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Landry Calls Civil Servants the ‘Gestapo.’ Who Should Apologize?

In a dispiriting reminder that the more things change, the more they remain the same, Rep. Jeff Landry (R-La.) plucked a page from former Rep. Tom Delay’s playbook, denouncing federal civil servants as “the Gestapo” because when he popped into a local office unannounced and without an appointment last week, staff kept him waiting for 20 minutes. When federal deepwater drilling permit chief Michael Bromwich objected to Landry’s appalling rhetoric, the Representative doubled down on idiotic and demanded that Bromwich apologize. Both Landry’s campaign and his congressional websites featured his pugnacious reiteration of the comment when checked immediately before this blog was posted.

First things first. I am a Jew. The extended family on my maternal grandmother’s side was wiped out by the Nazis. I had a typical upbringing for those born within a couple of decades of the Holocaust: the horror was deeply embedded in our memory and our emotional framework. I think most any Jew of our age—actually, of any age—cringes and feels like someone has walked over her ancestors’ graves when any person in public life bandies words like Gestapo and Nazi about. Louisiana most certainly has a Jewish population, and my hunch is that it will be more than a little interested in Landry’s over-the-top-while-still-down-in-the-gutter rhetoric.   For that matter, lots of non-Jews in the state will be likely be embarrassed to hear that one of their elected representatives is so breezily invoking such a hateful institution as the Gestapo. (Landry’s office numbers are at the congressional website I linked to a bit earlier, for anyone inclined to make a call.)

Second, rhetoric fatigue definitely afflicts the nation. We are so accustomed to people saying ridiculous things that we barely pay them any attention. In this context, though, we need to take more seriously the excoriation of people who work for the government. Remember the Oklahoma City bombing? In its tragic wake, President Bill Clinton gave a somber talk to mourning families in which he spoke words we cannot afford to forget:

This terrible sin took the lives of our American family, innocent children in that building, only because their parents were trying to be good parents as well as good workers; citizens in the building going about their daily business; and many there who served the rest of us -- who worked to help the elderly and the disabled, who worked to support our farmers and our veterans, who worked to enforce our laws and to protect us. Let us say clearly, they served us well, and we are grateful.

Let us let our own children know that we will stand against the forces of fear. When there is talk of hatred, let us stand up and talk against it. When there is talk of violence, let us stand up and talk against it. In the face of death, let us honor life. As St. Paul admonished us, let us ‘not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.’ …

There is nothing patriotic about hating your country or pretending that you can love your country but despise your Government.

Last but not least, we have the reality that demagogues like Landry work so hard to obscure. Far from being mighty and fearsome, the regulators who work for Mr. Bromwich at the unfortunately named Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation, and Enforcement (pronounced “bummer” by inside-the-Beltway wise guys) are both underfunded and outmatched by an oil industry as energetic in its relentless demands for drilling permits as it is in annual profits. The Wall Street Journal has reported that a “small cadre” of regulators armed with “checklists and pencils” had failed to make much of a dent in overseeing offshore operations throughout the Gulf: “inspectors have been overruled by industry, undermined by their own managers, and outmatched by the sheer number of offshore installations they oversee. Inspectors come into the job with little or no hands-on experience in deep-water drilling, learning as they go.”  And the Associated Press recently reported that so many people work for the oil industry near the Gulf that the government is hard-pressed to find new hires who do not have conflicts of interests because family and friends work for the companies they are regulating.

Our political system is so polarized that participants think they can say anything, anywhere, to anybody. But it isn’t so. Ask Tom Delay. But hurry. His “I’m a Member of Congress, I can do and say what I want” approach got him on the wrong side of the law, and he’s frantically appealing a money laundering conviction that will likely land him in prison.

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Rena Steinzor | September 21, 2011

Landry Calls Civil Servants the ‘Gestapo.’ Who Should Apologize?

In a dispiriting reminder that the more things change, the more they remain the same, Rep. Jeff Landry (R-La.) plucked a page from former Rep. Tom Delay’s playbook, denouncing federal civil servants as “the Gestapo” because when he popped into a local office unannounced and without an appointment last week, staff kept him waiting for […]

Ben Somberg | September 21, 2011

David Driesen Op-ed in Post-Standard Discusses Ozone Politics

CPR Member Scholar David Driesen has an op-ed in this morning’s Syracuse Post-Standard discussing the Administration’s punt on the smog standard, arguing it’s “unfortunate that President Obama has decided to embrace the Republican narrative about regulatory burdens instead of explaining the true causes of our economic woes.” Remembering the role of financial deregulation in our […]

Robert Verchick | September 21, 2011

Plan EJ 2014: Building a Foundation for Federal Environmental Justice Policy

Let’s stipulate: EPA’s withdrawal of a stronger ozone rule was the low point. And for many, a betrayal, a sedition, the nation’s biggest sell-out since Dylan went electric (or played China, take your pick). Still, Jackson’s EPA has accomplished a great deal. Last week the EPA showcased new policy devoted to one issue with which Jackson […]

Peter T. Jenkins | September 20, 2011

Sneak Attack Against Regulation of Dangerous Snakes Countered in House of Representatives

Guest blogger Peter T. Jenkins is a lawyer and consultant working with the National Environmental Coalition on Invasive Species (NECIS), committed to preventing further harm from invasive, non-native plants and animals. He is Executive Director of the Center for Invasive Species Prevention (CISP). If the federal government cannot regulate huge constrictor snakes that have already […]

Rena Steinzor | September 19, 2011

CPR Seeks Executive Director

I regret to report that CPR is losing its outstanding executive director, Shana Jones.  Shana’s tenure has produced a true CPR success story, when the organization stabilized on the funding front and its staff began steady growth.  When Shana joined us, CPR staff was half its current size.  In great measure because of her steady […]

David Driesen | September 14, 2011

The Ozone Standard as Presidential Policy: Some Concerns

Cross-posted from RegBlog. As Stuart Shapiro recently pointed out in a RegBlog post, President Obama himself made the decision a week ago to withdraw the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA’s) ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS). Presidents have occasionally acted to resolve disputes between the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) and […]

Ben Somberg | September 13, 2011

Would Susan Collins’ Regulatory Time-Out Act Really Block the Boiler MACT?

Senator Susan Collins announced last week the “Regulatory Time-Out Act” (S. 1538), which would put a one-year moratorium on most “economically significant” regulations. On Monday, she said she had 16 other Senators on board – all Republicans. So while I’m not under any illusion this is going anywhere, one point jumped out at me for […]

Daniel Farber | September 12, 2011

Ten Fatal Flaws in the ‘Regulatory Uncertainty’ Argument

Cross-posted from Legal Planet. A current conservative refrain is the regulatory uncertainty is holding back the economy.  Consider an editorial entitled “Obama’s regulatory flood is drowning economic growth”: Businesses large and small face more uncertainty today about the federal regulatory environment than at any point since the New Deal . . . . Seeing this […]

Rena Steinzor | September 8, 2011

More Anti-EPA Shenanigans? Is IRIS Next on the Hit List? We’ll Be Watching

From what we hear, EPA is not a happy place these days, and we don’t wonder why. Never did a hard-pressed staff deserve so much guff, less. Politico reported that the White House is treating Lisa Jackson with kid gloves, hoping against hope that she won’t up and quit on them over the outrageous White House trashing […]