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Gulf Oil Spill: Conservatives Seek Government Solutions To Problem

EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS   06/ 2/10 10:40 AM ET   AP

Gulf Oil Spill Conservatives
Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal walks through oil that got past booms as he tours a land bridge built by the Louisiana National Guard to hold back oil from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in Grand Isle, La., Friday, May 21, 2010. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

Ben Brooks, a lawyer and Republican state senator from coastal Alabama, says he's no fan of big government but he expects an aggressive federal response as a gunky oil spill threatens the Gulf of Mexico.

"There's nothing inherently contradictory in saying we believe in smaller government and demanding that the government protect public safety," Brooks said.

All along the Gulf Coast, where the tea party thrives and "socialism" is a common description for any government program, conservatives who usually denounce federal activism suddenly are clamoring for it.

Take Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, a Republican elected in 2007 when Democrat Kathleen Blanco opted not to seek re-election after she was widely panned for a bumbling response to Hurricane Katrina two years earlier.

Since April 20, when a gulf rig exploded and blew out an underwater oil well about 50 miles south of Louisiana, Jindal has been a ubiquitous presence in the fishing communities and barrier islands along his state's fragile coastline. He's been out on boats and up in Black Hawk helicopters, doors open, to survey the spreading, rust-colored swath of crude.

Jindal, a possible 2012 presidential candidate, has demanded a stronger response from the Obama administration, accusing the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers of dragging its feet in approving Louisiana's plans for protective berms – a plan that took three weeks to approve.

"This oil threatens not only our coast and our wetlands, this oil fundamentally threatens our way of life in southeastern Louisiana," Jindal said last week.

Jindal is a fiscal conservative who made headlines last year by rejecting some federal stimulus money, then distributing other stimulus funds by handing out oversized cardboard checks to local officials.

Louisiana State University political science professor Kirby Goidel said Jindal's call for larger federal involvement in the oil spill management contradicts the governor's usual persona.

"He's governor largely because of Katrina," Goidel said. "He knows that it's important to get out on top of it and be clear if the federal government is not doing what it's supposed to do. It's important for people to know that."

Goidel said he's not surprised small-government conservatives would seek help from Washington in a disaster that threatens the Gulf's water quality and everything that depends on it, from the shrimping industry to tourism.

"I think it's a pretty predictable response: 'We've got a problem that's beyond our control. Get the federal government in here to take control,'" Goidel said.

In Mississippi, Republican Gov. Haley Barbour – another potential presidential candidate in 2012 – advocates limited government and brags that his fellow citizens "hitched up our britches" to recover from Katrina, even as he lobbied for billions of federal dollars for everything from debris removal to expansion of a state port. Barbour has not called for a larger federal response to the oil spill. He said Tuesday that the first oil had appeared on one of Mississippi's barrier islands, near Alabama – a caramel-colored streak about three feet wide and two miles long. He said additional vessels would be used to gather and absorb oil.

"This no reason for anybody to panic," Barbour said Tuesday.

Barbour, who headed the Republican National Committee from 1993 to 1997 and is current chairman of the Republican Governors Association, declined to take any potshots at Democratic President Barack Obama, even hours after Obama criticized himself and said he was wrong to believe oil companies were prepared to deal with a massive spill.

"I'm not going to criticize the president for political reasons," Barbour said. "I don't think it serves any purpose. I don't think it would be fair."

A bipartisan group of attorneys general from Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida sent Obama a letter May 6 asking for federal help in documenting information about oil company BP PLC's response to the blown well.

"We recognize that BP has stated publicly that it will live up to its obligation to pay all claims arising from this environmental and economic disaster. We hope that BP will," the five attorneys general wrote. "But we would be remiss in our responsibilities if we did not consider the possibility that enforcement or litigation efforts may be required in the future."

Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum, who is in a Republican primary for governor, posted the letter on his state website, with other information about the oil spill.

"This has been a tragic event, and our environment and several local economies still hang in the balance," McCollum says on the site. "I remain committed to ensuring British Petroleum and any other responsible parties do everything necessary to make Florida whole."

In coastal Mississippi, Republican state Rep. Steven Palazzo has been critical of the federal government, including what he sees as an intrusive role in a health care overhaul that he – like many conservatives – calls "Obamacare."

As he runs for Congress in a district that relies on shipbuilding, tourism and the seafood industry, Palazzo says Washington should do all it can to protect the Gulf of Mexico. He said his stance does not contradict his advocacy of limited government.

"This is not only an economic nightmare but it's an ecological one as well," Palazzo said. "We cannot spare any resource."

Brooks, the Alabama senator, said the oyster fishermen, shrimpers and deck hands in Mobile County, Ala., depend on the Gulf and he believes the government should handle the oil spill as it would any public safety issue – quickly and with all the resources needed.

"These are hardworking, good people," Brooks said. "They have to work to take care of their families and pay the rent and buy the groceries."

