The Palm Beach Post

Trump lauds U.S. aid to Puerto Rico

But San Juan’s mayor rips homeland chief for ‘good news’ remark.

- By Darlene Superville and Luis Alonso Lugo

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump pledged to help Puerto Ricans recover basic necessitie­s and security in Maria’s ruinous aftermath as his homeland security chief tried to escape a tempest of her own making, set off when she called Washington’s response to the hurricane a “goodnews story.”

Elaine Duke, the department’s acting secretary, drew a sharp rebuke from San Juan’s mayor for seeming to play down the suffering.

“When you don’t have food for a baby, it’s not a good-news story,” Mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz told CNN on Friday. “Damn it, this is not a good-news story. This is a people-are-dying story.”

For his part, Trump said Puerto Rico is “totally unable” to handle the catastroph­e on its own.

“They are working so hard, but there’s nothing left,” he said. “It’s been wiped out.”

He said the federal government is “fully engaged in the disaster and the response and recovery effort.”

Trump said he was not aware of Duke’s remark.

“I haven’t heard what she said,” he told reporters. “I can tell you this: We have done an incredible job considerin­g there’s absolutely nothing to work with.”

Yet even in voicing solidarity and sympathy with Puerto Rico, he drew attention again to the island’s pre-hurricane debt burden and infrastruc­ture woes, leaving doubt how far Washington will go to make the U.S. territory whole.

“Ultimately the government of Puerto Rico will have to work with us to determine how this massive rebuilding effort — it will end up being one of the biggest ever — will be funded and organized, and what we will do with the tremendous amount of existing debt already on the island,” he said. “We will not rest, however, until the people of Puerto Rico are safe.”

Earlier he tweeted: “The fact is that Puerto Rico has been destroyed by two hurricanes. Big decisions will have to be made as to the cost of its rebuilding!”

Duke visited the island Friday, surveying the ravaged landscape by helicopter in an hourlong tour and driving from the airport past stillflood­ed streets, twisted billboards and roofs with gaping holes. She met local officials and federal personnel on the ground, and tried to move on from remarks that stunned people in Puerto Rico a day earlier.

Speaking to the pre ss, and taking no questions, she said neither she nor Trump will rest until displaced Puerto Ricans are back home, schools, hospitals and clean water are back and the island’s economy is moving again. Duke said she

is aware that people are suffering and “clearly the situation in Puerto Rico after the devastatin­g hurricane is not satisfacto­ry.”

Trump weighed in on his way to New Jersey for the weekend. He praised his emergenc y management direc tor, Brock Long, for doing a “fantastic job” and said Duke “is acting, and she’s working very hard.”

During this season’s trio of monster hurric anes — Harvey, Irma and Maria — Trump and his administra­tion have drifted into the perilous territory of premature self-congratula­tion in the face of unfolding catastroph­e, seemingly unmindful of the “Brownie moment” that scarred George W. Bush’s presidency.

Bush famously told his emergency management director, Michael Brown, “Brownie, you’re doing a heck of a job” during what proved to be a tragically inept federal response to deadly Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

Trump has repeatedly boasted about the positive reviews he said his administra­tion is getting from Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands for its relief effort, even as people in remote towns struggle to find food, water and other basics.

Then Duke said before leaving Washington that the federal relief effort was a “good-news story” because of “our ability to reach people and the limited number of deaths.”

“Let me clarify,” she said Friday upon her arrival in San Juan. She said she meant “it was good news that people of Puerto Rico and many public servants of the United States are working together.”

Trump is expected to survey the damage in person Tuesday.

‘We have done an incredible job considerin­g there’s ... nothing to work with.’ President Donald Trump

On Washington’s response

 ?? JOE RAEDLE / GETTY IMAGES ?? Sgt. Angel Cotton and other members of the Puerto Rico National Guard deliver food and water via helicopter Friday to survivors of Hurricane Maria in Lares, Puerto Rico. The federal response to Puerto Rico’s crisis is being criticized.
JOE RAEDLE / GETTY IMAGES Sgt. Angel Cotton and other members of the Puerto Rico National Guard deliver food and water via helicopter Friday to survivors of Hurricane Maria in Lares, Puerto Rico. The federal response to Puerto Rico’s crisis is being criticized.

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