The Republican Party in the Trump era has overwhelmingly embraced an allâ€
Itâ€
Repeatedly in recent weeks, prominent Republican officials in areas dealing with the fallout have indicated that Trump and his MAGA allies are doing the latter.
Theyâ€
The most serious situation is the hurricane response. Top Republicans have increasingly spoken out in recent days against misinformation thatâ€
The message seems to be: Cut it out.
“The last thing that the victims of Helene need right now is political posturing, finger-pointing, or conspiracy theories that only hurt the response effort,� Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) said in a letter to constituents Sunday.
Appearing on CBSâ€
Tillis talked around the specific claim but contradicted Trump by saying that “we have the resources that we need.� He added that federal money spent on migrants is not “affecting the flow of resources to western North Carolina.� His letter to constituents, which started with his plea about misinformation, was released hours later.
Other Republicans pointed to a specific claim about the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) supposedly confiscating supplies and property.
“Thereâ€
Knox County, Tenn., Mayor Glenn Jacobs (R) also referenced the claim in a statement Friday, urging, “Please quit spreading those rumors as they are counterproductive to response efforts.�
These officials didnâ€
North Carolina state Sen. Kevin Corbin (R) was among the first prominent Republicans in the area to speak out, decrying the “conspiracy theory junk� on social media and calling it “distracting to people trying to do the job.� Corbin cited the purported confiscation and blocking of supplies and the idea that the government can control the weather (which Georgia Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene has promoted).
Rep. Chuck Edwards (R-N.C.), who represents hard-hit western North Carolina, was asked Monday morning on CNBC about the confiscation rumors and called them “totally unsubstantiated.�
Edwards clarified that he was not defending FEMAâ€
Again, the people stirring this up on social media include Trump and Musk, an ally Trump welcomed to a rally on Saturday. And Trump has been far from “truthful.�
‘We got off to a slow start with getting assistance in here from our national and state agencies,’ says @RepChuckEdwards on Hurricane Helene recovery efforts. ‘They are here now in full force,’ he says: pic.twitter.com/BDumcgmeTE
— Squawk Box (@SquawkCNBC) October 7, 2024
The situation is a callback to what happened last month when Trump and his running mate, Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio), began promoting baseless conspiracy theories about Haitian migrants stealing and eating pets in Ohio.
Then, as now, Republican officials in the affected area repeatedly derided the claims and even cast them as harmful to their communities — often while avoiding specifically citing Trump and Vance:
- Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R) called Trumpâ€
s and Vance†s comments “garbage,� “hurtful to a lot of people� and “very hurtful� to the migrants†children. - Springfield Mayor Rob Rue (R) said the conspiracy theories were “hurting our citizens and hurting our community.�
- Clark County Commission president Melanie Flax Wilt (R) said the rumors had diverted resources for “a literal wild goose chase,� damaged the integration of Haitians into the community and had a negative effect on local businesses that depend on Haitian migrants for labor.
- “This certainly is incredibly tragic and completely untrue,â€� Rep. Michael R. Turner (R-Ohio), who represents Springfield in Congress, said on CNN. “This should not have happened; itâ€
s been tearing the community apart.�
The situation led to dozens of bomb threats; DeWine said many of them appeared to have come from overseas.
Turner in his Sept. 19 CNN interview quickly added that he believed Trump and Vance had “moved on� from the claims. But Trump to this day is talking about deporting Haitian migrants from Springfield — despite the fact that they have legal status.
And now, just weeks after Turnerâ€