Surprising

Yes because we need never ending funding bills because 4 trillion a year just doesn't allow for disaster relief
And spending it on illegals didn't help either. Don't even bother with the bullshit spin
Disaster relief is a core function of government not an option. You retards who worship the government sure suck at it
 
Disaster relief is a core function of government not an option. 
Just remembering Ron DeSantis voted against two Hurricane Sandy relief packages. But that was different. Allegedly.
 
Disaster relief is a core function of government not an option. 
Just remembering Ron DeSantis voted against two Hurricane Sandy relief packages. But that was different. Allegedly.
I remember Harris totally botching this response
As do the voters
I'm sure the folks mourning the dead and trying to survive appreciate your inane attempts to deflect
 
By the way since it is a core function you don't need to pass a bill every time there's a disaster
Use some of that 4 trillion laying around
 
Maybe DeSantis actually read the bills and the use of FEMA as a slush fund?https://www.realclearinvestigations...illions_of_unused_disaster_funds_1063217.html
An August report from the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Inspector General noted that in 2022, FEMA “estimated that 847 disaster declarations with approximately $73 billion in unliquidated funds remained open.” 
Drilling down on that data, the OIG found that $8.3 billion of that total was for disasters declared in 2012 [Sandy] or earlier.
 
Maybe DeSantis actually read the bills and the use of FEMA as a slush fund?https://www.realclearinvestigations...illions_of_unused_disaster_funds_1063217.html
https://www.oig.dhs.gov/sites/default/files/assets/2024-08/OIG-24-45-Aug24.pdf#:~:text=The%20Federal%20Emergency%20Management%20Agency%20(FEMA)%20did%20not%20ensure%20that from the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Inspector General noted that in 2022, FEMA “estimated that 847 disaster declarations with approximately $73 billion in unliquidated funds remained open.” 
Drilling down on that data, the OIG found that $8.3 billion of that total was for disasters declared in 2012 [Sandy] or earlier.
More likely it was that Sandy hit New Jersey and Connecticut.
 
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