GOVERNORS BRISTLE AT GUARD PROPOSAL
President could take control of National Guard without Governors’s consent.
By ROBERT TANNER, AP National Writer August 5, 2006
CHARLESTON, S.C. - The nation's
governors are closing ranks in opposition to a proposal in Congress that would let the president take control of the National
Guard in emergencies without consent of governors.
The idea, spurred by the
destruction and chaos that followed Hurricane Katrina's landfall in Louisiana and Mississippi,
is part of a House-passed version of the National Defense Authorization Act. It has not yet been agreed to by the Senate.
The measure would remove
the currently required consent of governors for the federalization of the Guard, which is shared between the individual states
and the federal government.
"Federalization just for
the sake of federalization makes no sense," said Gov. Kathleen Blanco of Louisiana,
a Democrat who had rough relations with the Bush administration after the disaster last year. "You don't need federalization
to get federal troops. ... Just making quick decisions can make things happen."
Gov. Mark Sanford of South Carolina, a Republican, said "a whole bunch of governors" were
opposed to the idea after the proposed change was brought up in a private lunch meeting.
Some two dozen governors
met in Charleston for three days of discussions at the annual
summer gathering of the National Governors Association. The association's leaders sent a formal letter of opposition to House
leaders last week.
The language in the House
measure would let the president take control in case of "a serious natural or manmade disaster, accident, or catastrophe,"
according to the NGA.
"The idea of federalizing
yet another function of government in America is a, the wrong direction,
and b, counterproductive," Sanford said. "The system has worked
quite well, notwithstanding what went wrong with Katrina."