USA
This article was added by the user . TheWorldNews is not responsible for the content of the platform.

Biden and DeSantis show friendly cooperation after president surveys Florida storm damage

The president’s meeting with DeSantis brings the two political rivals face to face just weeks ahead of November’s midterm elections. Biden and DeSantis have sparred on issues including Covid mandates, support for the LGBTQ community and, most recently, the governor’s move to fly migrants in the U.S. from Texas to Martha’s Vineyard, Mass., a step the president called “reckless.” But they’ve seemingly put their differences aside this week as they focus on Florida’s recovery from Hurricane Ian and have spoken over the phone several times.

“I think he’s done a good job,” Biden said on Wednesday when asked about DeSantis’ performance in dealing with the storm. “We worked hand-in-glove. We have very different political philosophies, but we’ve worked hand-in-glove. … In dealing with this crisis, we’ve been in complete lockstep.”

Florida is reeling from the impacts of Ian, which made landfall as a Category 4 storm along the state’s Gulf Coast last week and has caused mass devastation and flooding across the state. It has killed at least 72 people — with the death count expected to rise as search-and-rescue efforts continue — and left some beachside communities leveled and buildings reduced to rubble.

Over 97 percent of the state has power restored, DeSantis said in his own remarks on Wednesday. The governor described a massive effort of 2,500 rescues, 28 points of distribution of resources and 45 million bottles of water distributed so far.

“We are cutting through the bureaucracy,” DeSantis said, thanking those at every level of government for the “team effort.”

For residents of Florida affected by the storm, the most important step now is registering to see what resources they may be eligible for, Biden said. He also said that “we’re going to try to speed” up the phone-wait times for help with additional personnel.

Biden, with DeSantis standing behind him, further addressed an issue that has at times revealed a partisan divide in disaster response: climate change.

“I think the one thing this has finally ended is the discussion about whether or not there’s climate change, and we should do something about it,” Biden said, describing the destruction he saw in Florida this week — as well as damage he’s witnessed over the last six months from wildfires across the West.

The president, along with first lady Jill Biden, surveyed the damage on Florida’s west coast via helicopter before touching down at Fisherman’s Wharf in Fort Myers at about 2 p.m. DeSantis and his wife, Casey DeSantis, greeted the president and first lady at the wharf, where they walked along the waterfront speaking with a group of other individuals who the White House said were citizens affected by the hurricane.

Biden and DeSantis then moved to a briefing area, where the president spoke with Florida Sens. Marco Rubio and Rick Scott. DeSantis began the briefing shortly after, thanking Biden and his administration for their support before detailing recovery efforts since the storm hit. FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell and Army Corps of Engineers Commanding Gen. Scott Spellmon also briefed the group.

While in Fort Myers, Biden and the first lady also planned to meet with small-business owners and local residents affected by Hurricane Ian.

The White House earlier Wednesday authorized additional disaster assistance funding for debris removal and emergency protective measures, and extended the time period that the funding will be available.

“We are committed to helping the state of Florida build back stronger and more resilient, and we will be there for them each step of the way,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters aboard Air Force One while en route to Fort Myers.

Criswell, the FEMA administrator, told reporters during the same press briefing that the hurricane could be “one of the more costly disasters that we’ve seen in many years,” with damage in the billions. She added that assessments of the extent of the damage to infrastructure were just beginning.

In a statement on Wednesday, Scott, Florida’s junior senator, asked Majority Leader Chuck Schumer to reconvene the Senate to pass additional aid for those affected by the hurricane once FEMA and local officials determined their funding needs.

“The federal government has a big role to play in Florida’s recovery, and the minute that FEMA and our state and local officials determine the true funding needs, we must act,” Scott said in the statement.