Billy Long is a Tea Party stalwart who ran for Congress as a man fed up with Washington.
Long won in a landslide and now represents Joplin, Mo., where he fired up a Tea Party crowd in April pretending to auction off the national debt.
Five weeks later, Long was back in Joplin, this time in the dark and rain, surveying the aftermath of an apocalyptic tornado. And this time, the federal government was his friend.
"FEMA called as soon as I got there and said, 'Congressman Long, we're on the way. We'll have boots on the ground in an hour or two,' " he says. "And I said, 'No you won't; they're already here.' "
What followed, Long says, has been a superb relief effort.
"The president came in, he was great. [Homeland Security Secretary] Janet Napolitano came in, she's been great," he says. "[House Minority] Leader Pelosi came up to me on the floor, hugged me and said, 'Billy, anything the people of Joplin need they'll have.' "
And that's just what they've gotten: FEMA has spent close to $100 million on the cleanup, and an additional $19 million plus on rent and home repairs. Napolitano was back in Joplin on Thursday, praising Joplin's "can-do attitude" and Long.
"He's worked well with our office, with our shop," she said. "When he was asked about FEMA, to rank it shortly after the fact, on a scale of 1 to 10, he said he'd give it a 12."
Doing It Locally
This kind of talk doesn't square with some of Long's constituents. Bloggers say he's "shredding his Tea Party stripes," drinking the "Potomac Kool-Aid." He's portrayed as just another politician bellying up to the trough.
Perhaps surprisingly, some of this grief for helping tornado-ravaged Joplin has come from ... Joplin.
"Joplin would be, some people would use the phrase, 'the buckle of the Bible Belt,' " says John Putnam, who leads a Tea Party group here. "It's very conservative. I think the bottom line for most of us is that we can do it locally."
Putnam says volunteers, local folks hit by the tornado and tens of thousands of people streaming in from across the country — many evangelical Christians with ties to Joplin's numerous churches — have done most of the work. But Putnam, unlike some in the blogosphere, is willing to give Long a pass.
"I think this is the system we operate under, and as long as we're under this system, it's fine for him to try to maximize FEMA's contribution," he says.
This blog features observations from Randy Turner, a former teacher, newspaper reporter and editor. Send news items or comments to rturner229@hotmail.com
Friday, September 23, 2011
Tea Party element not happy with Billy Long's embrace of FEMA: We can do it locally
The Joplin Tea Party element is not happy with what he sees as Seventh District Congressman Billy Long's embrace of FEMA and big government following the May 22 Joplin tornado:
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Obviously Putnam is rich and has no concept of the needs of those whose homes have been taken, whose relatives have died or been injured, who have had everything taken from them.
FEMA was in Joplin within hours. FEMA paves the way for many homeowners to get low-interest loans through the Small Business Administration, as low as 2.8 percent.
Putnam thinks all this can be done locally? This is the reason we pay our taxes. This is what government is for.
Billy Long is absolutely right. He hasn't drunk the Kool Aid; he has had his eyes opened to the needs of thousands of Joplinites. We had 8,000 buildings knocked down, Putnam.
I really think Putnam doesn't even speak for the Tea Party. When tragedy comes and government comes in to assist, things are working correctly.
Mr. Long: Thank you for your leadership. When the chips are down you and our other leaders have come through.
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