
Floods Put Abbott, a Disaster Veteran, at Crossroads of Trump's FEMA Rebrand
But since the July 4 floods that killed dozens in his state, the Texas governor has spoken much more positively about federal disaster response.
'This is the fastest that I'm aware of any administration responding so swiftly, so collaboratively, so coordinated,' said Abbott (R), appearing alongside President Donald Trump during his visit to Texas last week. In a statement, an Abbott spokesperson cited FEMA as an 'exceptional' partner.
Abbott's shifting rhetoric reflects thinking at the White House, where talk of abolishing the agency has been replaced by talk of 'rebranding.' His opinions will become even more important in the months ahead: Abbott is one of two sitting governors on the FEMA Review Council, giving him direct influence over how the administration will implement Trump's vague ideas about limiting Washington's role in disaster coordination and handing more responsibility to the states.
The administration is pointing to Abbott's response to the flooding as an example of how FEMA can work most effectively. But FEMA has always deferred to the states to lead disaster management, putting in question just how drastically the administration wants to alter its role.
The debate over FEMA comes as Texans are relying heavily on the agency, which coordinates the immediate federal response to a disaster and supports state and local governments in what can be years-long recovery efforts. Since January 2015, FEMA has supported Texas in 16 federally declared disasters, and the state has received nearly $15 billion in federal disaster funds, according to data from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace's Disaster Dollar Database.
'This is incredibly high stakes for governors and state legislatures,' said Sarah Labowitz, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment who studies disaster response. 'I think the hard part is that we don't know [what exactly will happen to FEMA]. It's sort of a bumper-sticker slogan to say get rid of FEMA as we know it. What does that actually mean to people who are living through disasters?'
Abbott and state lawmakers are preparing for a July 21 special session where flood prevention and federal relief funding are on the agenda. And the governor is planning to ask FEMA to reimburse the Texas emergency management department for the millions of dollars it spent tapping search-and-rescue assistance from a state-to-state mutual agreement, according to a document seen by the The Washington Post.
Abbott, meanwhile, plans to keep working on the FEMA Review Council.
In a statement, Abbott's office said his work on the council 'will continue bringing Texas' proven leadership in emergency management to ensure state and local governments are empowered to better serve their citizens.' He suggested during the council's first meeting that he wanted to help 'fill in the details' of the administration's plan to revamp FEMA.
Abbott is planning to ask for several things during the upcoming special legislative session, including improved warning systems in flood-prone areas, better communication between first responders and relief funding for the affected region – including from FEMA.
Abbott has a long track record of managing crises in his state, including Hurricane Harvey in 2017 and the Uvalde school massacre in 2022, and endured the scrutiny of the state response that has followed each one.
'I worked with Governor Abbott on several disasters during my time as administrator, and I don't have anything bad to say about how he approaches it. He understands disaster management,' said Deanne Criswell, who led FEMA under President Joe Biden.
But some Texas Democrats are criticizing Abbott for simultaneously defending the administration's moves to trim down FEMA.
'With the Trump administration gutting FEMA, it's had significant consequences,' said Rep. Julie Johnson, a North Texas Democrat. 'Abbott is showing fidelity to the president, not fidelity to the residents and the citizens of the state of Texas.'
FEMA activated in the state after Abbott requested that a state of emergency be declared on July 5, the day after the flooding, sources at the agency said, and Trump signed it the next day. FEMA can't send responders into a state without an invitation from the governor. The agency also said it would make grants available for recovery efforts in Texas.
But the agency's response was not as proactive as it could have been, Criswell said. The former administrator said FEMA could have had more resources in position to enter the state as soon as Abbott requested federal assistance but was bogged down by new constraints requiring Homeland Security Secretary Kristi L. Noem's approval for larger deployments.
FEMA did not respond to a request for comment.
Before the flooding, the Trump administration's desire to shift more responsibility to states was criticized as a misunderstanding of FEMA's role, which is already to financially support overwhelmed state-led disaster management efforts. Staffing reductions have also put in question the agency's effectiveness.
Noem said at the first meeting of the FEMA Review Council in May that it would 'very much look to' Abbott for ideas to improve the agency. Abbott avoided Trump's talk of ending the agency, instead discussing the need to 'streamline' and 'restructure' it.
On Capitol Hill and in state capitals, there does not appear to be much support for getting rid of FEMA altogether. Criswell acknowledged that there have been bipartisan frustrations for years with the FEMA bureaucracy to secure recovery funding.
During the council's second meeting, which was held Wednesday, Noem said some of FEMA's response to the Texas flooding 'is exactly how President Trump imagined that this agency would operate, immediately making decisions, getting them resources and dollars that they need so that they can conduct the response that they need to do on the ground.'
