Chattanooga Times Free Press

Trump dispenses hoagies, handshakes in hurricane zone

- BY CATHERINE LUCEY AND KEN THOMAS

NAPLES, Fla. — President Donald Trump doled out hoagies and handshakes in the sweltering Florida heat on Thursday as he took a firsthand tour of Irma’s devastatio­n and liberally dispensed congratula­tory words about the federal and state recovery efforts.

Trump, who was in and out of the state in less than three hours, got an aerial view of the water-deluged homes along Florida’s southweste­rn coast from his helicopter, then drove in his motorcade along streets lined with felled trees, broken traffic lights and shuttered stores on his way to a mobile home community hit hard by the storm.

Walking along a street in Naples Estates with his wife, Melania, the president encountere­d piles of broken siding and soggy furniture heaped on front porches and residents who were happy to get a presidenti­al visit.

“We are there for you 100 percent,” Trump said before donning gloves and helping to hand out sandwiches to residents from a lunch line under a canopy. “I’ll be back here numerous times. This is a state that I know very well.”

Trump earlier met with federal and state leaders in Fort Myers, where he was brimming with enthusiasm for the state and federal response efforts.

“It’s a team like very few people have seen,” he said. Quoting back from Gov. Rick Scott’s praise for the federal government’s responsive­ness, Trump added: “As Rick said, we have been very, very fast, and we had to be.”

The president couldn’t resist injecting a political flavor into his visit, telling reporters in Fort Myers he was hopeful that Scott, a two-term Republican, would run for the Senate, where Democrat Bill Nelson is up for re-election next year.

“I don’t know what he’s going to do. But I know at a certain point it ends for you, and we can’t let it end. So I hope he runs for the Senate,” Trump said.

Trump’s visit offered him the chance to see how people are coping with Irma’s aftermath and how the Federal Emergency Management Agency is responding. Many Florida residents remain swamped and without power. Nearly 2.7 million homes and businesses, about 1 in 4 Florida customers, were still in the dark Thursday.

But as Trump’s comments about Scott suggested, politics weren’t far from the surface in Florida, the largest and most pivotal state in recent presidenti­al elections. Trump defeated Democrat Hillary Clinton in Florida last year by about 1 percentage point.

Vice President Mike Pence, who joined Trump on the trip, promised Floridians: “We’re with you today. We’re going to be with you tomorrow, and we’re going to be with you until Florida rebuilds bigger and better than ever before.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump, center, and first lady Melania Trump on Thursday tour a neighborho­od impacted by Hurricane Irma in Naples, Fla.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump, center, and first lady Melania Trump on Thursday tour a neighborho­od impacted by Hurricane Irma in Naples, Fla.

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