Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Fox News Hosts Slam Donald Trump For Denying the Official Death Toll In Puerto Rico Live On Air

Fox News Hosts Slam Donald Trump For Denying the Official Death Toll In Puerto Rico Live On Air
Melissa Francis criticizes President Donald Trump's response to Hurricane Maria as Hurricane Florence batters the North Carolina coast. (Screenshot via Fox News/YouTube)

Ouch.

Melissa Francis, the co-host of "Outnumbered" on Fox News, criticized President Donald Trump's comments disputing the death toll in Puerto Rico as a result of Hurricane Maria, saying his remarks are particularly "distasteful" coming, as they did, as Hurricane Florence batters the North Carolina coastline.

“Five states have declared a state of emergency ... Ten million people in the path of Florence,” said Francis. “Instead, they’re fighting back and forth about what happened in Puerto Rico. It is incredibly distasteful. I don’t know why the president weighed in on this one.”


"I understand the president's frustration in the sense that he has worked very hard to help Puerto Rico ... that the effort to help them has been herculean," Francis continued. "But to take up on the issue of how many people are dead is so disgusting."

The entire panel agreed.

Contributor Steve Hilton agreed with Francis, calling the president's comments "unseemly," and saying that “this political argument is really unnecessary.”

“What are we doing?” Hilton asked.

“Outnumbered” co-host Harris Faulkner concurred, saying that Trump's claim “cheapens us as a country.”

Katie Pavlich, a frequent contributor, said the president's comments about Puerto Rico as Hurricane Florence threatens the Eastern Seaboard served as a “distraction from the preparedness for this current hurricane," noting that while questions about how death tolls are determined and much responsibility must fall on local or federal governments are valid, they can be reserved for another time.

Contributor Leslie Marshall also weighed in, saying that Trump should have not politicized the matter at all.

“You can never ― left or right, no matter what office you’re in ― try and turn disaster into political victory,” said Marshall. “One of the things people are looking at ― which they don’t want to see in the president ― is the self-accolades.”

The Fox News panel's discussions comes after Trump, without providing evidence, denied that 3,000 people died in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico.

This follows Trump’s claims earlier this week that Puerto Rico was “one of the best” and was an “unsung” success for the administration:

A George Washington University study published last month revised the island’s official death toll to 2,975 people, many of whom died due to lack of aid, electricity, water, and access to medical care. The Trump administration shuffled its feet in response to the disaster and was savaged for offering aid remarkably quickly to the victims of Hurricanes Harvey and Irma by comparison.

A POLITICO investigation found the Trump administration’s response to Hurricanes Harvey and Irma (which last year struck Texas and Florida respectively)  was “faster and greater, at least initially” than its response to Hurricane Maria:

No two hurricanes are alike, and Harvey and Maria were vastly different storms that struck areas with vastly different financial, geographic and political situations. But a comparison of government statistics relating to the two recovery efforts strongly supports the views of disaster-recovery experts that FEMA and the Trump administration exerted a faster, and initially greater, effort in Texas, even though the damage in Puerto Rico exceeded that in Houston.

The Trump administration was plagued by scandals related to its response to the storm, however, as Second Nexus pointed out earlier this week:

The awarding of the multimillion dollar electrical restoration contract to a company with no disaster experience that belonged to a friend of a cabinet member brought allegations of corruption and cronyism. The official death toll remains unresolved. And getting into Twitter feuds with both the Governor of Puerto Rico and the mayor of San Juan hurt the Trump administration’s public image.

San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulin Cruz, whom Trump called “incompetent,” has made numerous headlines this week for her harsh rebukes of the president, including in tweets she issued this morning, one of which calls the president’s “LACK OF RESPECT APPALLING!”

Yesterday, Representative Gerald Connolly of Virginia said that if Democrats win back the House in this year’s midterms, they will investigate the “failures of FEMA and the response of the administration” after Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico.

More from People/donald-trump

Donald Trump
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images

Trump Slammed After Saying He's 'Not Joking' About Running For A Third Term

Republican President Donald Trump was ridiculed for insisting he was "not joking" about running for a third presidential term, which would violate the Constitution under the 22nd Amendment, stating a President cannot be elected beyond a second term.

In an NBC interview Sunday morning, Trump maintained his allies were pushing for a third term for the Trump administration.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Donald Trump
Fox News

Trump Ripped For Bonkers Answer After Being Asked To Define What A 'Woman' Is

President Donald Trump was called out after he was asked by a conservative reporter at the end of Women's History Month to give his definition of a "woman"—only to show that he doesn't even know his own talking points let alone those of the wider GOP.

This past Friday, Trump attended the swearing-in ceremony for interim U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey, Alina Habba, where he also took questions.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Karoline Leavitt
C-SPAN2

Karoline Leavitt Gives Mind-Boggling Update On Signal Group Chat Scandal—And Critics Are Furious

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt was called out after she dismissed reporters' questions amid revelations that Atlantic editor Jeffrey Goldberg was invited into a Signal chat with high-level Trump administration officials, particularly Vice President JD Vance and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, discussing military strategy surrounding war strikes in Yemen.

Lawmakers from both parties have increased their calls demanding an investigation into the Signal scandal. The latest push came from Democrats on the House Intelligence Committee, who on Monday sent a letter to Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard calling for an independent probe.

Keep ReadingShow less
Kids in a classroom
Maskot/Getty Images

Tennessee Senate Passes Bill Requiring Schools To Teach Students To Get Married And Have Kids

The Republican-led Tennessee Senate has passed a bill that requires schools to teach children a "success sequence" that emphasizes the importance of getting married and having children.

If approved by the state House, the “Success Sequence Act” would require schools to teach students about the purported “positive personal and societal outcomes” of following a prescribed sequence of life events: earning a high school diploma or equivalent, entering the workforce or pursuing higher education, getting married, and then having children.

Keep ReadingShow less
Two people flirting
Photo by Jed Villejo on Unsplash

People Break Down Telltale Signs That Someone Thinks You're Attractive

Let's be honest: Some of us are pretty clueless when it comes to flirting.

Whether it's knowing how to flirt or suspecting when someone is flirting with us and acting on it, we fumble our way through the experience and might only occasionally find our way to a date or relationship.

Keep ReadingShow less