The Welland Tribune

Trump falsely accuses Puerto Rico leaders of using relief funds to pay debt

- JOHN WAGNER AND ARELIS R. HERNÁNDEZ

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Tuesday falsely accused “inept politician­s” in Puerto Rico of seeking to use “ridiculous­ly high” levels of hurricane relief funding to pay off debts that have left the U.S. commonweal­th in bankruptcy.

“The U.S. will NOT bail out long outstandin­g & unpaid obligation­s with hurricane relief money!” Trump said in a tweet that represente­d his latest salvo toward leaders of the island since it was ravaged by hurricane Maria a little more than a year ago.

In fact, neither Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rosselló — or a federal board that oversees the territory’s finances — have argued that federal disaster relief funds should be used to directly pay off debts. Rosselló and other local leaders have actively advocated against such a move.

Trump’s tweet came as the federally appointed control board approved a five-year fiscal plan Tuesday. The plan projects that $82 billion in anticipate­d federal disaster funds will bolster the island’s economy, better positionin­g it to pay off debts in the future.

“The president is confusing the oversight board’s position with that of the government of Puerto Rico,” said Sergio Marxuach of the Center for a New Economy.

He said the oversight board’s plan estimates surpluses in forgone years for Puerto Rico because the board expects federal disaster relief funds will stimulate the economy. But federal dollars are not directly being used for debt payment. Rather, they are going to infrastruc­ture and other reconstruc­tion post-Maria, Marxuach explained.

Rosselló and other leaders in Puerto Rico have argued that the plan is too austere.

In a tweet Tuesday, Rosselló wrote that he agrees with Trump that hurricane relief should not be used for debt payments, adding “that’s why I’m opposing the Oversight Board’s outrageous plan that would severely hamper Puerto Rico’s recovery and growth.”

San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz, who publicly pleaded with Trump for a swifter federal response in the wake of Maria, also said in a tweet directed at the president Tuesday that “we finally AGREE on something.”

A White House spokespers­on did not return a request for elaboratio­n on the reasoning in Trump’s tweet.

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