats, particularly in predominantly White,
suburban precincts, with a resulting turnout of only 60 to 65 percent
of registered voters in majority-Black precincts compared to a turnout
of from 70 to 80 percent of registered voters in majority-White
precincts.
          Bill Saunders concurs that the major reasons for his defeat were "anti-Carter sentiment and the mood of the country," stating that local Democrats would have stood a better chance had the local and national races been separated on the ballot. Saunders also accuses the local media of ignoring the real issues in political campaigns and stressing irrelevant and irresponsible comments made by opposition candidates. "If you want to talk issues and not run a nasty campaign, you're out of luck," says Saunders.
          Saunders blames his defeat to a lesser degree on confusion within
the Black community. One Black faction urged split-ticket voting while
the Democratic_Party urged straight-ticket voting. There was also
less-than enthusiastic support of Saunders from some traditional
sources generated by the fact that the State NAACP has been seeking to
have the state senate reapportioned into single member districts for
quite some time. The fear that


the election of even one Black to the state senate would endanger a single member reapportionment plan tempered the support of some Black leaders. The Chronicle, Charleston's Black newspaper, while supporting Bill Saunders, noted reservations that perhaps the reason Saunders was able to garner so much White support was the fact that White politicians were trying to defuse the single member district reapportionment attempt; the NAACP, while supporting Saunders, expressed a belief that his election might harm their reapportionment suit.
          Whatever combination of reasons led to the defeat of Saunders, he
does not believe his race was one of them. Statistics showing that
Saunders received approximately the same number of votes as White
Democrats in local races seem to bear him out. "I got a lot of White
votes," says Saunders, expressing a hope that local Blacks will
realize this and not make a racial issue of his defeat. Racial issue
or not, the defeat of Bill Saunders leaves the South_Carolina State
Senate 100 percent White, and enables some future candidate once again
to claim: "It's about time we elected a Black State Senator."
          
            Mary Frances Derfner is an occasional writer in Charleston, S.C., for Southern_Changes.
          
        
