March 4th, 2010

By Rob Novit, The Aiken Standard

Eight years ago, said Dick Smith with a smile, Dick and Jane ran for Aiken City Council and take the credit for making the council meetings and the decision-making process more open to the public.

Smith and Jane Vaughters, now former council members after two terms in office, formally endorsed state House member Nikki Haley of Lexington to be the Republican nominee for governor. She is a candidate who shares their philosophy, Vaughters said.

Smith and Vaughters were joined in the endorsement by their replacements on City Council, Steve Homoki and Reggie Ebner, and by political activist Marianne Pecararo during a reception at Woodside Country Club. …

“An accountant by training, she has done a wonderful job in the State House, working diligently for open and efficient government and zero-based budgeting,” Vaughters said. “You must look at her three opponents and their actions, not just words. She is really the true fiscal conservative. And you can look at her and see she’s not a good ol’ boy.”

Haley recapped her background, growing up in the small town of Bamberg with parents who immigrated from India. They started a business in their living room and now it’s a multi-million dollar company. Haley started keeping the books at age 13 and only after she arrived at Clemson University did she learn that wasn’t exactly normal.

In the family business, she knows how hard it is to make a dollar and then have the government take it. Haley had not been politically active, but in 2004 she defeated the Republican with the longest service in the House.

“The government has no value for a dollar,” Haley said. She said the budget grew from $4 billion in 2004 to $7 billion in [2007] before the economic crisis has left the House proposing a $5.3 billion budget this year.

Her push since her election has been transparency in government. “There’s a bill to make all transparency permanent,” Haley said, “but it’s not just the legislative votes on the record. I’m now for term limits. … We need fresh ideas.”

With 12 percent unemployment facing the state, Haley wants a new tax restructure to replace the bandage approach.

“We need to look at every single tax,” she said. “We need to eliminate small business income taxes, so they will have the money to hire people. I celebrate Boeing coming to South Carolina … but we need to take care of small businesses, too.” …

To read the complete story, please click here:

http://www.aikenstandard.com/Local/0304-nikki-haley

###