The tweets coming from a president ensconced in his New Jersey golf club sought to defend Washington's efforts to mobilize and coordinate recovery efforts on a US territory in dire straits almost two weeks after Hurricane Maria struck.
San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulin Cruz on Friday accused the Trump administration of "killing us with the inefficiency" after the storm. She begged the president, who is set to visit Puerto Rico on Tuesday, to "make sure somebody is in charge that is up to the task of saving lives," and appealed for help "to save us from dying."
"I know the good heart of the American people and I know that when a mayday sound goes off, they come to the rescue," she told ABC's "This Week."
Trump's weekend tweets have shown him to be contemptuous of any complaints of a laggard US response to the natural disaster that has imperiled the island's future. He has repeatedly blamed the press for what he sees as unfair coverage of the situation on the ground, where power and many are still struggling for basic essentials, including food, water and fuel.
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The day before, Trump had lashed out at Cruz, deriding "Such poor leadership ability by the Mayor of San Juan, and others in Puerto Rico, who are not able to get their workers to help."
He added: "They want everything to be done for them when it should be a community effort."
Trump's critical response was an unusually pointed rebuke in the heat of a disaster, a time when leaders often put aside partisan differences in the name of solidarity. But it was a reminder of the president's unrelenting penchant for punching back against critics, whatever the circumstances.
"You know, speaking from his fancy golf club, playing golf with his billionaire friends, attacking the mayor of San Juan who is struggling to bring electricity to the island, food to the island, water to the island, gas to the island. It is unspeakable. And I don't know what world Trump is living in," he said in an interview on CNN's "State of the Union." Ohio's Republican Gov. John Kasich, another Trump critic, echoed the outrage.
"It's not appropriate. I mean, when people are in the middle of the disaster, you don't start trying to criticizing them," he said on CNN. "I just, I don't know what to say." But Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, making the Sunday show rounds to promote the president's tax plan, defended the tweets and the federal government's response.
FEMA administrator Brock Long told NBC that FEMA had been working to fix roads, establish emergency power and deliver fuel to hospitals. He said 700 gas stations are now open and telecommunications are available to about one-third of the island.
Trump's administration has tried in recent days to combat the perception that he failed to quickly grasp the magnitude of Maria's destruction and has given the US commonwealth less attention than he'd bestowed on states like Texas, Louisiana and Florida after they were hit by hurricanes Harvey and Irma.
Sanders said that, "given the president's history on race," it was fair to question whether ethnicity might be playing a role in his different reaction.
"Yeah, I think we have a right to be suspect that he is treating the people of Puerto Rico in a different way than he has treated the people of Texas or Florida," Sanders said.
Natural disasters sometimes bring moments of rare bipartisan solidarity. In the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy, which wreaked havoc along the East Coast in 2012, New Jersey's Republican governor, Chris Christie, praised Democratic President Barack Obama for his personal attention and compassion at a joint press conference. Still, the fight over relief money became politicized and contentious, with numerous Republicans voting against a delayed relief bill.
Republican Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida encouraged all parties to stay "100 per cent focused on what needs to be done to get the people of Puerto Rico help."
"I do think every minute we spend in the political realm bickering with one another over who's doing what, or who's wrong, or who didn't do right, is a minute of energy and time that we're not spending trying to get the response right," he said on CBS' "Face the Nation.