The Day

Puerto Ricans welcome help, not Trump’s tweets

President to visit hurricane-battered island today in wake of latest controvers­ial comments

- By DANICA COTO

San Juan, Puerto Rico — Outside of official events, many Puerto Ricans say they won’t be welcoming President Donald Trump with open arms during his visit to the storm-wracked island today.

People in the U.S. territory were angry or dismissive Monday when asked about Trump’s descriptio­n of some Puerto Ricans who have criticized the U.S. government’s aid after Hurricane Maria as “ingrates” and about his assurances that the relief effort is going well.

“He’s a piece of trash,” Rachel Cruz, a linguist, said as she headed home after buying groceries in the capital, San Juan. “He makes a fool out of himself and a fool out of his country.”

Cruz said Puerto Ricans are furious with power still cut off on most of the island, schools and many businesses closed, and much of the countrysid­e struggling to find fresh water and food, but she said even the angriest were unlikely to openly insult the man ultimately responsibl­e for helping them.

“The majority of people here feel that way, but we have to be more balanced because we need help,” she said.

Even those happy with the federal aid effort for the U.S. territory’s 3.4 million people said they resented Trump’s tweets about some Puerto Ricans being lazy and ungrateful.

“We appreciate all the help that we’ve received, but his comments are not true,” said Nancy Rivera, a private school principal who was out buying bread. “We don’t deserve that.”

Rivera and her husband live in the north coastal town of Toa Baja, which was one of the hardest hit by Maria and where dozens of people had to be rescued from rooftops amid widespread flooding. The couple has moved temporaril­y to their son’s apartment in San Juan.

Angel Tomas Crispin, manager of a convenienc­e store that was doing brisk business as people sought to restock basic supplies, didn’t have kind words for the president. “Donald Trump is not the solution for Puerto Rico,” he said.

Crispin said he was angered by Trump’s recent comments about the island. “All this money he has, and all the education he has, and he’s ignorant.”

Noelys Martinez, a call center worker, said she didn’t think Trump’s visit would change anything.

“The lights are not going to come back on because of him,” she said as she strolled near a park eating ice cream.

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