But Noem's characterization has mystified disaster response experts, who say Abbott appears to be directing an effort consistent with how states normally interact with the agency. FEMA supplements state governments when they are overwhelmed and need financial assistance or coordination with other federal agencies, Criswell said, but state and local governments ultimately lead the response and recovery efforts.
Criswell said Abbott's disaster management strategy this time didn't appear different from when they worked together. Labowitz agreed that the coordination looked the same.
Texas has infrastructure and resources to respond to disasters that other states don't have, according to disaster response experts. But, as Labowitz noted, such states are 'in a strong position in large part because of the backing of the federal government.'
The state's uniquely robust infrastructure has been built from decades of experience responding to hurricanes, tornadoes, ice storms and other natural disasters. Texas also maintains a multibillion-dollar 'rainy day fund' to help finance disaster recovery. Even with those resources, the state has repeatedly relied on federal assistance.
'It's not realistic to expect every state to develop the same type of resources that the federal government can provide,' Criswell said. 'It's a much better use of our taxpayer dollars, whether it's state tax dollars or federal tax dollars, to have this centralized resource capability.'
Texas has still faced criticism for not adequately preparing the Hill Country for catastrophic floods. The region is known to be at risk for flash flooding, but Kerr County was denied state assistance to prepare for flooding, including federal funds administered by the state, multiple times.
'The fact Texas denied their request for grant funding to ensure proper siren notifications is a problem. And that is a failure of Greg Abbott,' Johnson said. 'It is a failure of Texas Republicans.'
Abbott, who has been governor since 2015, has enjoyed a warm working relationship with Trump since his first term, forged through multiple tragedies that have struck the state and demanded federal support. At the helm of the most populous red state in the country, Abbott has been a reliable political ally for Trump, though other state GOP leaders, such as Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, have been more enthusiastic in their support for Trump.
'We've become very, very close, politically and personally,' the president said of Abbott as he led a roundtable with local officials Friday in Kerrville. 'We've had a tremendous relationship with Texas. I guess Texas brought us together. We were together fine, but now we're together a lot more.'
Unlike another governor who has had to deal with Trump on disaster response in his second term – California Democrat Gavin Newsom – Abbott does not harbor national political ambitions. Abbott quickly shot down Trump's floating of him as a running mate last year and is widely expected to seek a fourth term next year.
The federal response to the floods has drawn scrutiny from Democrats, with several members of the state's congressional delegation demanding an oversight hearing. The lawmakers raised concerns about breakdowns in the public alert systems, with many residents and visitors in the area – including attendees of summer camps – not receiving warnings of the coming floods.
Abbott shut down a question when asked about who was to blame for the floods' devastation. Speaking to reporters Wednesday, he said: 'The losing teams are the ones that try to point out who's to blame. The championship teams are the ones that say, 'Don't worry about it, man, we got this.''
Kendall Scudder, chairman of the Texas Democratic Party, argued that the floods were a consequence of Abbott and other Texas Republicans long prioritizing divisive social issues over 'bread-and-butter issues that people are counting on their government to deliver on.' Johnson said Abbott's football metaphor was an 'unconscionable' attempt to skirt accountability.
Abbott has weathered criticism of his disaster response before. His remarks that the Uvalde school shooting 'could have been worse' if not for the law enforcement response became a rallying cry for critics in his 2022 reelection race against Democrat Beto O'Rourke, whom Abbott defeated by a comfortable margin.
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Japan Today
5 days ago
- Japan Today
Over 300 protests held Saturday against Trump redistricting push
A protester raises a sign during one of the Fight the Trump Takeover nationwide rallies against Texas' Republicans efforts to redraw the state's 38 congressional districts, at the State Capitol in Austin, Texas, on Saturday. By Matt Tracy By Matt Tracy (Reuters) -Pro-democracy activists and labor groups held hundreds of rallies and other events across the United States on Saturday protesting the Trump administration's push for Texas to redraw its congressional map in favor of Republicans. Former Congressman Beto O'Rourke was among those who spoke on Saturday in Texas, from which dozens of Democratic state lawmakers fled to deny Republicans the quorum needed to vote on a redistricting plan that President Donald Trump had demanded. "They do this because they are afraid," O'Rourke told an audience on Saturday, speaking of those attempting redistricting. "They fear this power they see here today." Drucilla Tigner, executive director of pro-democracy coalition Texas For All, told Reuters pro-democracy and labor groups held over 300 events attended by tens of thousands of people in 44 states and Washington, D.C. Many of the more than 50 Texas Democrats who fled the state have been staying in Illinois, also the site of protests on Saturday. The Texas lawmakers in Illinois are out of reach of civil arrest warrants that could be acted on within Texas. The Texas Democrats kept the map from coming to a vote during a special session Governor Greg Abbott called that ended Friday. Abbott immediately called a second special session. Abbott said that redistricting plans, legislation to increase flash flood safety in the wake of deadly July flooding, and other legislative work remains undone because Democrats are absent. California's Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom on Thursday unveiled a redistricting plan in his state that he says would give Democrats there five more Congressional seats, possibly offsetting any Republican gains in Texas. The Texas House Democrats said in a written statement on Thursday that they will only return to Texas if their state's special legislation is ended and once California's redistricting maps were introduced. © Thomson Reuters 2025.


