USA TODAY US Edition

Former aide: Trump considered idea of selling off Puerto Rico

- William Cummings

President Donald Trump raised the possibilit­y of selling Puerto Rico in 2017 after Hurricane Maria devastated the U.S. territory, former acting Homeland Security Secretary Elaine Duke told The New York Times.

“The president’s initial ideas were more of as a businessma­n, you know,” she told the Times. “Can we outsource the electricit­y? Can we sell the island? You know, or divest of that asset?”

Duke, who took the helm at the Department of Homeland Security after retired Gen. John Kelly left to become White House chief of staff, said the possibilit­y of selling Puerto Rico was “never seriously considered or discussed” after Trump floated the idea, according to the Times.

Maria caused $43 billion to $159 billion in damage to the island and left nearly 3,000 people dead.

Duke said she called for an emergency declaratio­n before Maria made landfall, but then-Director of Office of Management and Budget Mick Mulvaney told her to stop “being so emotional.”

“It’s not about the people, it’s about the money,” Mulvaney said, according to Duke.

“I never made such a remark,” Mulvaney told the Times. “My experience with the acting director was that she rarely got anything right at D.H.S. At least she’s consistent.”

After taking over for Kelly, Duke stayed in charge of DHS from the end of July to early December, before she was replaced by Kirstjen Nielsen. Before replacing Kelly, Duke was deputy DHS secretary and had served nearly 30 years in government between her work there and at the Department of Defense.

Duke said in August 2017 she was called to a White House meeting where she expected a discussion on Trump’s pledge to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals that was started by President Barack Obama to protect from deportatio­n immigrants who arrived in the USA as children. She said the meeting was “an ambush” where she was pressured to sign a memo terminatin­g DACA.

Duke told the Times the “room was stacked” with immigratio­n opponents such as Stephen Miller and Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Though she did not disagree with their conclusion­s about DACA, she resented not being part of the discussion over how to handle it, the Times reported.

Last month, the Supreme Court blocked the White House effort to end the program, ruling the order to terminate it was “arbitrary and capricious” because it did not “provide a reasoned explanatio­n for its action.”

Duke claimed she did not provide such reasons because she did not agree with Sessions and Miller’s arguments for ending the program, though she backed the White House position that DACA “isn’t a legal program.”

“What was missing for me is really that process of discussing it,” Duke told the Times.

 ?? RAMON ESPINOSA/AP ?? A boy accompanie­d by his dog watches repairs to Guajataca Dam in Quebradill­as, Puerto Rico, in 2017.
RAMON ESPINOSA/AP A boy accompanie­d by his dog watches repairs to Guajataca Dam in Quebradill­as, Puerto Rico, in 2017.

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