Trump won't denounce violence against FEMA workers

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  • Starting in 2019, during the Trump administration, the Federal Emergency Management Agency has been funding migrants’ food, shelter and transportation through two programs that give money to nonprofit organizations and state and local governments.
  • This funding does not come at disaster victims’ expense. Neither of the programs for migrants uses money from FEMA’s Disaster Relief Fund, which is primarily used after natural disasters. Congress funds the migrant and disaster relief programs separately.
  • FEMA is not out of money. The agency’s Disaster Relief Fund was facing a funding deficit before Hurricane Helene hit Sept. 26. This is not unusual; nearly every year since 2017, Congress has approved extra funding for the agency.

 
FEMA is giving billions to illegals who have no legal right to be here.

Chairman Green on Secretary Mayorkas' Claims About ...

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House Homeland Security Committee (.gov)
https://homeland.house.gov




Oct 4, 2024 — ... (FEMA) “does not have the funds to make it through the [hurricane] season.” “The real story here is that the Biden-Harris administration has ..

They would have the funds if illegals who have no legal right to be here had not gotten hundreds of billions from the big pot of money.

It all comes out of one big pot and is distributed.
 

CHAIRMAN GREEN ON SECRETARY MAYORKAS’ CLAIMS ABOUT FEMA FUNDS: BIDEN-HARRIS ADMINISTRATION’S PRIORITIES “ARE COMPLETELY BACKWARDS”​

October 4, 2024

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, House Committee on Homeland Security Chairman Mark E. Green, MD (R-TN) released the following statement after comments by Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas that the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) “does not have the funds to make it through the [hurricane] season.”

“The real story here is that the Biden-Harris administration has spurned the interests of the American people since day one, pushing for hundreds of millions of FEMA dollars every year, specifically for illegal immigrants,” Chairman Green said. “Last year, House Republicans eliminated this spending in the FY24 DHS appropriations bill, only for the Democrat-controlled Senate and White House to fight to add it back to the omnibus spending bill.

“This is an issue of priorities, and the Biden-Harris administration’s are completely backwards. It takes a lot of nerve for Secretary Mayorkas to ask for more money after he and his bosses in the White House fought for roughly $650 million just this year for the Shelter and Services Program. Under Biden and Harris’ leadership, our tax dollars are being used to help facilitate illegal immigration, while many American citizens are left to suffer following natural disasters.”

Background: Mayorkas’ comments came a week after the passage of a continuing resolution providing roughly $20 billion for FEMA’s Disaster Relief Fund (DRF), which is used to fund the response to emergencies like Hurricane Helene. The day prior to Mayorkas’ comments, FEMA published an advisory stating that the infusion of funds from the continuing resolution allowed it to lift restrictions on funding thousands of projects across the country.

Last year, House Republicans zeroed out funding for EFSP-H and SSP—only for the Senate and White House to push back. In the most recent omnibus, roughly $650 million was directed away from CBP to FEMA to fund SSP.
 
That's a lie.
  • Starting in 2019, during the Trump administration, the Federal Emergency Management Agency has been funding migrants’ food, shelter and transportation through two programs that give money to nonprofit organizations and state and local governments.
  • This funding does not come at disaster victims’ expense. Neither of the programs for migrants uses money from FEMA’s Disaster Relief Fund, which is primarily used after natural disasters. Congress funds the migrant and disaster relief programs separately.
  • FEMA is not out of money. The agency’s Disaster Relief Fund was facing a funding deficit before Hurricane Helene hit Sept. 26. This is not unusual; nearly every year since 2017, Congress has approved extra funding for the agency.
 
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