Hurricane Sandy: Will Mitt Romney regret suggesting that he'd shut down FEMA?

Liberals are quick to remind voters that during the conservative Republican primary season, Romney was quite open to yanking federal aid for disaster relief

Mitt Romney campaigns in Pensacola, Fla., on Oct. 27: During the Republican primary, Romney had some harsh words for FEMA.
(Image credit: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

As a "severely conservative" Republican primary candidate, Mitt Romney said he would consider shuttering the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which is currently bracing for the fallout from Hurricane Sandy, aka the Frankenstorm. When asked how he would fund FEMA as president, Romney responded that "every time you have an occasion to take something from the federal government and send it back to the states, that's the right direction. And if you can go even further and send it back to the private sector, that's even better." When asked specifically about disaster relief, Romney said that "we cannot afford to do these things without jeopardizing the future or our kids," and that it is "simply immoral" to "rack up larger and larger debts." (Watch the video below.) Liberals are sure that Romney will come to rue those words. Will he?

Yes. Federal aid is essential for disaster relief: "Totally devolving responsibility for emergency management and disaster relief to the states, much less the private sector, is a notion only a stone ideologue would embrace," says Ed Kilgore at Washington Monthly. "The feds don't always do the best job in these situations, but suggesting they are none of the national government's business is the kind of policy that might have even given Barry Goldwater pause."

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