Cracks emerge in House GOP after speaker's threat to saddle California
wildfire aid with conditions
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[January 23, 2025]
By MICHAEL R. BLOOD and KEVIN FREKING
LOS ANGELES (AP) — California Republicans are pushing back against
suggestions by President Donald Trump, House Speaker Mike Johnson and
other Republicans that federal disaster aid for victims of wildfires
that ravaged Southern California should come with strings attached,
possibly jeopardizing the president's policy agenda in a deeply divided
Congress at the outset of his second term.
With Trump planning to visit the fire-ravaged state this week,
resistance from even a few House members to his efforts to put
conditions on disaster aid could further complicate an already fraught
relationship between reliably liberal California and the second Trump
administration.
Several Republicans who narrowly won California House seats in November
have expressed dismay that the state relief could be hitched to demands
in exchange for helping the thousands of Californians in their districts
still reeling from this month's disaster.
“Playing politics with people’s livelihoods is unacceptable and a slap
in the face to the Southern California wildfire victims and to our brave
first responders," Republican Rep. Young Kim, whose closely divided
district is anchored in fire-prone Orange County, southeast of Los
Angeles, said in a statement.
In an interview aired Wednesday night, Trump said he may withhold aid to
California until the state adjusts how it manages its scarce water
resources. He falsely claimed that California’s fish conservation
efforts in the northern part of the state are responsible for fire
hydrants running dry in urban areas.
“I don’t think we should give California anything until they let the
water run down,” Trump told Fox News’ Sean Hannity.
Local officials have said the conservation efforts for the delta smelt
had nothing to do with the hydrants running dry as firefighters tried to
contain blazes around Los Angeles. They said intense demand on a
municipal system not designed to battle such blazes was to blame.
The wind-driven firestorms wiped out whole neighborhoods of Los Angeles
County, left thousands homeless and killed more than two dozen people.
Trump said earlier this week that discussions are underway in the White
House to bring more water to perennially parched Los Angeles, alluding
to rainfall runoff lost to the Pacific and the state's vast water
storage and delivery system.
“Los Angeles has massive amounts of water available to it. All they have
to do is turn the valve,” the president said.
California has long been a favorite target of Trump, who also referred
to the fires in his inaugural address Monday. In LA, he said, “we are
watching fires still tragically burn from weeks ago without even a token
of defense."
“That’s going to change.”
Trump has made no mention of the multinational firefighting force
deployed to contend with multiple blazes. Firefighters were gaining
ground on the two major fires Wednesday when a third blaze broke out
north of Los Angeles and quickly burned through hundreds of acres of dry
brush.
Johnson, a Louisiana Republican echoing Trump's complaints, has said
there are “serious” problems in how the state is managed. Those include
insufficient funding for forestry programs and water storage. He also
noted the public dispute between the LA fire chief and City Hall over
budget cuts.
Johnson said Wednesday that Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles
Mayor Karen Bass did not prepare the state or the city for what was to
come. He particularly cited a 117-million-gallon reservoir left unfilled
for nearly a year. Newsom has called for an independent investigation of
the reservoir.
Bass didn't directly respond to a question about possible conditions on
disaster aid, saying in a statement: “Our work with our federal partners
will be based on direct conversations with them about how we can work
together."
Some Republicans have suggested that the congressional relief package
could become entangled with efforts to raise the nation’s debt limit —
and with the House so closely divided, even a few breakaway votes from
either party could alter the outcome.
That leaves GOP lawmakers from California in a political quandary:
whether to forcefully stand up for their home state, often pilloried by
the GOP as representing all that is wrong with America, while
Republicans in Congress are eager to show a unified front and parlay
their November election wins into what Trump has called a new “golden
age” for the nation.
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Homeowner David Marquez, left, holds a metal detector as he shows
recovered metal items found with his father, Juan Pablo Alvarado,
right, inside the walls of their multi-generational home in the
aftermath of the Eaton Fire, Sunday, Jan. 19, 2025, in Altadena,
Calif. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)
Several California representatives agreed that the federal
government must guard against the misuse of funds but argued that
the money should not be held up or saddled with restrictions not
placed on other states after tornadoes and hurricanes.
The dilemma played out in social media posts by Republican Rep. Ken
Calvert, who narrowly prevailed in November in his swing district
east of Los Angeles.
“Californians are entitled to receive federal disaster assistance in
the same manner as all Americans," he wrote on X. But, he quickly
added, “Some federal policy changes may be needed to expedite
rebuilding as well as improve future wildfire prevention. Those kind
of policies are not conditions.”
Republican Rep. Kevin Kiley, whose sprawling district runs from east
of Sacramento south to Death Valley, told KCRA-TV in Sacramento last
week that Johnson's use of the word conditions was not “especially
helpful.” Speaking at the Capitol Wednesday, he said there is a lot
of ambiguity about what constitutes conditions for disaster aid.
He said his focus is to make sure the money doesn’t get wasted
through government inefficiency.
“We want to make sure the money actually gets to the victims and
they can use it to rebuild their homes and to recover,” Kiley said.
Politicians in Washington have feuded for years over how to restrain
the growing wildfire threat across the West. Republicans have long
complained that inadequate land management practices have
exacerbated damage from wildfires, while Democrats have emphasized
the role of climate change and the failure of the federal government
to address it.
About the only thing they agree on is that the problem persists.
Some lawmakers have noted that disaster aid over the years for
Johnson’s home state of Louisiana did not come with conditions.
Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries called the idea a “non-starter.”
Republican Rep. Doug LaMalfa, whose largely rural district runs from
the Sacramento area north to the Oregon border, said he wasn’t too
concerned about talk of conditions.
“Everything has conditions, especially the way California wastes
money,” LaMalfa said. "We want to help people and we want to help
with that, like we’ve helped with others. But California is very,
very irresponsible.”
Trump plans to visit the state to see the damage firsthand on
Friday. Newsom hasn't said publicly if he'll accompany him on his
tour.
With the fragile GOP majority in the House — there are 219
Republicans, 214 Democrats and one vacancy — Johnson cannot afford
defections on any vote. And it could be several weeks before a
fuller accounting of the state’s recovery needs is ready and a
formal request submitted to the White House.
Following major natural disasters, the president typically makes
supplemental spending requests, as happened after hurricanes Helene
and Milton.
Congress also could provide more disaster aid to California through
legislation. Sen. Lindsey Graham, the Republican chairman of the
Senate Budget Committee, said he would work to include disaster aid
in a filibuster-proof bill Republicans hope to craft this year that
would pay for some of Trump’s top policy priorities.
Newsom urged Johnson and other congressional leaders to quickly
approve assistance for the state, where fires are still burning and
strong winds continue to threaten new ones. In an email to
supporters from his campaign committee, he warned that “Republicans
are holding federal aid hostage” and said Democrats might be able to
peel off a handful of GOP votes to push through an aid package.
“In times of natural disaster — from Hurricane Katrina to Hurricane
Helene — Americans have always stood together, setting aside
politics to extend a helping hand to those in need,” the governor
wrote. “Historically, federal disaster aid has been provided without
conditions.”
___
Freking reported from Washington.
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