Gulf Today

Calm Biden tackles storm’s fury

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Nature has its own way of dealing with humanity. Now its whims have affected the office of the most powerful person on the planet. He has not only to contend with man-made opposition and issues, but also deal with the ravages of Nature.

A month into the job and focused on the coronaviru­s, President Joe Biden is seeing his disaster management skills tested ater winter storms plunged Texas, Oklahoma and neighbouri­ng states into an unusual deep freeze that let millions shivering in homes that lost heat and power, and in many homes, water.

At least 59 deaths across the US have been blamed on the blast of unseasonab­le weather.

Biden came into office on January 20 promising to tackle a series of brewing crises, starting with the coronaviru­s pandemic and its ripple effects on the economy. He tacked on systemic racism and climate change as top priorities. The problem is that the storm is happening when the coronaviru­s is also raging on. This means that delivery of millions of much-needed vaccines to boost immunity to the pandemic will be delayed.

Biden approved a major disaster declaratio­n for Texas on Saturday as the state struggles with the storm fallout.

Millions of residents in the United States’ biggest oil and gas producer have had to contend with days of electricit­y outages, and nearly half of all Texans are still suffering from disruption­s to their water service.

10 deaths due to hypothermi­a were reported. The action by the Biden administra­tion makes federal funding available to affected individual­s, including assistance for temporary housing and home repairs and low-cost loans.

With all the state’s power plants back online, millions of Texans were finally able to turn on the lights and heat their homes again. However, outages persisted and more than 78,000 homes remained without electricit­y as of Saturday morning.

With the weather set to improve and temperatur­es expected to return to normal in the coming days, the main concern has shited from power to water.

More than 1,200 public water systems have reported service disruption­s, many of them leading to boil water notices.

Biden said on Friday that he hopes to travel to Texas next week but doesn’t want his presence and the accompanyi­ng presidenti­al entourage to distract from the recovery.

“They’re working like the devil to take care of their folks,” Biden said of Texas officials.

Biden wants to avoid repeating the mistakes of his predecesso­rs where response to natural disasters is concerned.

George W. Bush earned praised for his leadership ater the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks but stumbled during his administra­tion’s halting response to the humanitari­an disaster that unfolded in New Orleans ater Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast four years later.

Barack Obama said he should have anticipate­d the brickbats for going to the golf course right ater he condemned the beheading of a kidnapped American journalist by militants in 2014. Obama was vacationin­g on Martha’s Vineyard at the time. Donald Trump was criticised for tossing rolls of paper towels into a crowd of people in Puerto Rico who had endured Hurricane Maria’s pummelling of the island in 2017.

Bill Clinton, who famously claimed during the 1992 presidenti­al campaign that “I feel your pain,” was a natural at connecting with disaster victims.

Just this week, Republican Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas came under atack for travelling to Mexico while his constituen­ts suffered without power, heat and running water. His explanatio­n – that his daughters pushed for the getaway because they were out of school – was particular­ly slammed.

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