[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 159 (Wednesday, October 4, 2017)]
[House]
[Page H7760]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE RELIEF EFFORT IN PUERTO RICO
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Arizona (Mr. Gallego) for 5 minutes.
Mr. GALLEGO. Mr. Speaker, this weekend, as millions in Puerto Rico
trudged through squalor and sewage in search of food, as hospitals ran
low on power and medicine, as homes lay in ruins and businesses
remained swamped under feet of water, our Commander in Chief went
golfing. As our brothers and sisters on the island suffered, our
President sank putts and hit drives.
As the gross inadequacy of his administration's response was revealed
to a worldwide audience, the leader of the free world patted himself on
the back. ``We have done a great job with an almost impossible
situation,'' Trump tweeted.
Mr. Speaker, Donald Trump has it backwards. He is not doing a great
job despite an impossible situation; the Puerto Rican people are.
Yesterday, on a belated visit to the island, Trump could have
apologized. He could have promised a vast expansion of the Federal
relief effort to match the vast and growing needs of the Puerto Rican
people. Instead, he offered only blame and condescension. ``I hate to
tell you, Puerto Rico,'' he says, ``but you are throwing our budget out
of whack,'' said Trump.
I am sorry, Mr. Speaker, but our President is dead wrong. He is the
one who is throwing our budget out of whack with his tax cuts for the
rich. He is the one who is throwing our government out of whack with
his early-morning tweets and his childish temper tantrums. He is the
one who is throwing our country out of whack with attacks on immigrants
and people of color and the disabled and veterans and Gold Star
parents, and on and on, and now, most recently, on the courageous
leaders of Puerto Rico and the people of Puerto Rico. Such poor
leadership, he says, of the ability of the mayor of San Juan and others
in Puerto Rico.
Mr. Speaker, I am not sure Donald Trump understands the meaning of
the word ``leadership,'' especially in the wake of a natural disaster.
Real leadership is about having the courage to do what is right and the
compassion to do what is necessary to help others. It is about self-
sacrifice, not self-promotion. It is about putting our country first
and your own ego second.
Instead, yesterday we were treated to the bizarre spectacle of the
President of the United States throwing rolls of paper towels into a
crowd.
Despite the millions in Puerto Rico wanting for electricity or basic
necessities, he called his administration's response ``unbelievable''
and ``incredible.''
Donald Trump even had the gall to congratulate Puerto Rico on not
losing hundreds of lives like in a real catastrophe like Hurricane
Katrina. Frankly, it is hard to recall a more callous statement from an
American leader in my lifetime.
Mr. Speaker, the outrageously poor response to the devastation in
Puerto Rico is the best illustration yet that President Trump only
cares about people who look like him or vote for him or make the kind
of money that he makes.
The American people, especially the 3.5 million U.S. citizens in
Puerto Rico, deserve a President who is capable of common human
decency, a President more concerned about his conduct in office than
his coverage in the media, a President who understands that his base is
every single one of us.
Mr. Speaker, I would like to close with a few words in Spanish for
the brave people of Puerto Rico.
(English translation of the statement made in Spanish is as follows:)
The Puerto Rican people are stronger than Donald Trump thinks.
And they will come out of this crisis and prosper again.
We can't wait any longer.
We are with you.
Los puertorriquenos son mas fuertes de lo que Donald Trump cree.
Y ellos saldran de esta crisis y prosperaran de nuevo. No podemos
esperar mas.
Le debemos a la gente de la isla nuestro apoyo completo. Estamos con
ustedes.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Members are reminded to refrain from
engaging in personalities toward the President.
The gentleman from Arizona will provide a translation of his remarks
to the Clerk.
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