Trump to Travel to Texas With Torrential Rain Still in the Forecast


Washington: President Trump on Sunday announced plans to travel to Texas on Tuesday, as millions of people there continued to battle catastrophic flooding and torrential rain that was expected to last for several more days.

The timing of a presidential visit, as the disaster was still unfolding, could put Mr. Trump in an awkward position of adding to the logistical headaches for state officials, though he may avoid the storm-ravaged parts of Texas. The White House emphasized that the president’s plans were tentative and could still change.

But his Twitter feed and the photos and statements released by the White House indicated that Hurricane Harvey and its aftermath had energized Mr. Trump, giving him the first major external crisis of a presidency that has manufactured most of its own upheavals.

On Friday, as the storm began lashing the Gulf Coast, Mr. Trump posted several updates on the status of the storm and lavished praise on the government’s response. He held two teleconferences over the weekend with members of his cabinet and signed a federal disaster proclamation for Texas.

It was a calculated display of energetic presidential leadership - one hardly unique to the Trump administration. But it also revealed a president who was genuinely riveted by the drama unfolding in Texas, certainly more so than he has been by other pressing issues facing his administration, like tax reform or a repeal of the Affordable Care Act.

Mr. Trump also used the hurricane to soft-pedal a bit of unrelated political business, announcing late on Friday night that he had pardoned Joe Arpaio, the former Arizona sheriff. The timing seemed anything but coincidental: With cable news channels switching to wall-to-wall storm coverage, the fierce criticism of Mr. Trump’s action, from Republicans as well as Democrats, was largely lost in the howling winds.

There were other off-key moments throughout the weekend. At times, Mr.Trump’s tweets conveyed an unabashed excitement about the historic nature of the storm, even as it became clear that Houston and other cities faced a grinding crisis.

“Wow,” he tweeted on Sunday morning. “Now experts are calling #Harvey a once in 500 year flood! We have an all out effort going, and going well!” An hour earlier, he noted, “Many people are now saying that this is the worst storm/hurricane they have ever seen. Good news is that we have great talent on the ground.”

Mr. Trump did not wait long to start doling out praise. On Saturday, as relief efforts were just gearing up, the president tweeted to the administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, Brock Long, “You are doing a great job - the world is watching! Be safe.”

That echoed President George W. Bush’s premature endorsement of his FEMA chief, Michael Brown - “Brownie, you’re doing a heck of a job” - after Hurricane Katrina inundated New Orleans in August 2005. The government’s relief effort, of course, was subsequently botched, and Mr. Bush’s attaboy came back to haunt him.

Hurricane Harvey is the first natural disaster of Mr. Trump’s presidency, and the White House is keenly attuned to the political risks of handling it poorly. When Senator Charles E. Grassley, Republican of Iowa, warned Mr. Trump not to repeat the mistakes of Katrina, the president fired back on Twitter, “@Chuck Grassley - got your message loud and clear.”

“We have fantastic people on the ground,” he added, “got there long before #Harvey. So far, so good!”

One thing that may help the Trump administration’s response is the hard-won history that some of its leaders have with Katrina. Mr. Trump’s homeland security adviser, Thomas P. Bossert, was working for FEMA when the hurricane struck, and later ran Mr. Bush’s emergency preparedness office. The agency’s current administrator, Mr. Long, was head of FEMA’s hurricane program at the time of Katrina.

On Friday, Mr. Bossert said the hurricane was on the minds of everyone in the administration. “That experience is still in their memory,” he told reporters. “It’s still in their experience, their muscle memory. And what we’ve done has gotten a lot better as a government.”

Mr. Bossert suggested that disaster relief, with its focus on rapid response and logistics, was well suited to Mr. Trump.

“This is right up President Trump’s alley,” he said. “His questions weren’t about geopolitical issues or about large political consequences. His questions were about, ‘Are you doing what it takes to help the people who are going to be affected by this storm?’”

On Friday and Saturday, the White House distributed photos of Mr. Trump being briefed on storm preparations and relief efforts.



At Camp David, the president ran the meetings remotely, speaking from a television screen to aides who were in the Situation Room. He was alone at a desk, wearing a jacket but no tie, and a white baseball cap emblazoned with the letters USA.

Administrations typically project an air of activity and resolve during natural disasters. After the calamitous earthquake in Haiti in 2010, the Obama White House issued a stream of fact sheets, statements and Flickr photos to convey the image of a president pulling every lever to help the people there. Mr. Obama dispatched one of his closest aides, Denis R. McDonough, to the capital, Port-au-Prince, to personally oversee the relief effort.

Mr. Obama won credit for that performance. But only four months later, he was faulted for what critics said was his slow-footed response to the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

Mr. Trump’s presidency has been unusual so far in the lack of major external crises, either at home or abroad. Critics have questioned how he would handle a major test, and his response to Hurricane Harvey may offer a blueprint.

His decision to go to Camp David raised some eyebrows, though Mr. Bossert pointed out that the presidential retreat was “45 minutes up the road” from the White House and was equipped with communications facilities that would keep the president in constant contact with his staff.

Given Mr. Trump’s schedule there - and his stream of tweets about it - it is not clear that he would have done much differently if he had stayed in the White House for the weekend. As with his vacation in Bedminster, N.J., the line between work and leisure is often blurry for him.

While the storm clearly dominated the president’s time, he also found time to promote a book by another hard-line law enforcement official, Sheriff David A. Clarke of Milwaukee, take a shot at Missouri’s Democratic senator, Claire McCaskill, repeat a threat to terminate the North American Free Trade Agreement, and reiterate his determination to build a wall on the Mexican border, saying on Twitter that Mexico would pay for it “through reimbursement/other.”

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