President Donald Trump warned FEMA is set to face reckoning for not doing its job for four years under the Biden administration, he said in an exclusive interview with Sean Hannity.
States may end up bearing the brunt of natural disaster management instead of benefitting from the resources of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), President Donald Trump suggested Wednesday.
Donald Trump, the former U.S. President, has openly criticized FEMA, the federal emergency response agency, claiming it complicates matters. He suggested that states should manage their own issues, criticizing FEMA's performance over the past four years in an interview with Fox News.
President Donald Trump sat down with Fox News’ Sean Hannity for the first sit-down interview of his presidency. Here are some takeaways from their conversation.
President Trump remained focused on past grievances as much as new goals for his returning administration in first sit-down interview with Fox News
"They were very minor incidents, and it was time," Trump told Fox News host Sean Hannity.
Kevin Guthrie, executive director of the Florida Division of Emergency Management, is at the top of Trump's list of potential FEMA nominees, three sources told NBC News.
President Donald Trump will visit storm-ravaged North Carolina on Friday in his first trip outside Washington since the start of his second term.
President Donald Trump targeted federal workers in an opening act aimed at exerting political control over a sprawling bureaucracy — putting federal diversity, equity and inclusion employees on leave, banning remote work and stripping employment protections from civil servants.
US President Donald Trump has floated ending federal disaster relief and leaving states to fend for themselves during emergencies, in his first Oval Office interview since returning to power. With Los Angeles scorched by wildfires and the eastern United States still recovering from two devastating hurricanes,
US President Donald Trump on Wednesday floated ending federal disaster relief and leaving states to fend for themselves during emergencies in his first Oval Office interview since returning to power.