Yomiuri Shimbun
07-08-2025
- Yomiuri Shimbun
Dozens of FEMA Staffers Involuntarily Reassigned to Support Deportations
The Department of Homeland Security has reassigned dozens of Federal Emergency Management Agency employees to Immigration and Customs Enforcement to help vet and process new hires for the government's mass deportation initiative. DHS maintained that the moves are temporary and won't hinder disaster readiness, but six current and former FEMA officials said losing that many people, even for a few months, will greatly slow operations while the already much-reduced agency is juggling multiple ongoing disaster declarations, including the historic Texas floods. DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin confirmed the reassignments to The Washington Post, saying that 'through the One Big Beautiful Bill, DHS is adopting an all-hands-on-deck strategy to recruit 10,000 new ICE agents.' 'To support this effort, select FEMA employees will temporarily be detailed to ICE for 90 days to assist with hiring and vetting,' McLaughlin wrote. 'Their deployment will NOT disrupt FEMA's critical operations. FEMA remains fully prepared for Hurricane Season. Patriotic Americans are encouraged to apply at FEMA had already lost about 2,000 people in recent months, since Trump administration officials announced their intention to reduce the agency's role in disaster response and transfer authority to states. Then, over the past week, DHS transferred more than 100 people to ICE – half of FEMA's human resources department and about 50 people from its security team, according to the six current and former officials, two of whom have direct knowledge of the reassignments. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the moves. An email obtained by The Post titled 'Notice of Management-Directed Reassignment' stated that the employee receiving the email was being 'reassigned to the position of Personnel Security Specialist' located at DHS in Los Angeles. The FEMA staffer had seven days to either accept or decline the reassignment. If they did not respond, FEMA and DHS would consider that 'as an acceptance of the directed reassignment.' If they declined, they 'may be subject to removal from Federal service.' 'We appreciate your service and hope your new assignment will be both challenging and rewarding,' the email stated. If employees have to move for their reassignments, FEMA, in many cases, has to cover those relocation expenses, according to federal law. Those moves can add up to tens of thousands of dollars per person, one official explained. The American Prospect first reported FEMA staffers receiving a similar email by FEMA staffers on Wednesday. While FEMA has helped DHS with missions in the past and vice versa, officials said forcing this many people to take reassignments during hurricane season, when the agency is already stretched thin, marks a sharp departure. 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At FEMA, the human resources team – the Office of the Chief Human Capital Officer – typically ensures that the agency has appropriate contracts and processes local hires who would run services for disaster-stricken communities such as those in Texas, New Mexico, West Virginia and Kentucky. FEMA's security team, under the chief security officer, helps vet new employees, contractors and state workers year-round, not just during disasters. But in a major event such as a hurricane, that team may work 10,000 cases a week to swiftly bring on all the personnel needed to respond, according to an official familiar with security's work. Those staffers also coordinate security for all field operations. 'With the increased threats during the Hurricane Helene response, they were critical in coordinating with local law enforcement to protect our personnel in the field,' Criswell explained. FEMA staffers have worked with DHS on immigration initiatives before. Past administrations, including President Joe Biden's, have pushed the agency to use its reservists and other staff members for work along the southern border because FEMA is designed by law to add staff members quickly. Under Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, though, the moves were voluntary. Last year, Republicans scrutinized how the agency used resources – including allowing 50 workers who volunteered to be reassigned for 90 days – for migrants at the border through its Shelter and Services Program. 'I think as an agency of the United States government, we need to prioritize United States citizens,' Rep. Garret Graves (R-Louisiana) said in a hearing last year. 'I don't think I can go back to people at home saying 'Yes, they're properly triaging the needs of our own citizens.'' Since taking office, though, Trump has declared a massive immigration emergency and pushed to direct heavy amounts of resources to raid communities and deport undocumented immigrants. In response, DHS has been actively recruiting and hiring more deportation officers, attorneys and criminal investigators – and it needs people to get these hires vetted and ready to go. 'America has been invaded by criminals and predators. We need YOU to get them out,' the agency said in a pitch featuring a caricature of Uncle Sam and offering signing bonuses and other benefits. According to two people familiar with the reassignments, some FEMA staff are still working from the agency but are supporting ICE's hiring processes by performing background checks and screenings. The moves leave FEMA staffing even more thin, current and former employees said, and could be a big problem if a major hurricane or wildfire were to strike. 'If we have a big disaster surge and 'discover' staffing holes, there is no pipeline in motion working toward addressing any attrition,' said one employee. 'They are quietly strangling our capability.'


