Biden, Florida's DeSantis work 'hand-in-glove' on Hurricane Ian recovery
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[October 06, 2022]
By Steve Holland
FORT MYERS, Fla. (Reuters) -U.S. President
Joe Biden met with Florida Governor Ron DeSantis on Wednesday to assess
the devastation from Hurricane Ian, and stressed the need for a united
federal and state effort for the lengthy recovery ahead.
Biden, a Democrat, and DeSantis, his potential 2024 Republican
presidential rival, have clashed over multiple issues including COVID-19
vaccines, abortion and LGBT rights.
They largely set those differences aside during the visit to hard-hit
Fort Myers as Biden pledged federal support for a cleanup and rebuilding
effort that could cost taxpayers billions of dollars and take years to
complete.
Biden and DeSantis greeted each other warmly and stood shoulder to
shoulder as they met with victims of the hurricane.
"Mr. President, welcome to Florida. We appreciate working together
across various levels of government," DeSantis, often a blistering
critic of the president, told Biden during remarks after the tour.
"We're in this together," said Biden, who referred to DeSantis as 'Guv,'
and complimented the "good job" the governor had done. "We’ve worked
hand-in-glove. We have very different political philosophies."
More than 100 people died and nearly 400,000 homes and businesses
remained without power in Florida on Tuesday, five days after Hurricane
Ian crashed across the state.
Biden opened his remarks by saying the storm showed climate change was
real and needed to be addressed, something some in DeSantis's Republican
party have denied. "I think the one thing this has finally ended is a
discussion about whether or not there’s climate change and we should do
something about it," he said.
Climate change is making hurricanes wetter, windier and altogether more
intense, experts say.
The president also stressed the amount of federal help Florida receive
for storm aid and as part of Democrat-backed spending, including $13
billion over the next five years for highways and bridges.
"The key here is building back better and stronger to withstand the next
storm. We can’t build back to what it was before. You got to build back
better, because we know more is coming," he said.
Biden and his wife, Jill, arrived in Fort Meyers early Wednesday
afternoon, two days after visiting Puerto Rico, a U.S. territory
battered by Hurricane Fiona last month.
Biden got an aerial view of the destruction during a helicopter flight
and called the destruction "horrific."
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U.S. President Joe Biden and first lady
Jill Biden walk next to Florida governor Ron DeSantis and his wife
Casey DeSantis as they tour Hurricane Ian destruction during a visit
to Florida, in Fort Myers Beach, Florida, U.S., October 5, 2022.
REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein
BILLIONS OF DOLLARS, INSURANCE QUESTIONS
Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Deanne Criswell
said it would cost the federal government billions of dollars to
repair the damage from the storm.
"We are still very much in the lifesaving and stabilization mode.
They are just beginning the assessments of what the actual extent of
damages to the infrastructure. It's going to be in the billions,"
Criswell told reporters on Air Force One.
Biden and Criswell also suggested Wednesday that Florida's insurance
industry, which faces tens of billions of dollars in losses for the
storm, could come under increasing scrutiny.
"The fact of the matter is, states like Florida, where they’ve had a
lot of natural disasters because of flooding and hurricanes and the
like - the insurance industry is being very stretched," Biden said.
"We’re going to have to have a hard look at whether or not the
insurance industry can be sustained."
Fort Myers Mayor Ray Murphy, who also manages commercial real
estate, told Reuters he and Biden were having a friendly chat and
"trying to encourage each other" in a colorful exchange picked up by
a microphone.
"No one fucks with a Biden," the president told Murphy, to which the
mayor replied: "You're goddamn right ... That's exactly right."
Murphy, elected on a nonpartisan basis, said there was no mention of
DeSantis in the brief conversation.
Biden visited Florida in July after a condominium complex collapsed
and killed nearly 100 people, and stressed cooperation with DeSantis
at the time.
But before Hurricane Ian hit, Biden had planned a rally in the
political battleground state where Democratic officials expected the
president to attack the governor.
On climate change, Biden has made reducing carbon emissions a focus
of his presidency, while DeSantis backed funding to harden Florida's
defenses against flooding but also opposed some previous
disaster-relief aid and pushed pension funds not to consider
environmental impact when they invest.
(Additional reporting by Doina Chiacu and Andrea Shalal; Writing by
Jeff Mason and Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Heather Timmons, Aurora
Ellis and Lincoln Feast)
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