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Bush returns to New Orleans for 10th anniversary of Katrina

WATCH ABOVE: George W. Bush was in Gulfport, Mississippi on Friday to mark the tenth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. 

NEW ORLEANS – Former President George W. Bush returned Friday to New Orleans – the scene of one of his presidency’s lowest points – to praise the region’s recovery from America’s costliest natural disaster on the 10th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.

He was with students at Warren Easton Charter High School, the same school he visited on the first anniversary of the catastrophic storm. He was accompanied by his wife, Laura, whose library foundation helped rebuild what is the oldest public school in New Orleans.

WATCH: Hurricane Katrina made landfall in New Orleans 10 years ago, eventually leaving 80 per cent of the city under water and hundreds of thousands of people feeling abandoned by their government. Mike Drolet reports.

The two met with students at the school’s gymnasium, where he was also greeted by New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu and former Louisiana governor Kathleen Blanco, who was in office during Katrina. His wife, Laura, wore a purple dress in honour of the school’s colours.

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READ MORE: Obama lauds ‘inspirational’ New Orleans 10 years after Hurricane Katrina

The school’s success is one of the president’s brighter moments in what was an extremely trying time for the Bush administration. Bush was vilified for his government’s lacklustre response.

A series of faux pas – from flying over flooded New Orleans first on Air Force One to his “Heckuva job, Brownie” quip in support of the soon-to-be-dismissed director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, Michael Brown- marred his personal record.

RAW VIDEO: George W. Bush dances to New Orleans school marching band during Hurricane Katrina 10 year anniversary visit

Douglas Brinkley, a presidential historian at Rice University and author of “The Great Deluge,” a detailed account of the first days after Katrina, said the catastrophic hurricane became a “confluence of blunders” from which Bush would never recover. His approval ratings fell after the storm and never returned to pre-storm levels, he said. “That’s when I think his presidency started on a downward trend.”

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In New Orleans, Bush and his team were pilloried by Louisianans and became a source of deep resentment and mockery – displayed in effigy at Carnival displays for years after Katrina.

READ MORE: 10 years after Katrina, New Orleans’ tourism industry a textbook success story of rebirth

At Warren Easton, at least, Bush could point to a success story.

“We have fond memories of his last visit,” said Arthur Hardy, a celebrity in New Orleans for his expertise in all things Mardi Gras and Carnival, the city’s signature festivity. Hardy graduated from the high school in 1965.

He said Bush helped the school come back and reopen after Katrina.

WATCH: President Obama was in New Orleans to mark ten years since Hurricane Katrina brought the city to ruins. Weijia Jiang reports.

After New Orleans, the Bush family will visit Gulfport, Mississippi, to attend an event with state officials, including Gov. Phil Bryant and former Gov. Haley Barbour. Barbour was governor when Katrina hit and served as a staunch Bush ally.

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The event in Mississippi will serve to thank first responders who helped after the hurricane.

The Gulf Coast and New Orleans are places that Bush is deeply tied to – both as an eastern Texan familiar with the Gulf and as the president who inherited the Katrina disaster.

The bulk of the rebuilding fell to the Bush administration, which oversaw more than $140 billion on the disaster, his office said.

Bush largely took a hands-off approach and frequently said rebuilding was best left to locals. He’s made frequent trips to the region since Katrina, his office said. Much of the rebuilding – now viewed as a success story – was overseen by Bush appointees.

In 2006, when he came to deliver his anniversary remarks, Bush picked Warren Easton as an example of the city’s comeback spirit.

The school – badly flooded and facing closure – fought to stay open as a new charter school and was in the process of reopening when Bush came. When Warren Easton reopened in 2006, nearly every student who attended was considered “homeless” because they lived in trailers sent to hurricane victims by the Federal Emergency Management Agency or slept on couches, school officials said.

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