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Ben Brooks, a lawyer and Republican state senator from coastal Alabama, says he's no fan of big government but he expects an aggressive federal response as a gunky oil spill threatens the Gulf of Mexi...
Ben Brooks, a lawyer and Republican state senator from coastal Alabama, says he's no fan of big government but he expects an aggressive federal response as a gunky oil spill threatens the Gulf of Mexi...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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swengnikaerb 09:02 AM on 06/02/2010
Nelson Montana 6 minutes ago (8:44 AM)
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This wasn't a natural disaster. It was a blunder of oversight. That is indeed very preventable. And when dealing with power such as this that threatens the environment, basic precautions should have been in place. They were not.
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Nelson,

Using your "logic"  Read More...
09:18 AM on 06/25/2010
Gulf oil spill solved;
I admit this will work to solve the oil leaking from the sea floor, don't forget to credit me if this technique if used.
OK, the unit must be extremely heavy and shaped like a funnel with its edge just wider than the size of the oil leak entrance. Just flip the funnel shaped unit upsid-down over the oil leak hold, the rest is easy connecting the smaller end to a pipe for pumping.
The oil will always flow upwards so it will not spill out to the bottom, i sat down and think out this very carefully and it will work.

By Rennie Peters
Trinidad and Tobago
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ugly american
Just say "No!" But to What?
05:37 PM on 06/05/2010
Private enterprize has proved that they are inept at dealing with the spill and it's aftermath at best and totally corrupt at worst.
There is a time for the federal government to get involved because it is too big for any corporation to handle.
Personally I believe that time was about three weeks ago. But better late than never!
They called in a movie producer when I think the appropriate people would be NASA. They know a lot about hostile environments and how to fix major problems on the fly. (Ex. Apollo 13)
To be sure don't let BP off the hook! Take every dime it costs us right out of thier dividends and hides! But tell them "thank you, we will take it from here because you are obviously not able to handle it."
01:19 PM on 06/03/2010
Conservatives agree that there is a role for government. This would be one of the instances where government involvement is appropriate. The country needs to be protected. This isn't private sector intrusion. It's protecting the country.

I like how conservatives are hypocrites for wanting the government to be involved, yet liberals are not hypocrites when they say the private sector should fix it. Liberal debating skills at their finest.
03:38 PM on 06/03/2010
very nicely put.
10:59 AM on 06/03/2010
This is a prime example of the hypocritical nature of the conservative movement. It is able to justify practically anything when it supports THEIR agenda.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Teagle03
10:40 AM on 06/03/2010
I hope obamas socialist agenda does'nt include taking over this mess. let the free market fix it.
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10:01 AM on 06/03/2010
The Republican solution to this crisis is "Sarah aka "Bible Spice". She has all of the answers to solve this complicated problem that we can't seem to handle. But first someone must show her where the Gulf of Mexico is located.
10:57 AM on 06/03/2010
She has been looking from her porch and claims to be able to see it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Aurical
Trolls suck!
10:00 AM on 06/03/2010
Exactly. Who has a tougher job at a large company, the folks that make all the actual decisions or the ones that come up with the company jingle? That is what regressives excel at: giving monologues (no follow up), bumper sticker slogans, mock indignation, fear mongering. All of which are a lot easier than actually governing.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
babyboomerorig
We are women, hear us roar!
10:00 AM on 06/03/2010
Ok....too many think that Obama's got the answers and should have his butt in the Gulf area at all times, barking orders, pulling everything into line.

BP admitted last night that they were totally unprepared for this disaster and are grabbing at straws to find solutions.

BP has refused to take suggestions from others in the industry and scientists who think that if they do the wrong thing (like putting the debris down the tube, filling it with mud, etc) and cause fissures to develop around the site. The fissures would be impossible to control and create a bigger problem than we already have.

BP needs to get off it's high horse, take suggestions into consideration, allow the media in to photograph their destruction and realize that this government can only do so much....they broke it, they bought it.
01:21 PM on 06/03/2010
The government might be wise to do something. If only they would try "so much."
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2bad
I'll be takin these Huggies and any cash ya got.
09:42 AM on 06/03/2010
"Government is not the solution to the problem. Government IS the problem." R. Reagan

Seems the right is big on slogans but short on actual solutions for any of the problems they've created. Just a family tradition!
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
caseyblab
09:40 AM on 06/03/2010
I thought Free Markets could do it all. Where is it? When will it clean the beaches and restore fishing and shrimping?
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farmilyman
everything is illusion
09:27 AM on 06/03/2010
Maybe they should get their gun-toting militia/teabag people out their helping.
Democrat in the South
Empathy, the most important word
09:14 AM on 06/03/2010
I know, lets have a contest; the first Republican that stops the oil leak gets to be President.
01:21 PM on 06/03/2010
President Bobby Jindal sounds pretty good.
09:02 AM on 06/03/2010
I thought they wanted nothing from the government. wow whats next. Their like the 3 faces of Eve
06:57 AM on 06/03/2010
They speak out of both sides of their mouths. They need to make up their minds what they want. They have no clue.
05:25 AM on 06/03/2010
Sooooooooooooooo where are the REPUBLICAN TEA PARTY RALLIES about NO BIG GOVERNMENT? LOL!
05:40 AM on 06/03/2010
Big government is the reason they can't fix this. Our government is a massive bloated beurocracy that can't tell it's head from it's ass anymore. A smaller government would have been more transparent and efficient, and would have been easily prepared for an incident like this. The cost is nothing, fixing this doesn't require big-government, it requires a government that's not corrupt and inept like this one.
06:24 AM on 06/03/2010
You miss the point!

The ReTHUGS don't want government in their lives until they need it!, AND they don't want to pay taxes BUT are ready to complain about not having enough supplies to cover their beaches from the oil.
Democrat in the South
Empathy, the most important word
08:49 AM on 06/03/2010
Government IS small now. That's what the rethugs have been doing for decades. If you READ any of the articles on HP you will know that. There's one today about this subject. If you choose to ignore the facts then you are part of the problem and have no credibility.