Seeks
aid cut-off to hurricane-ravaged US territory
By
Common
Dreams for
That was San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulín
Cruz's response to President Donald Trump's Monday night tweet-storm, in which
he once again
inflated the amount of federal aid Puerto Rico has received
since Hurricane Maria and attacked Cruz as "crazed and
incompetent."
"He is unhinged," Cruz tweeted
in response to the president's rant, which came after a GOP emergency aid
bill stalled in the Senate, in part due to Democratic opposition
over the legislation's inadequate relief to Puerto Rico.
"He knows his response was
insufficient at best," the San Juan Mayor continued. "Shame on
you!"
Trump's Puerto Rico rant came as over a million U.S. citizens on the island are facing massive
food stamp cuts amid congressional inaction.
The president has repeatedly claimed
Puerto Rico has received $91 billion in federal disaster relief. According to the Washington Post, this number "appears
to be a steep inflation of what's actually been appropriated."
Trump has also reportedly told aides
that he "doesn't want another single dollar going to the island."
The $13 billion relief bill that failed in the Senate Monday included $600 million in aid for Puerto Rico's food stamp program, as well as aid to California, North and South Carolina, and other states.
As the Post reported,
Senate Democrats argued the GOP legislation is "inadequate to meet the
U.S. territory’s needs as it attempts to recover from Hurricane Maria."
According to a
study published in The
New England Journal of Medicine last year, as many as 6,000 people
may have died in Puerto Rico due to Hurricane Maria.
"Democrats are embracing a
House-passed relief bill containing hundreds of millions of dollars more for
Puerto Rico than the GOP version, but it, too, failed to advance Monday as
Republicans opposed it," the Post reported.
"Trump opposes sending any additional aid to Puerto Rico apart from the food stamp money, funding Republicans convinced him to accept as the price for passing the long-pending disaster bill."
"Trump opposes sending any additional aid to Puerto Rico apart from the food stamp money, funding Republicans convinced him to accept as the price for passing the long-pending disaster bill."
In a statement last
week, Puerto Rico governor Ricardo Rosselló accused Trump of treating residents
of the island as second-class citizens.
"People from all over the nation,
and the world, have witnessed the inequalities Americans face on the
island," Rosselló said. "Mr. President: Enough with the insults and
demeaning characterizations."