Arab Times

Trump vows 1st-class infrastruc­ture system

$1trln for projects

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CINCINNATI, June 8, (AP): Dogged by allegation­s in Washington, President Donald Trump traveled to friendlier territory Wednesday and promised to create a “first-class” system of roads, bridges and waterways by using $200 billion in public funds to generate $1 trillion in investment to pay for constructi­on projects that most public officials agree are badly needed and long overdue.

Trump

“America must have the best, fastest and most reliable infrastruc­ture anywhere in the world,” Trump said, pushing his infrastruc­ture plan in middle America as Washington geared up for Thursday’s appearance before Congress by fired FBI Director James Comey.

“We will fix it,” said Trump, standing along the Ohio River. “We will create the first-class infrastruc­ture our country and our people deserve.”

But the controvers­ies and distractio­ns in Washington continued to dog the president throughout the day. As he was speaking, the Senate intelligen­ce committee released the prepared testimony Comey is expected to deliver Thursday. It includes detailed descriptio­ns of meetings and phone conversati­ons between Trump and Comey.

In the speech, the president also pressed the Senate to send him a health care bill, criticized congressio­nal Democrats as “obstructio­nists” and revisited his controvers­ial decision to pull the US out of the Paris climate agreement.

Trump said that as he campaigned across the country last year, people often asked him why the US was spending money to rebuild other countries when the roads and bridges they travel on needed rebuilding, too.

Trump declared the days of spending on other nations are over: “It’s time to rebuild our country” and to “put America first,” he said.

While infrastruc­ture initially was seen as an area where Republican and Democrats could work together, Democrats have balked at Trump’s plan for using tax incentives and public-private partnershi­ps to finance improvemen­ts. Many argue such a plan would result in taxpayer-funded profits for corporatio­ns with the cost loaded onto consumers.

Before the speech, Trump met aboard Air Force One with a pair of families the White House said were “victims” of the Obama-era health care law that the president and congressio­nal Republican­s want to repeal and replace.

Trump said the families — one from Ohio and another from Kentucky — are going through “turmoil” along with millions of other consumers who are facing rising premiums and limited choices for health coverage under the 2010 law.

“It’s just crazy expensive,” said Dan Withrow, president and owner of a pallet packaging and distributi­on company in Louisville, Kentucky. “Deductible­s have gone crazy, the costs of the plans have gone crazy, and what I’ve done is I’ve absorbed most of the increases just so I can keep happy employees.”

“If I passed it all on to them, they would be paying outrageous rates,” he said.

“Now it’s time for the Senate to act and save Americans from this catastroph­ic event because Obamacare is dead,” Trump said. “Obamacare was one of the biggest broken promises in the history of politics. Remember ‘you can keep your doctor, you can keep your plan?’ Didn’t work out that way.”

The Republican-controlled House has passed a health care bill that no Democrats supported. Senate Republican­s are working on their own version.

Trump also mentioned his announceme­nt last week that he was pulling the US out of what he dismissive­ly referred to as the “so-called” Paris climate accord. Trump has said the pact that nearly 200 nations agreed to in 2015 was unfair to the United States. Trump said as long as he is president “we will never have outside forces telling us what to do and how to do it.”

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