WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump and Texas
lawmakers on Friday defended the federal government’s response to the
deadly July Fourth flooding in Central Texas, claiming that aid was
quickly dispatched to reeling communities after the floodwaters swept
through.
Making his first visit to Texas since
the floods, which killed at least 120 people, Trump toured a part of the
disaster site near the Guadalupe River in Kerrville, received briefings
from local officials and sat for a roundtable with first responders and
other officials. After the event, in response to a reporter’s question
about whether federal weather forecasters properly warned of the
impending floods, Trump stood by his administration’s response, saying
that “everyone did an incredible job, under the circumstances.”
He then bristled at the question and labeled the inquiring reporter “evil.”
“Only a bad person would ask a question like that,” he said.
Other roundtable participants rallied to the president’s defense and praised the pace of the federal government’s response.
“Pointing fingers is for losers,” Rep. Chip Roy said, invoking similar comments made by Gov. Greg Abbott
at a news conference earlier in the week. The Austin Republican, whose
district was hit hardest by the storm, was effusive in his praise for
Trump.
“I can't thank you enough,” he said to the president. “When I called you on Friday, you said, ‘whatever you need.’”
Abbott, who sat to Trump’s left at the
roundtable, said it was “the fastest I'm aware of any administration
responding so swiftly, so collaboratively, so coordinated as we have in
response to this.”
President Donald Trump, First Lady Melania Trump and Gov. Greg
Abbott receive a briefing from first responders as they visit a scene
of recent flood devastation along the banks of the Guadalupe River in
Kerr County on July 11, 2025
The White House previously defended
the quality of its weather forecasts and warnings, insisting they were
“timely and precise” and undisturbed by staffing cuts at the National
Weather Service. In the days since, scrutiny has shifted to how the
federal government has responded, as reports have emerged
that the Federal Emergency Management Agency has moved slower than
expected to help with recovery and search-and-rescue efforts.
On Sunday, two days after the flooding began, Trump signed a major disaster declaration at Abbott’s request, freeing up federal funds for the recovery efforts.
The aid package includes grants for
temporary housing, funds for repairing damaged homes and facilities, and
low-cost loans for uninsured property losses.
Statewide leaders, including Abbott and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, underscored that lawmakers will work during the upcoming special legislative session to find solutions that could prevent similar tragedies.
Abbott said the session, scheduled to
begin July 21, will give community members a chance to “weigh in” on how
the Legislature should respond. One such venue, Patrick said, will be a
legislative hearing in Kerrville where residents hit by the flood will
get to share “their stories, their needs and their wants.”
Accompanying Trump on his flight from Washington to Central Texas were Sens. John Cornyn and Ted Cruz,
along with Housing and Urban Development Secretary Scott Turner, a
former Texas state lawmaker whose agency has coordinated parts of the
federal response to past Texas disasters, such as Hurricane Harvey.
Rep. Wesley Hunt,
a Houston Republican who is considering a Senate primary run against
Cornyn, was the only House member to accompany Trump on Air Force One.
On the ground, Trump was joined by nearly every Republican from Texas’ congressional delegation.
Texas’ devastating floods have
refocused attention on the president’s plans for FEMA — one of the main
coordinating hubs of the recovery efforts. Trump has previously
suggested the agency should be significantly reduced and have many of
its recovery functions shifted to the states.
“A governor should be able to handle
it, and frankly, if they can’t handle it, the aftermath, then maybe they
shouldn’t be governor,” he said at the White House in June.
Some Texas leaders have supported
Trump’s call, including Abbott, who was named earlier this year to a
council tasked with recommending changes to the agency. At the council’s
first meeting in May, Abbott said states “have proven that we can move
more nimbly, more swiftly, more effectively” than FEMA, which he
characterized as “slow and clunky.”
The Kerrville floods are raising fresh
questions about whether a scaled-back agency could do enough to help
states respond to serious disasters.
Trump’s administration has reportedly
backed off plans to wind down the agency, instead pivoting to a
potential “rebrand” that would center state officials in future disaster
response.
In a statement, White House
spokesperson Abigail Jackson denied the report and said Trump was
committed to “empowering state and local governments by enabling them to
better understand, plan for and ultimately address the needs of their
citizens.” Discussions on how to restructure FEMA are ongoing, Jackson
said.
Some Republicans have touted FEMA’s
importance in the days since the floods. Cruz called the agency’s
response “incredibly important,” adding that he would be open to seeing
it restructured to become more “nimble.”
On Thursday, ten House Democrats from Texas signed a letter
requesting a hearing to probe the federal government’s response
preparedness and “the damaging role that the Trump administration has
played in weakening the federal government’s capacity to respond to
disasters.”
In the wake of the flooding, some
rescue efforts and resources have been slowed by Homeland Security
Secretary Kristi Noem’s cost-cutting policy of personally signing off on
any contract or grant FEMA awards over $100,000, CNN reported. Agency officials created a task force earlier this week to expedite the process, according to NBC News.
Noem, whose department includes FEMA,
has stood by the new protocols and FEMA’s overall response, calling the
CNN report “absolutely trash.”
A group of Texas Democrats, led by Reps. Greg Casar of Austin and Jasmine Crockett of Dallas, sent a letter to the FEMA administrator Monday asking for clarification on the policy.
After Trump’s Texas visit Friday, The New York Times reported that two days
after the floods, FEMA didn’t answer nearly two-thirds of disaster
assistance calls because hundreds of call center contractors were fired
when their contracts expired July 5. Noem didn’t renew the contracts
until five days later, the Times reported.
1 comment:
I don't know about much about the warning system in Kerr County but I was in the Hill Country on Monday and spoke to several first responders. My old agency, TABC sent in an SRT whose response to this disaster was immediate. I'm talking on the ground within hours along with DPS, Game Wardens and Coast Guard they are all working from can to can't.
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