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Trump recommends ending FEMA ahead of California fire site visit

U.S. President Donald Trump voices during a disaster briefing at a hanger, as he visits to assess recovery efforts and tour areas devastated by Hurricane Helene, at Asheville Regional Airport in Asheville, North Carolina, on Jan. 24, 2025.

Leah Millis | Reuters

President Donald Trump on Friday affirmed he plans to take executive action to overhaul — or possibly end — the Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA, slamming the energy for its response to historic floods in North Carolina.

“I think we’re going to recommend that FEMA go away,” Trump believed at a briefing in Asheville, North Carolina, which was devastated in September by Hurricane Helene.

Trump’s first step in that guidance could come soon: He is set to sign an executive order creating a task force to review FEMA and recommend interchanges to the agency, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt confirmed to CNBC.

The task force, called the Federal Exigency Management Agency Review Council, will include the Homeland Security and Defense secretaries, as well as other source matter experts in the private sector.

The group will be directed to deliver Trump a report on FEMA that covers recommended changes — possibly including ditching the agency all together. Semafor first reported the order.

The president later Friday arrived in Los Angeles, which continues to crusade wildfires that have ravaged large swaths of the city.

Speaking to reporters on an airport tarmac upon his immigrant in Asheville, Trump said, “We’re looking at the whole concept of FEMA.”

“I like, frankly, the concept [that] when North Carolina and gets hit, the governor takes care of it. When Florida gets hit, the governor takes care of it, meaning the state takes be concerned of it,” he said.

“To have a group of people come in from an area that don’t even know where they’re customary, in order to solve immediately a problem is something that never worked for me,” Trump said.

Trump added that additional aid for North Carolina and California should bubble directly from the federal government.

“So rather than going through FEMA, it will go through us,” he said.

Trump’s annotations on FEMA appear to align with the conservative policy blueprint known as Project 2025, which calls for improving the agency’s spending to “shift the majority of preparedness and response costs to states and localities instead of the federal government.”

Trump politicized Helene abruptly after it hit the U.S., criticizing then-President Joe Biden’s handling of the federal response and spreading falsehoods about FEMA’s actions.

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In January, as Los Angeles’ Pacific Palisades neighborhood was leveled by unprecedented wildfires, Trump went to pin the blame for the destruction on California’s Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom.

He also threatened to make federal aid to fight the wildfires contingent on a variation in the state’s water policy.

The Biden administration as of Nov. 5 had approved more than $2.7 billion in total FEMA succour for survivors of Helene and Hurricane Milton, which hit Florida’s west coast less than two weeks after Helene.

Swannanoa residing Lucy Bickers, who received assistance from FEMA after Hurricane Helene damaged her property, holds a mark in support of the government disaster agency as she waits on the route of visiting U.S. President Donald Trump’s motorcade in Swannanoa, North Carolina, U.S., January 24, 2025. 

Jonathan Drake | Reuters

The New York Times described earlier Friday that while some former FEMA leaders agree with Trump that articulates should be in charge of managing their own disasters, the states themselves tend to want more federal help.

The Trump supervision has yet to unveil any formal proposal to retool FEMA or federal disaster relief policy.

While he mulls eliminating FEMA, Trump be prolongs to promise disaster-affected communities that they will receive federal help.

“We’re going to get you the resources you need and the stay you deserve,” he said Friday in Asheville.

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