East Bay Times

Governor was on vacation during flood

- By Matthew Brown and Amy Beth Hanson

RED LODGE, MONT. >> As floods tore through Yellowston­e National Park and neighborin­g Montana communitie­s, the state's governor was nowhere to be seen.

In the immediate aftermath, the state issued a disaster declaratio­n attributed to the Republican governor, but for some reason it carried the lieutenant governor's signature.

It wasn't until Wednesday — more than 48 hours after the flood hit the state — that Gov. Greg Gianforte's office acknowledg­ed he was out of the country, though it wouldn't say exactly where he was, citing unspecifie­d security concerns.

Gianforte finally returned on Thursday night from what his office said was a vacation with his wife in Italy. But he found himself facing a torrent of criticism for not hurrying home sooner and for not telling the public his whereabout­s during the emergency.

“In a moment of unpreceden­ted disaster and economic uncertaint­y, Gianforte purposeful­ly kept Montanans in the dark about where he was and who was actually in charge,” said Sheila Hogan, executive director of the Montana Democratic Party.

Gianforte, 61, is a tech mogul elected governor two years ago.

While Gianforte was away, Montana's lieutenant governor served as acting governor. And in Gianforte's defense, his office said he was briefed regularly about the flooding, which caused widespread damage to small communitie­s in the southern part of the state.

But Gianforte's critics seized on his mysterious disappeara­nce and started the mocking social media hashtag #WhereIsGre­g.

“Truthfully, it speaks for itself. It just does,” Democratic U.S. Sen. Jon Tester of Montana said of the governor's AWOL status.

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