JEAN LAFITTE, La. (AP) — Republican Mitt
Romney launched the final leg of his quest for the White House by visiting
storm-battered Louisiana on Friday. He drove through a town that was flooded by
Hurricane Isaac in part because it's still outside the vast flooding protection
system built with federal funds after Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans.
Just hours after accepting the presidential
nomination at the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., Romney swooped
into this fishing community, where Isaac brought severe flooding to the area
earlier in the week before being downgraded to a tropical storm.
Romney, who chatted with a handful of storm
victims and shook hands with first responders, didn't have too much to say.
"I'm here to learn and obviously to draw some attention to what's going on
here," Romney told Republican Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, who he
accompanied to the Jean Lafitte town hall to meet with emergency workers.
"So that people around the country know that people down here need
help."
That snippet of conversation represented
the bulk of Romney's public remarks in Louisiana on Friday.
His host, Jindal, is now calling on the
federal government to expand the rebuilt flood protection system that prevented
serious flooding in New Orleans during this week's storm. That system, built
after flooding from Katrina devastated much of New Orleans, cost the Army Corps
of Engineers $14.5 billion. It doesn't extend as far as Jean Lafitte, which is
situated in Jefferson Parish, and has been affected by a series of hurricanes,
including Katrina, Rita, Cindy and now Isaac.
"It is absolutely critical that the
Corps, and certainly our delegation working them, but that the Corps and the
federal government look at those other levees," Jindal said Thursday.
Lafitte is included in a proposed ring levee that the state hopes to build, but
there are no concrete plans to build yet.
Romney was silent on whether, as president,
he would support paying for such an expansion. Romney's running mate, Wisconsin
Rep. Paul Ryan, has proposed eliminating $10 billion a year in disaster
spending and requiring Congress to pay for emergencies by cutting from
elsewhere in the budget. That proposal was blocked by GOP leaders.
Hurricane Isaac is blamed for at least six
deaths in Louisiana and Mississippi. It submerged hundreds of homes, forced
thousands of others to evacuate and cut power to nearly half of Louisiana's
homes and businesses.
Romney didn't speak to reporters as he
toured Jean Lafitte on Friday. The Romney campaign refused to say whether he
would support additional funding for the levees, saying only that the GOP
nominee "recognizes the importance of disaster prevention and would seek
to ensure that we have the infrastructure we need to keep all Americans
safe."
Jindal did explain the issue to Romney as
they climbed into the Republican nominee's SUV and began their tour.
"It (the levee system) performs well,
but the areas here — the other areas ..." Jindal said, trailing off
because Romney jumped in.
"Are outside, outside that levee
system," Romney said.
Romney's motorcade, including trucks
equipped to drive through high water, edged gingerly down Jean Lafitte
Boulevard, a main road.
Accompanied by National Guard vehicles, the
caravan inched through water that at some points was a foot or more deep,
submerging gas stations, flooding homes and covering front laws. Residents
stood in the water and watched the motorcade pass.
Flood protection was clearly on the minds
of residents. A man who waved a neon yellow sign reading "Mitt is Our
Man" wondered why levees had not been able to protect the low-lying areas
of this fishing community.
"It has really destroyed us," the
man said to Romney after the motorcade stopped on the side of the road. "I
don't know why we can't come up with something that saves all."
Up the street, a giant pink sign hung on
the balcony of a flooded house. "Where is our levee protection?" it
read.
Romney and Jindal spent close to an hour
meeting with first responders and local officials. Romney shook hands with
National Guardsmen outside the U.S. Post Office and talked with a local
resident, Jodie Chiarello, 42, who lost her home in Isaac's flooding.
"He just told me to, um, there's
assistance out there," Chiarello said of her conversation with Romney.
"He said, go home and call 211." That's a public service number
offered in many states.
Chiarello said she will likely seek some
other shelter because her home was submerged in the flooding. She expressed
frustration about the town's lack of flood protection.
"We live outside the levee protection
that's why we get all this water because they close the floodgates up front and
all they're doing is flooding us out down here," she said. "It's very
frustrating, very. We go through Katrina and Rita and now we're going through
Cindy, Lee and now Isaac."
Romney's last-minute visit, announced less
than 12 hours after he became the Republican nominee, took him to the disaster
area ahead of his Democratic rival, President Barack Obama. The president was
following with his own visit to Louisiana on Monday, the White House announced.
Romney went at Jindal's invitation, his
campaign said. Jindal, a Republican, told reporters Romney had been in touch
several days ago to ask how he could help with storm relief and Jindal
suggested Romney come down and see the damage for himself. He said he had
extended an invitation to Obama as well.
"We welcome them both," Jindal
said.
Jindal insisted that he would stay focused
on the storm's aftermath during both men's visits.
"We're not talking politics," he
said. "That's not the right time to do that. We're solely focused on the
hurricane and the response."
White House spokesman Jay Carney, asked
what a private citizen like Romney could accomplish by visiting a disaster
area, said he wasn't sure how to answer the question but that drawing attention
to the affected area was "important."
Romney spokesman Kevin Madden said Romney's
visit could focus people on "the needs of the affected region,
particularly the need for charitable donations and resources to aid relief
efforts."
Back in Washington, Democrats seized on the
trip to accuse Republicans of supporting cuts in federal disaster funding that
the Gulf Coast will now need to recover from Isaac.
"It is the height of hypocrisy for
Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan to make a pretense of showing sympathy for the
victims of Hurricane Isaac when their policies would leave those affected by
this disaster stranded and on their own," said Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid, D-Nev., in a written statement.
Louisiana Sen. Mary Landrieu said she
welcomed Romney to her home state but pushed him on disaster funding.
"I hope as he witnesses recovery in
action, he will reflect upon his party's approach to funding disaster
response," she said. "Had the plan advocated by his running mate
Congressman Paul Ryan and Congressman Eric Cantor prevailed, there would be no
money readily available to provide assistance for this, or any other disaster."
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