The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Trump’s claim about DC homeless raises eyebrows

- By JILL COLVIN Associated Press writer Geoff Mulvihill contribute­d to this report from Cherry Hill, New Jersey.

WASHINGTON (AP) >> Washington, D.C., officials are pushing back against an unsubstant­iated claim by President Donald Trump that he orchestrat­ed a purge of homeless people in the city to shield visiting foreign dignitarie­s from having to see them.

The claim, in a Fox News interview that aired Monday, was among a series of assertions leveled by Trump in recent days as he has seized on the homeless epidemic. He has also claimed, wrongly, that homelessne­ss is a novel issue and suggested, without evidence, that local and state officials have deliberate­ly exacerbate­d the problem for political gain.

“It’s a phenomena that started two years ago. It’s disgracefu­l,” Trump claimed in the interview with Fox News host Tucker Carlson. He blamed mayors and governors, and threatened interventi­on, saying: “We’re looking at it very seriously. We may intercede.”

Trump then suggested he had done something to end homelessne­ss in Washington, even though thousands still sleep on the streets of the nation’s capital and in its shelters.

“You know, I had a situation when I first became President, we had certain areas of Washington, D.C., where that was starting to happen, and I ended it very quickly,” said Trump. “I said, ‘You can’t do that.’ When we have leaders of the world coming in to see the president of the United States and they’re riding down a highway, they can’t be looking at that.”

The claim left D.C. officials baffled.

“I have no idea what the president’s talking about,” said City Councilmem­ber Brianne Nadeau, who chairs the council’s human services committee. “It sounds like he’s talking about some kind of removal of homeless people rather than providing services, which is what we do.”

A survey released in May found about 6,500 homeless people in Washington — down from 8,350 in 2016. But there is no evidence that Trump had anything to do with that decline, according to city officials.

Experts say high housing costs are the main cause of homelessne­ss. They say that accounts for the recent increase in people living on the streets up and down the West Coast, where a strong economy has pushed up rents. Nationally, there are about 550,000 homeless people, according to onenight snapshots conducted in 2016, 2017 and 2018.

Trump’s comments came in response to Carlson’s complaint that cities in Japan were cleaner than those back home.

“There’s no graffiti. No one going to bathroom on the street. You don’t see junkies,” he said, complainin­g that some U.S. cities including New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles have got “major problems” with “filth.”

“We cannot ruin our cities,” Trump responded, blaming the problem on what he referred to as the “liberal establishm­ent.”

“The thing that nobody can figure out is do these governors or mayors, do they really think this is a positive? Do they really think this is okay? Because it’s not. It’s destroying their city. And it’s destroying a whole way of life . ... It’s not what our country is all about.”

Trump also raised the issue — though not by name — during a press conference in Japan shortly after taping the interview, responding to a question about Russian President Vladimir Putin’s comment that Western-style liberalism is obsolete.

Trump complained about cities like San Francisco and Los Angeles, saying, “I’m very embarrasse­d by what I see in some of our cities, where the politician­s are either afraid to do something about it, or they think it’s votes.”

In Los Angeles, Mayor Eric Garcetti said the growing homeless crisis there and across the nation “is not his fault, nor is it my fault, it is something that has been decades in the making.” He issued a public invitation to Trump to walk the city’s streets with him to see the suffering and desperatio­n firsthand.

In D.C., however, city officials scoffed at Trump’s portrayal of the homeless population, and said they would gladly welcome additional federal resources to help provide housing and other services to those in need.

It’s “incredibly offensive,” Nadeau said of Trump’s language. “It’s interestin­g to me that a leader who lives in our nation’s capital and is the highest official in the land could be so cavalier about people living in the streets right outside his doorstep.”

Laura Zeilinger, director of the D.C. Department of Human Services and former executive director of the U.S. Interagenc­y Council on Homelessne­ss under former President Barack Obama, said Trump “has had no direct influence or involvemen­t in the District’s work to end homelessne­ss.” She said his budget “has only proposed decreases in federal funding for affordable housing.”

“The District welcomes the Administra­tion’s support and additional resources to make homelessne­ss in our city and in our nation rare, brief and nonrecurri­ng,” she said in a statement.

The White House did not respond to repeated questions about what specifical­ly Trump was referencin­g in his claim about the District. Instead, they pointed to the decline in the city’s homeless rate, which began before Trump took office, and his 2020 budget request for nearly $2.6 billion to support local homeless housing and service programs — a $215 million increase from 2019, despite broader efforts to reduced public housing assistance.

“Like many Americans, the President has taken notice of the homelessne­ss crisis, particular­ly in cities and states where the liberal policies of overregula­tion, excessive taxation, and poor public service delivery are combining to dramatical­ly increase poverty and public health risks,” said spokesman Judd Deere. He noted that Trump last week signed an executive order to explore efforts to remove regulatory barriers to affordable housing and said Trump had “directed his team to go further and develop a range of policy options for considerat­ion to deal with this tragedy.”

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER ?? President Donald Trump talks during a signing ceremony in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Monday, July 1, 2019, with Vice President Mike Pence, left, and Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar. The president signed a $4.6 billion aid package to help the federal government cope with the surge of Central American immigrants at the U.S.-Mexico border.
CAROLYN KASTER President Donald Trump talks during a signing ceremony in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Monday, July 1, 2019, with Vice President Mike Pence, left, and Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar. The president signed a $4.6 billion aid package to help the federal government cope with the surge of Central American immigrants at the U.S.-Mexico border.

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