Trump Attacks Puerto Rico, Threatens To Pull Emergency Responders

in #trump7 years ago

President Donald Trump pummeled Puerto Rico on Thursday, saying its energy framework and foundation were a "calamity" before two sea tempests hit a month ago and he debilitated to pull government crisis administration specialists from the tempest attacked island.

His remarks drew incensed reactions from Democrats who charged he is treating Americans there like "peons."

Trump tweeted, "'Puerto Rico survived the Hurricanes, now a monetary emergency lingers to their very own great extent making.' says Sharyl Attkisson. An aggregate need of........accountability say the Governor. Electric and all framework was catastrophe before tropical storms."

(It wasn't clear why Trump alluded to Attkisson, a preservationist writer who has over and again shielded him.)

"Congress to choose the amount to spend.......We can't keep FEMA, the Military and the First Responders, who have been astonishing (under the most troublesome conditions) in P.R. perpetually!" Trump wrote in another Tweet.

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Trump's most recent assaults on Puerto Rico instantly touched off brutal feedback from Democrats.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York tweeted an inquiry to the president: "For what reason do you keep on treating Puerto Ricans uniquely in contrast to different Americans with regards to catastrophic events?"

"FEMA needs to remain until the point that the activity is done and at the present time, it's off by a long shot to done. There is still demolition, Americans are as yet passing on. FEMA needs to remain until the point when the activity is done," he included.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of California posted, "We don't forsake Americans in their critical moment."

"PR and USVI require MORE help, not less, from the government govt," Pelosi composed, alluding to the U.S. Virgin Islands. At a question and answer session later in the morning, Pelosi called Trump's tweets "terrible."

Rep. Darren Soto of Florida disclosed to NBC News: "Trump keeps on regarding Americans in Puerto Rico as peons. He wouldn't say this in regards to government recuperation endeavors in Texas or Mississippi."

House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer of Maryland stated: "It is dishonorable that President Trump is debilitating to desert these Americans when they most need the government's assistance. He has a duty to our kindred residents in Puerto Rico and on the U.S. Virgin Islands to guarantee that each government asset is made accessible to aid recuperation and remaking for whatever length of time that it takes."

Response from Puerto Rico was quick, as well.

"U.S. nationals in Puerto Rico are asking for the help that any of our kindred residents would get over our Nation," the island's representative, Ricardo Rosselló, tweeted.

Trump's tweets come a long time after Puerto Rico was hammered by Hurricane Maria. FEMA said that as of Tuesday, 21 days since Maria made landfall, 84 percent of individuals on the island stayed without power and just 63 percent had consumable water. Numerous others have been without lodging and essential necessities.

Maria Gonzalez, who has stayed stranded in a remote zone of western Puerto Rico, separated in tears this week as she disclosed to NBC News that she had disease and was in grave need of a generator.

She offered an edgy request to FEMA: "Go ahead! Do what you should do."

FEMA says that 19,000 regular citizen and military administration faculty are working in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The organization is facilitating work fairs in Ponce to contract 1,200 individuals for the help exertion.

Later Thursday, the acting secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, Elaine Duke, is arranging an arrival visit to the Puerto Rico in the midst of the declaration Wednesday that FEMA is growing its authority group there.

By and by, feedback has relentlessly mounted over the Trump organization's reaction to what is being called an unfurling philanthropic emergency, with some comparing the circumstance to the result of Hurricane Katrina. Rosselló raised the loss of life from the tempest to 43.

Be that as it may, Trump himself has over and over lashed out at Puerto Rican authorities, including San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz, who has argued for more government help.

On Sept. 30, Trump tweeted that Cruz had "poor authority capacity" and said Puerto Rican authorities "need everything to be improved the situation them when it ought to be a group exertion."

Days after the fact, amid an Oct. 3 visit to the island, Trump said U.S. alleviation endeavors in Puerto Rico, bankrupt before the tempest, had "tossed our financial plan somewhat askew" and the president was shot calmly hurling moves of paper towels into a group at a fiasco help focus. Cruz has reprimanded Trump for the occurrence, calling it "horrendous and terrible."

VP Mike Pence, in any case, said amid his own visit to the island a week ago that the White House would stay with Puerto Ricans for whatever length of time that the recuperation would take.

"We are with you today, we will be with you tomorrow, we will be with you consistently until the point when Puerto Rico reconstructs and recoups greater and over and above anyone's expectations previously," Pence said last Friday.

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