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South Carolina Primary 2012: GOP Candidates Steer Clear Of 'Corridor Of Shame'

Posted: 01/20/12 04:32 PM ET

By Samuel P. Jacobs

MARION, South Carolina--Amid the flurry of campaigning before Saturday's South Carolina Republican presidential primary, not a single candidate has shown up in Marion County, a sleepy rural stretch that represents the bottom of the U.S. economy.

Unemployment in the county stands at a staggering 17.3 percent, the highest rate in a state battered hard by the recession. Manufacturing, textile and tobacco jobs have been steadily leaving Marion for decades and now more than 2,000 of the county's 33,000 residents are looking for work, according to the South Carolina Department of Employment and Workforce.

Marion County is located in what has become known as the "corridor of shame" - an impoverished stretch of South Carolina along Interstate 95 - and has stood still even as Republican Governor Nikki Haley aggressively lures companies to the state. Her efforts last year brought announcements of new or expanded operations in the state from Boeing, BMW and TD Banknorth.

Haley, who has endorsed Mitt Romney in the Republican presidential race, is proud of the growth. "In a nation struggling economically," she said in a recent interview, "South Carolina is winning."

But Marion County, which sits along the site of a proposed interstate highway, has scored few wins. Its population is stagnant in a state that has seen a 67 percent increase in population in 30 years. Without jobs, officials say, it is hard to attract new people and younger residents are anxious to flee.

Rodney Berry, mayor of the town of Marion and executive director of business development in the county, says two things hold the county back. Roads need work, something residents feel acutely when they travel to more prosperous neighboring counties, and the county has built its hopes around completion of the new interstate highway.

It also suffers from the perception that the available workforce is uneducated. Thirteen percent of residents have bachelor's degrees, little more than half the average in South Carolina statewide.

"Plain and simple," Berry said. "A lot of people need some help."

SOLIDLY DEMOCRATIC

Politically, Marion County has long been a Democratic Party stronghold in a Republican state. It is majority African-American and in 2008 its voters solidly backed Barack Obama. They are poised to back Obama's re-election.

Obama visited the county in 2007 and raised its problems as a campaign issue. Republican Newt Gingrich picked up the theme, referring to the "corridor of shame" in campaign appearances and criticizing the Obama administration's outreach to low-income communities.

But none of the Republican contenders ventured into Marion when they gathered 50 miles away in the popular tourist town of Myrtle Beach for a Monday debate. Myrtle Beach is in Horry County, which has fared much better in the tough economy. Marion County's other neighbor, Florence, last year saw major manufacturing companies arrive, including the job-listing site Monster.Com, food-maker Heinz, and car-maker Honda.

"You'd think we'd be primed for great growth," Berry said. "But we are so different than the two big counties we are nestled between. We do think often that we are the forgotten people."

Adding to the pain, Marion County is about to lose its influential Democratic congressman, James Clyburn, through redistricting. A Republican may take the seat, leading Berry to worry that his county will be even more forgotten.

LIFE GOES BY

Rita Hennecey, who has lived here since 1953, watches the slow pace of progress with her friends from a table at Dry Dock, a popular gathering place along Highway 76.

"Marion used be known as a pretty little city on the way to the beach," she said after church one recent Sunday. "You would never have dreamed it would be this way."

Hennecey and her friends can recount the town's history, its namesake Revolutionary General Francis Marion, known as the "Swamp Fox," and the tobacco farms and textile plants that once supported a thriving economy.

But they can just as easily recall the names of the now-gone companies that once made candy, clothes and Coke bottles. When Russell Stover, the area's largest employer, left town in 2000, nearly 1,200 jobs went with it. That story has been repeated over and over. In May, car-parts manufacturer Inteva closed its plant, putting 42 people out of work.

"It used to be busy on Main Street," said Lucia Atkinson, who has lived in the area for more than 70 years. Her husband was mayor for 18 years. "It was filled with four or five groceries and four filling stations. They sold ladies dresses and furniture."

Today, a quarter of the stores on Main Street are vacant.

As mayor, Berry finds himself fielding phone calls from residents who need help with electric bills or organizing collections to put chicken, grits, and rice onto families' tables. More than a quarter of the people live below the poverty line.

"When you hear the news every month, Marion County is the highest unemployment," Berry said. "Emotionally, it takes a toll on folks. It's become engrained in our minds to some degree ... It just starts to permeate your mind and body that maybe we can't."

But he and others try to be optimistic. Over the years, folks here have faced and conquered adversity many times before.

"We are very resilient people," he said.

