As President Donald Trump repeatedly levels false claims that Puerto Rico has been granted $92 billion in hurricane recovery aid, the islandâs leading newspaper sent him a direct message on its front page Friday: âYour Numbers Are Fake.â
El Nuevo DĂa, which typically publishes in Spanish, released an English version of the paper laying out a fact-check of the presidentâs math.
âAlthough some politicians in Puerto Rico have indeed mismanaged funds and have let their constituents down, Mr. Trumpâs claims about the amount of money that has actually been assigned to the island are incorrect,â it reads.
In reality, federal data shows that Congress has allocated $49.7 billion to Puerto Ricoâs disaster relief following hurricanes Irma and Maria, both of which struck in 2017. Of that total, less than $14 billion has been received.
But Trump has long disregarded the numbers, instead insisting that the island has been paid several times the actual amount.
âWow! Yet another big storm heading to Puerto Rico. Will it ever end?â he tweeted Tuesday, erroneously stating once again that Congress has approved $92 billion for the island, calling it âan all time record of its kind for âanywhere.ââ
The president also made the claim in July, days before Gov. Ricardo RossellĂł announced his resignation amid protests over the leak of his crude messages to advisers and federal corruption charges against two of his administrationâs former top officials.
In a pair of tweets that month, Trump took the opportunity to attack the island, claiming âCongress foolishly gave 92 Billion Dollars for hurricane relief, much of which was squandered away or wasted, never to be seen again.â
On Wednesday, as Puerto Rico was readying itself for the arrival of Hurricane Dorian, which mainly missed the area on its way toward Florida, Trump called the island âone of the most corrupt places on earthâ and slammed its politicians as âincompetent.â
Though the president has deemed himself âthe best thing that ever happened to Puerto Rico,â he is part of the reason it has been slow to receive aid. In June, The Washington Post reported that he had finally signed a disaster relief bill that he had delayed for months in opposition to the funds.