USA TODAY US Edition

Trump focuses on stricken Gulf Coast

Pence promises that help is hurrying to battered region

- Gregory Korte

President Trump said Monday that he may visit the Gulf Coast two or three times this week — stopping in Texas and possibly Louisiana — to survey the damage caused by Hurricane Harvey, the worst natural disaster to hit the nation during his 7-month-old presidency.

Trump expressed amazement at the magnitude of the disaster but promised a swift and longterm federal government response.

“I’ve heard the words epic, I’ve heard historic. That’s what it is,” he said at the White House as he met with the president of Finland. “It’s like Texas. It’s really like Texas, if you think about it. But it is a historic amount of water.”

Trump coordinate­d the federal response from the presidenti­al retreat at Camp David over the weekend, declaring a federal disaster just before the storm made landfall Friday. He extended that disaster declaratio­n to Louisiana on Monday as the storm headed north.

“Tragic times such as these bring out the best in America’s character, strength, charity and resilience,” he said. “We see neighbor helping neighbor, friend helping friend and stranger helping stranger.”

“We are one American family, we hurt together, we struggle together,” he said. “We will get through this, we will come out stronger.”

Trump said he would call on Congress to pass a longer-term reconstruc­tion package and said that his threatened shutdown of the federal government over Mexican border wall funding “has nothing to do with it.”

As the federal response en- tered its fourth day, Vice President Pence spoke about disaster recovery. In interviews with Houston radio and television stations, Pence sought to reassure flood victims that federal resources were on their way.

Pence repeatedly emphasized that “the state is in the lead” of the disaster response.

“I remember this during my days as governor of Indiana,” he told Trey Ware, the morning host of KSTA radio in Houston on Monday. “When the rain comes down and beats against the house and the floodwater­s rise and the wind blows, states are in the lead and your local first responders and local emergency managers.”

Pence said the federal government “has a vital role in providing support,” and more than 8,000 federal officials are in the Houston area and have helped to ship more than 1.2 million meals and 1 million liters of water. The Federal Emergency Management Agency has 10 mobile communicat­ion offices in the region.

“These moments bring out the character of our nation. We’re seeing the generosity, the compassion, the courage of the American people in high relief,” Pence told radio host Rush Limbaugh. “I mean, you have first responders who have risked life and limb to rescue families that were stranded after Hurricane Harvey made landfall.”

Trump planned to fly to Texas on Tuesday, but the White House had not confirmed his exact destinatio­n as of Monday afternoon.

 ?? JOE RAEDLE, GETTY IMAGES ?? Vice President Pence says Texas is in the lead of the disaster response, backed up by the federal government.
JOE RAEDLE, GETTY IMAGES Vice President Pence says Texas is in the lead of the disaster response, backed up by the federal government.

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