
Trump tours Texas flood sites and defends officials as questions mount about response
Trump has repeatedly promised to do away with the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) as part of his larger pledges to dramatically shrink the size of government, and he's fond of decrying officials in Democrat-run states hit by past natural disasters and tragedy.
But the president struck a far more somber and sympathetic tone while visiting America's most populous Republican state — highlighting the heartbreak of what happened while effusively praising elected officials and first responders alike.
'The search for the missing continues. The people that are doing it are unbelievable,' Trump, seated with officials around a table with emblazoned with a black-and-white 'Texas Strong' banner, said at a makeshift emergency operations center inside an expo hall in Kerrville.
He later added, 'You couldn't get better people, and they're doing the job like I don't think anybody else could, frankly.'
Since the July 4 disaster, which killed at least 129 people and left more than 170 missing, the president has been conspicuously silent on his past promises to shutter FEMA and return disaster response to the states. Instead, he's focused on the once-in-a-lifetime nature of what occurred in central Texas' Hill Country and its human toll.
'We just visited with incredible families. They've been devastated,' the president said of a closed-door meeting he and first lady Melania Trump had with the relatives of some of those killed or missing.

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