In Panhandle, Fla. GOP Senate candidate Rubio calls federal response to oil spill ‘abysmal’

By Matt Sedensky, AP
Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Fla. Senate hopeful calls spill response ‘abysmal’

PENSACOLA, Fla. — Senate hopeful Marco Rubio accused the Obama administration of “insanity” and “incompetence” in its handling of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, but steered away from his own support of offshore drilling at a campaign stop Wednesday.

Rubio said Obama should have convened the world’s leading experts in the initial days of the spill and devised a plan to stop it. He also railed against federal regulatory nitpicking he says has kept containment and cleanup efforts from being more effective.

“The response has been abysmal,” said the likely Republican nominee and tea party favorite from West Miami. “What this oil spill has revealed to us is a level of federal incompetence that is intolerable.”

The criticism of the federal response was met with loud applause at Rubio’s appearance in the Panhandle, where beaches have seen oil wash ashore. But he stayed away from his own stance on offshore drilling, which is controversial in this tourism-dependent region.

In questioning after his appearance, Rubio reiterated his openness to considering offshore drilling in Florida’s waters but said it was a “non-issue” because it is currently barred by state law.

“It has to be based on science. If the science says that drilling off Florida’s waters should be safe, that’s one thing. If it says it’s not, that’s another,” Rubio said. “Legalizing drilling off our coast should be based on a cost-benefit analysis that benefits Florida and doesn’t cost it ecologically or economically.”

Democratic candidates Kendrick Meek and Jeff Greene both oppose drilling off Florida’s coast and Gov. Charlie Crist, who was a Republican but is running as an independent, has come out against it since the Gulf spill.

Rubio, the former state House speaker, criticized Crist’s decision to call a special legislative session with the aim of putting an offshore drilling ban on the ballot in November.

Lawmakers will meet next week to consider whether voters should be able to decide on a constitutional amendment that would prohibit drilling in state waters. Rubio said the move is “nothing but a political stunt that uses this region and its suffering as a prop for a political campaign.”

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