Elizabeth Colbert Busch Has GOP Official Concerned Because She’s ‘Not A Bad-Looking Lady’

April 5, 2013

By Nick Wing, Huffington Post – Elizabeth Colbert Busch, the sister of comedian Stephen Colbert now facing former South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford (R) in a race for the state’s 1st Congressional District in May, has Republicans publicly expressing worries about losing the long-red seat. With her business record, a strong campaign apparatus and an ethically challenged opponent who, just years ago, was at the center of a nationally recognized sex scandal, Colbert Busch has been favored narrowly in early polling. But one Republican recently said there was another reason the party should be worried about the Democrat.

“Everybody is really concerned because she’s not a bad-looking lady,” Jerry Hallman, chairman of the Beaufort County Republican Party, told The New York Times, adding that Colbert Busch was also “a good speaker” and had “some money.”

With issues of gender already emerging at the forefront of the race, comments like this could be making Sanford cringe.

Democrats have been quick to remind voters of Sanford’s mysterious disappearance in 2009 that resulted in scandal. While the governor said he was hiking the Appalachian Trail at the time, he was actually visiting his mistress, Maria Belen Chapur, in Argentina. Sanford and his wife, Jenny, a popular figure in the state, later divorced. In 2012, Sanford and Chapur got engaged, and on Tuesday she made a surprise appearance at her fiance’s victory party.

In a fundraising e-mail for Colbert Busch earlier this week, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y) jabbed Sanford for his past indiscretions.

“This is the same Mark Sanford who, as governor, disappeared from office and used taxpayer money to visit his mistress. With all the issues we are working on, we do not need him in Congress,” she wrote. “Fortunately, there is a strong independent woman running to give us a better alternative named Elizabeth Colbert Busch.”

Other Demorats, seeing Sanford’s infidelity as old news among South Carolina voters, have turned to the ethics issues arising from the scandal. An investigation in 2009 ultimately led Sanford to pay $74,000 in fines and an additional $36,000 to cover the cost of the probe, and on Wednesday, Rep. James Clyburn (D-S.C.) suggested that would be a reliable line of attack.

With those issues already on the tip of his opponents’ tongues, Sanford is expected to be treading carefully.

Republican strategist Hogan Gidley, former executive director of the South Carolina GOP, summed up Sanford’s predicament in a recent interview with CNN.

via Elizabeth Colbert Busch Has GOP Official Concerned Because She’s ‘Not A Bad-Looking Lady’.

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