Why Are Americans Fleeing Blue States for Red States?
Let’s Rip Democrats Apart for Fun (and Because They’re Truly Awful)
CBS News Tried to Recalibrate Detention Stats — DHS Was Having None of...
Faith, Not Foul-Mouthed Scolds, Shined at the Grammys
Is There Any Good News Out There?
Has There Been Voter Fraud?
When Canadians Were Actually Funny
Man Who Pushed Propaganda About a Young Gazan Boy Slaughtered By The IDF...
America’s Security Doesn’t End at the Ice’s Edge
Girl Scout Cookies vs. the Inverted Food Pyramid
SBA Prioritizes American Citizens for New Loans
Let ICE Do Its Job
Will We Reach 100 Days of Straight Liberal Content on the Apple News...
Immigration Win: Federal Court Sides With Trump Admin on TPS Terminations for Multiple...
Federal Judge Blocks California Effort to Demask ICE Agents
Tipsheet

Scalise Rejects Colleague's Notion that Disasters Are God's Way of 'Telling People to Move'

Rep. Steve Scalise (R-LA) is starting to inject his voice back into the political arena after his harrowing experience on the baseball field over the summer. Scalise was shot in the hip at a congressional baseball practice in Alexandria, VA by a man who wished harm on Republican lawmakers. Several prayers and surgeries later, Scalise is ready to work his way back to his congressional duties.

Advertisement

One of his first orders of business was to correct something his colleague Rep. Jeb Hensarling (R-TX) said about the devastating floods down south. With storm after storm hitting the likes of Texas and Florida, God is telling residents "to move," Hensarling suggested in a CNBC interview.

"At some point, God's telling you to move," Hensarling said. "If all we do is force federal taxpayers to build the same homes in the same fashion, in the same location and expect a different result, we all know that's the classic definition of insanity. ... Maybe we pay for your home once, maybe even pay for it twice, but at some point the taxpayer's got to quit paying and you've got to move."

As Politico noted, the representative's controversial comments may upend his proposed changes for flood insurance programs. Hensarling, the chairman of the Financial Services Committee, is seeking to restrict flood insurance program premium discounts. Critics say it's cruel, but Hensarling explained in a statement that his changes will fix a "government monopoly" that "forces people to live in harm's way."

Advertisement

Scalise spoke up and issue a subtle rebuke of Hensarling's take on the devastating natural disasters that have forced people to flee their homes.

"My prayers go out to the people of Texas still recovering from one of America's most devastating storms," Scalise said in a statement. "God doesn't wish ill on people whose homes represent their slice of the American Dream."

The recovering representative, who is learning to walk again at a D.C. rehabilitation center, has yet to return to Capitol Hill, but he has been thrilling his colleagues by phoning in to conference calls and whip meetings.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement