Heckuva job Trumpie: President hails 'incredibly successful' response to Puerto Rico hurricaneHeckuva job Trumpie: President hails 'incredibly successful' response to Puerto Rico hurricane
With urricane Florence threatening a devastating blow to the U.S. mainland, President Trump
paused at a THuesday briefing with FEMA officials to reflect on what he
sees as the unqualified success of his administration’s response in
Puerto Rico to Hurricane Maria.
“I
think Puerto Rico was incredibly successful,” Trump said at the White
House during a meeting with FEMA administrator Brock Long, Vice
President Mike Pence and Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen.
“I actually think it was one of the best jobs that’s ever been done.”
President
Trump talks about Hurricane Florence during a briefing in the White
House’s Oval Office on Tuesday. (Photo: Susan Walsh/AP)
The
president was responding to a question from a reporter on how his
administration would apply the lessons it had learned from Hurricane
Maria. The Puerto Rican government revised the death toll from last
year’s storm to 1,427, but a team of independent researchers has put the
number of deaths related to Maria at 2,975. Trump, however,
characterized the administration’s much-criticized relief effort as an
“unsung success.”
While
boasting that his administration has received “A-pluses” for its
handling of hurricanes that hit Florida and Texas last year, Trump also
sought to explain why Puerto Rico was different.
“Puerto
Rico was actually our toughest one of all because it’s an island, you
can’t truck things onto it, everything’s by boat. We moved a hospital
into Puerto Rico, a tremendous military hospital, in the form of a ship —
you know that. And I actually think, and the governor’s been very nice
and if you ask the governor he’ll tell you what a great job. I think
probably the hardest one we had by far was Puerto Rico because of the
island nature,” Trump said, adding, “Puerto Rico got hit not with one
hurricane but with two. And the problem with Puerto Rico is their
electric grid and their electric generating plant was dead even before
the storms ever hit.”
Upset by what he saw as a lackluster aid response from the Trump administration, Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rosselló launched a nonpartisan 501(c)(4) organization in April to try to hold U.S. politicians accountable.
Last
October, when the official death toll from Maria was only in the
dozens, Trump traveled to Puerto Rico, where he said he was “proud” that
Hurricane Maria was not “a real catastrophe” like Katrina, which
caused 1,833 deaths when it hit New Orleans in 2005 as a Category 5
storm. President George W. Bush, making a belated visit to the scene of
the disaster, praised his FEMA director, Michael D. Brown, with the soon-to-be-infamous phrase, “Brownie, you’re doing a heckuva job.”
Sen. Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., sensed that Trump had made a similar gaffe Tuesday.
“This
is an offensive, hurtful and blatantly false comment from the
president,” Schumer said in a tweet. “Nearly 3,000 of our fellow
citizens died in Puerto Rico following Hurricane Maria. That is the
complete opposite of ‘success.’”
San
Juan Mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz, who clashed with Trump multiple times
over his response to the hurricane, also cried foul to the president’s
remarks on Tuesday.
With
the federal response to national disasters presenting each presidential
administration with the opportunity to rise or fall in terms of public
esteem, Trump used Tuesday’s photo opportunity to show he was taking the
threat from the storm seriously, more so than any president before him.
“We
are sparing no expense. We are ready as anybody’s ever been. It looks
to me, and it looks to all of a lot of very talented people that do this
for a living, like this is going to be a storm that’s going to be a
very large one — far larger than we’ve seen in perhaps decades,” Trump
said. “Things can change, but we doubt they will at this stage, this
pretty late stage, which we doubt they are going to be very, very far
off course. The places that are in the way and in the most jeopardy
would be Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, that area, and again,
they haven’t seen anything in what’s coming at us in 25, 30 years —
maybe ever. It’s tremendously big and tremendously wet and tremendous
amounts of water.”
Still, the comparisons with Puerto Rico continued to rain down.
“Unlike Puerto Rico, they have very strong power companies,” Trump said of the Carolinas. “They are going to do a great job.”
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