Japan Today
05-08-2025
- Japan Today
Texas Republicans could have a hard time enforcing threats against Democrats who left
Democratic Texas Rep. Gene Wu is silhouetted by the setting sun as he boards a bus following a press conference with other Texas House Democrats and Democratic members of Congress at the Democratic Party in Warrenville, Ill., Monday, Aug. 4, 2025. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh) By JIM VERTUNO Dozens of Texas Democratic lawmakers had barely left the state to stall a vote on a redrawn congressional map when Republicans started lobbing threats of steep fines, arrests, criminal investigations and even removal from office. But there are barriers to following through on the tough talk that's come from Gov. Greg Abbott on down, just as the Democrats' effort may not stop Republicans from ultimately approving the map sought by President Donald Trump to shore up his party's 2026 midterm prospects. Legal experts and even Republican state Attorney General Ken Paxton say it would be difficult to enforce consequences against the Democratic lawmakers while they are safely camped out in sympathetic Democratic-controlled states and effectively out of reach of Texas law enforcement looking to bring them home. Paxton, who is running for U.S. Senate, threw out some of the earliest calls for arrests. But even he has called enforcing the various threats 'a challenge.' 'Until they show up themselves back in Texas, sometimes it's hard to actually execute on that," Paxton said in interview with conservative podcaster Benny Johnson. "That's one reason they choose Democratic states. It becomes very difficult to execute those warrants when we can't get the cooperation of other states," Paxton's opponent in the 2026 GOP primary, U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, on Tuesday asked the FBI to 'take appropriate steps' to help Texas authorities find the lawmakers. By leaving Texas for Illinois, New York and Massachusetts, the Democrats prevented the 150-member state House of Representatives from reaching a quorum for a scheduled vote on the new U.S. House voting map. Trump hopes to pick up five Republican seats from Texas in 2026. Republicans hold an 88-62 majority in the House, and the Texas Constitution requires at least 100 members be present to do business. With at least 51 Democrats absent, the House failed to reach a quorum Monday and again Tuesday. Democrats have used the tactic before, in 2003 over a congressional redistricting bill and again in 2021 over an elections bill. But eventually, they had to return to the Capitol where Republicans used their majorities to pass the measures. The current special session ends Aug. 20, but Abbott can keep calling lawmakers back to the Capitol to pass the redistricting bill. Rules in the Texas House rules allow for fines of $500 every day the Democrats are absent. The House also issued civil warrants for the missing lawmakers to be arrested and returned to the House. Abbott then ordered state troopers to help find the lawmakers and bring them back. Abbott also said the lawmakers could be removed from office for vacating their office. But that would require navigating new legal territory and could take months. That effort would stem from a nonbinding legal opinion Paxton issued in 2021 that said the state could sue the lawmakers to have their seats declared vacated. Paxton said that could be a long process that would require individual lawsuits filed against each missing lawmaker, sometimes in district courts he said would not be friendly to Republicans. Still, Paxton said Tuesday that he will press ahead with the lawsuits if the lawmakers don't return by Friday. 'Democrats have abandoned their offices by fleeing Texas, and a failure to respond to a call of the House constitutes a dereliction of their duty as elected officials,' Paxton said. Some influential Republican lawmakers have stopped short of the same call to force them out of office. 'We'll see where it goes,' said state Sen. Charles Perry. "It's a tall order to remove an elected official from the Legislature.' Abbott also ordered the Texas Rangers to investigate possible bribery charges related to how the Democrats are paying for their quorum break, alleging anyone who financially helped them leave the state could be culpable. State Rep. James Talarico, one of the Democrats who left, encouraged donations to support their effort. 'Folks can donate to help us fund this quorum break. And we've already been inundated with donations from across the state of Texas, from across the country,' Talarico said. 'Just regular people donating five, 10, $15. And that's appropriate because this fight is for the people and it should be funded by the people.' David Froomkin, an assistant law professor at the University of Houston Law Center, said the removal effort and bribery charges would be on weak legal ground, and the threats of arrests and investigations are more likely meant to intimidate. 'It's much more aggressive hardball than we have seen in battles over the quorum requirement,' Froomkin said. 'In general in this country today, we're seeing incumbents be much more inclined to make aggressive use of their power in order to try to maintain their power." © Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.