
To a crowd of more than 100 people at the Hilton Garden Inn, the Democrat, a Spartanburg native and small-business owner in Rock Hill, said she’d fight for protections for women, health care programs for senior citizens, and support for South Carolina residents and businesses.
Those are things she claimed her opponent, U.S. Rep. Mick Mulvaney, a first-term Republican from Indian Land, isn’t doing. Mulvaney declined to comment.
Mulvaney beat U.S. Rep. John Spratt in the 2010 midterm elections in a wave of tea party, anti-incumbent sentiment. Since then, he’s made a name for himself as one of the most conservative voices in his party. Spratt, a York lawyer and Democrat who held the 5th District seat for nearly three decades, introduced Knott, who began as a volunteer in his campaign before joining the staff.
“You know what you got yourself into,” Spratt told Knott in his introduction, adding that everyone should thank her for running. “The seat for this district should not be allowed to go by default.”
“No use getting up here fooling ourselves. I know it’s a long shot,” Spratt said. “But by golly, things like this have happened before and they can happen again.”
Knott, who owns a small marketing business with her husband, has never run for public office, but said her campaign and business experience will help her. She also has the “temperament” to “bring back civility, sanity and help to break the gridlock in Washington,” she said.
Knott’s criticism of Mulvaney included his vote against a bill reauthorizing and increasing support for the Export-Import Bank of the United States, a federal credit agency that facilitates the sale of American goods internationally by providing loans and other financing tools to foreign buyers.
South Carolina’s lawmakers in Washington split support over the bill recently signed into law.
One of the bank’s greatest beneficiaries and supporters is Boeing, an aerospace company that recently built a plant in South Carolina. Boeing’s foreign airline customers have received more than half of all loans from the bank since 2007.
“(Mulvaney) was voting ‘no’ on some very serious issues for South Carolina,” Knott said.
After the vote, Mulvaney told a reporter he resisted lobbyists pushing him to support the bill, and decided not to support it.
“It’s hard for me to go back home and say we need to cut the FBI’s budget by 20 percent but in the next breath say we want to increase the size of the Export-Import Bank by 40 percent. It’s not consistent,” he said.
Pat Calkins, who chairs the York County Democratic Party, said she was pleased with Friday’s turnout and believes Knott will represent all 5th District residents.
The gathering was a sort of homecoming for area Democrats, still stunned by Spratt’s 2010 defeat. Lillian and Ken Warren of Lancaster said they think Knott will bring “integrity” to the office and knowledge of the issues.
“She’s very intimate with what all groups of people need, what the issues are, what’s important to them.”
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