Instead
of disaster relief, Trump piles on the abuse and cutbacks
More than a million
Americans on Puerto Rico are sliding toward starvation 18 months after
thousands died there in the wake of Hurricane Maria.
The federal disaster
response overseen by President Donald Trump’s administration has been
repeatedly criticized as a skinflint operation.
Funding cuts imposed on
the island this year have yielded horrific scenes, including an HIV clinic
where patients are now being forced to wallow in their own waste for hours
because staff cannot afford to buy enough diapers.
But to the president,
the story here is that everybody’s being unfair to him.
“I’ve taken better care
of Puerto Rico than any man ever,” Trump said Thursday afternoon when
questioned about Gov. Ricardo Rosselló’s (D-PR) criticisms of the White House
response. “Puerto Rico has been taken care of better by Donald Trump than by
any living human being,” he said.
Trump also reiterated
false statistics about funding dished out from Washington to various
hurricane-hit parts of the country, asserting that “we have $91 billion going
to Puerto Rico.”
The president appears to be plucking that number out of thin air, as the Washington Post explained when he used it in a meeting with Senate Republicans this week to grouse about disaster relief funding to the island territory.
The president appears to be plucking that number out of thin air, as the Washington Post explained when he used it in a meeting with Senate Republicans this week to grouse about disaster relief funding to the island territory.
The federal disaster relief process in Puerto Rico is historic for quite different reasons than Trump’s imagined generosity. He may not be the first U.S. head of state to end up bickering with local leaders after their jurisdictions were destroyed by a natural disaster, but he’s the first to swap personal jibes with such representatives in public while the death toll is still rising.
Rosselló’s pointed
remarks toward Trump — including a suggestion that sometimes in life it’s
valuable to “punch the bully in the mouth” during a CNN interview that
aired earlier Thursday — are in part a direct response to the president’s
reported rejection of any further funding to the island, which has been a U.S.
territory for a century.
Trump has also refused
Rosselló’s request for a private meeting, used access to the island as a pawn
in his shutdown theatrics, and sought to divert funds from disaster relief
there to his wall-building quest on the U.S.-Mexico border.
Since the storm,
Rosselló and Mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz of San Juan have each run afoul of Trump’s
notorious lifelong penchant for personal vendettas and reputation-based
grudge-nursing. Rosselló has repeatedly noted that the slow, clumsy, and
inadequate federal response to the catastrophic storm could have been much
simpler and more effective if Puerto Rico were granted statehood.
Puerto Rico’s peculiar
relationship to the rest of its country is exacerbating the hardships that any
populace would face while emerging from a storm as immense and violent as
Maria. Because it is not a state, the basic food assistance program Puerto Rico
residents rely upon is not automatically funded like the broader Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) is elsewhere.
The wrinkles Puerto
Rico’s territorial status places in the funding distribution pipeline between
D.C. and San Juan have forced cuts to food aid that could be restored with a
relatively small distribution of new taxpayer money.
Congressional leaders have reportedly agreed on a package to rescue the roughly two in five people there currently reliant on the program — and the only reason it hasn’t already happened is that Trump is vehemently opposed to the $600 million spend.
Congressional leaders have reportedly agreed on a package to rescue the roughly two in five people there currently reliant on the program — and the only reason it hasn’t already happened is that Trump is vehemently opposed to the $600 million spend.
The double game Trump is
playing on Puerto Rico — indignant friendship posturing in front of cameras and
ruthless pinch-purse score-settling away from them — illustrates the root
problem the territory faces.
Its citizens can enjoy their human and civil rights only as far as national leaders decide to allow. And without statehood, they don’t get any meaningful say in who those leaders are.
Its citizens can enjoy their human and civil rights only as far as national leaders decide to allow. And without statehood, they don’t get any meaningful say in who those leaders are.