Rogue Agency: The Case to Shut Down FEMA
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Three Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) supervisors involved with the scandal in which aid workers were advised to bypass homes with Trump signs in the aftermath of Hurricane Milton have been fired.

That makes four in total, given their walking papers over the incident.

The news appears to contradict former FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell, who told members of the House Oversight Committee that the shocking directive involved a lone employee.

The New York Post reports that Cameron Hamilton, the agency’s current acting administrator, sent a letter to Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) advising her of the results of an “exhaustive investigation” into the matter.

“[I]t is essential that the entire workforce understand that this incident was reprehensible, and this type of behavior will not be tolerated at FEMA,” Hamilton wrote, according to the Post.

He is also developing further training for FEMA employees that seeks “to reinforce that political affiliation should never be a consideration in the rendering of assistance.” 

News that workers had been advised to skip past the homes of those supporting President Trump in the aftermath of Hurricane Milton came as a shock. 

Whistleblowers cracked open a story regarding a supervisor directing employees in Lake Placid, Florida to avoid any damaged homes with Trump signs outside when they were canvassing the area following the devastating storm.

“Best practices” documents, which stated “avoid homes advertising Trump” and employee messages confirming “Trump sign no entry per leadership,” were hard to argue. 

Not only was there evidence of the directive to prolong the suffering of Republican voters, but there was documentation of them actually following the orders.


OUTRAGE: FEMA Workers Working Hurricane Milton Aftermath Ordered to Bypass Houses With Trump Signs

FEMA Administrator Fires Official Who Prevented Assistance to Trump Supporters; That Is Not Enough


Washington, though, refused to go quietly and very publicly claimed the politicization of disaster aid was a more widespread issue than anybody at FEMA was willing to admit.

She quickly appeared on “Roland Martin Unfiltered” on the Black Star Network and started making accusations. She even said aid workers avoiding pro-Trump homes had occurred in North Carolina, which Hurricane Helene had ravaged.

“Senior leadership will lie to you and tell you that they do not know,” Washington claimed. “But if you ask the [Disaster Survivor Assistance] crew leads and specialists what they are experiencing in the field, they will tell you.”

Criswell denied the allegations, telling lawmakers, “It has not gone beyond what this one employee did.”

Well, four now, actually.

Chair of the House Oversight Committee, James Comer (R-KY), would later talk to a whistleblower who alleged a FEMA contractor had suggested disaster victims with signs supporting Trump outside their homes were viewed by officials as “domestic terrorists.”

As a result, “elderly homeowners were so frightened … and afraid that they would not recover their loss that they removed the signs,” Comer said.

Despite all of this, Hamilton assured Blackburn in his letter that playing politics with people’s lives is not a widespread issue at FEMA.

While four separate supervisors failed to “meet our standards of conduct” when it came to providing aid regardless of political beliefs, Hamilton writes that the investigation “found no evidence this was a systemic problem, nor that it was directed by agency or field leadership.”

While the firing of any individual involved in withholding aid is an absolute necessity, it still falls short of expectations. As RedState’s Streiff reported, these supervisors were engaged in criminal acts.

“Depriving citizens of federal assistance because they supported a major party candidate is a violation of multiple federal laws,” he wrote.

Blackburn told the Post she is “pleased” that the three additional supervisors were fired. 

“This unjustifiable behavior should never be allowed to fester or run rampant in any organization — let alone a federal agency that is designed to serve the needs of the American people,” she said. 

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