(Editing by Marilyn W. Thompson and Bill Trott)

Copyright 2012 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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By Samuel P. Jacobs MARION, South Carolina--Amid the flurry of campaigning before Saturday's South Carolina Republican presidential primary, not a single candidate has shown up in Marion County...
By Samuel P. Jacobs MARION, South Carolina--Amid the flurry of campaigning before Saturday's South Carolina Republican presidential primary, not a single candidate has shown up in Marion County...
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11:12 AM on 01/21/2012
Watching the GOP candidates at these primaries and listening to their debates makes me feel like they are a bunch of teen thugs in a street brawl throwing punches at each other but from a non-striking distance in front of a bored audience. The only exception is Ron Paul who seem to be out of the ring and trying to address the "real" issues facing the Nation and is offering the best solutions to get the Nation out of its current economic crisis - and only a handful of the crowd are listening to him - while the rest of the audience is engaged in watching the comedy performed by the rest of the GOP candidates.
rdk70816
Yellowhammer
10:46 PM on 01/20/2012
And what has Obama done for the corridor of shame? Nothing.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rdmptn
Veteran Quartermaster
02:26 AM on 01/21/2012
President Obama helped J.V. Martin to get a $23.5 million low interest loan to rebuild their school. You guys will say and do anything to bash the President. If you were really interested in the answer to your question you would have looked it up. What have you or your candidate done to help these people? Nothing, because you don't care.
rdk70816
Yellowhammer
12:27 PM on 01/21/2012
What has he done to help the people in the corridor attempt to become prosperous? The school is a long range thing that will probably be filled with bad teachers.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
miketothad
trollslayer
06:41 AM on 01/21/2012
Much more than Republicans, or a Newt Gingrich, simply using people as a punchline.
You should be worried about your floundering party, more than whining about The President.
rdk70816
Yellowhammer
12:28 PM on 01/21/2012
President of what?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
thinkingwomanmillstone
10:12 PM on 01/20/2012
The candidates only represent their big donors....no big donors in the "corridor of shame". If they go there, they'd have to address problems that they have no answers for and no desire to solve. The mantra of ...the wealthy are being singled out and unfairly vilified would not go over well in the face of the reality of what many Americans face every day.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
A dean89
08:56 PM on 01/20/2012
G.O.P county Democrat voters
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camelias and sweet tea
Small drinking village with a shrimping problem
08:10 PM on 01/20/2012
And I suppose if offered, Nimrata will turn down and Federal help, she usually does. And she usually just keeps cuttings funds for education..THAT is why they keep voting "R", they don't know any better and that is how the GOP likes it down here.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Dosadi
Political agnostic
08:10 PM on 01/20/2012
Maybe they could trick Mitt into making a few stupid bets with them. We know he's good for $10,000. That would be a good start.
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dfranz
With Liberty and Justice for all
07:56 PM on 01/20/2012
No money available in the poorest county in the state, it's as simple as that. Heck, no one there could even afford the $10,000 a plate fee if they held a campaign dinner. It's not surprising, but disgusting none the less. Yet to hear these yahoos speak, they are the only political that can save this country and get these people back to work. Besides those people should ba happy that the Republican GOP passed a bill that reconfirms that IN God We Trust is still our national motto.
06:56 PM on 01/20/2012
There should be a program to help people become entrepreneurs in that area.
They can be educated to stop depending on the anti-union white stooge bosses.
nothingchanges
too soon old, too late smart
06:25 PM on 01/20/2012
I suspect the only "interest" the Republicans have in "the corridor of shame" is to make sure that photo id's are required to vote.

Poor people are beneath their notice.

That's the REAL shame.
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camelias and sweet tea
Small drinking village with a shrimping problem
08:11 PM on 01/20/2012
That is sooo true faved, already your fan. They have shown all the pretty photos of Charleston this week, you have no idea what else is out there.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Veneita
06:07 PM on 01/20/2012
GOP politics 101. Ignore real problems for the people on the lower rungs of society and act like they don't exist in "the greatest country in the world" and keep pushing "American Exceptionalism".

Growing up n the 1950's and receiving the brain washing of that era this sounds familiar. We had a teacher who told us those terrible Russians filmed people in Appalachia and showed it to the people in Russia as "propaganda of how American people live". The fact that those people in Appalachia WERE American citizens and that WAS the way they lived never crossed his mind.

Funny,...you would think a teacher could have put 2 and 2 together.
05:41 PM on 01/20/2012
"South Carolina is winning."

In a Charlie Sheen kind of way...
NYC619
Tri-corn hats cannot fit block heads
05:02 PM on 01/20/2012
"Corridor of Shame" sounds like a medical condition or closet full of skeletons Grinchy or Little Dicky Sanctimonious would have.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Veneita
06:11 PM on 01/20/2012
but it's not. It's a place and it's hell. http://www.corridorofshame.com/index.php
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camelias and sweet tea
Small drinking village with a shrimping problem
08:19 PM on 01/20/2012
There is a mostly Black community Called Atlantic Beach, right next to the High Rises in Myrtle Beach...They just were given FREE internet service by a gentlemen July, 2010. These people had no accress to computers while being surrounded by the wealth of the Grand Strand area. They don't talk about Atlantic Beach much either but at least now those resident who can afford a computer can talk about things now.