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How has Trump publicly responded to the deadly flooding in Texas and growing scrutiny over the federal response? Sara Firth reports.

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00:00I guess, Sarah, a lot of plates have been spinning for the Trump administration when something like this happens.
00:05It's not the huge priority right now.
00:08So how has he publicly responded to this disaster so far?
00:12What have we seen from the president?
00:13Well, the president hasn't criticized anything that's been taking place on the ground
00:19and the way that we've seen him respond in past disasters.
00:21So if you think back to the California wildfires,
00:24there was a lot of criticism over the emergency response from Governor Newsom.
00:28Now, we know President Trump is close to Governor Abbott, the Texas governor.
00:33He has expressed publicly his support for the governor's efforts
00:39and said that the administration will be standing behind Texas right now,
00:43that everybody's thoughts and prayers are with the people on the ground.
00:48But it does come as there's been increasing scrutiny and questions asked
00:52over whether the Trump administration's cuts potentially to the National Weather Service
00:58could have impacted the response efforts on the ground in the wake of the deadly flooding.
01:05Now, President Trump has been asked repeatedly,
01:08because he is the one who's announced that in the past that the FEMA,
01:13the Federal Emergency Management Agency,
01:16that that would be scaled back, potentially cut.
01:19He's been asked repeatedly in the wake of these floods in Texas about that.
01:23But he's so far avoided answering the question directly.
01:28Expect more of that today.
01:29There are going to be lots of families on the ground who will be looking for some kind of answers.
01:34And as we said, there is that increasing scrutiny over exactly what happened in the lead up to these floods,
01:41whether the warning systems were up to scratch and what happened in the aftermath as well,
01:47and whether resources were scrambled quickly and effectively enough to try and save as many lives as possible.
01:54And like the devastation really on the ground in Texas, it can't be overstated.
01:58You know, more than 120 people killed, but a lot of those were children.
02:03One of the areas very badly impacted along the Guadalupe River was a children's summer camp.
02:08So a number of girls killed in the flooding there and people still missing.
02:13So families right now just desperately waiting for answers.

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