Residents of the historically Black community of Altadena are feeling neglected after President Donald Trump failed to survey their damage from the Los Angeles wildfires.
Leaders and residents share a mix of disappointment, hope and support as President Trump did not visit the Eaton fire’s Altadena and Pasadena destruction.
This isn’t the first time Trump has come to survey a fire-ravaged California. He was critical of the state then, as he is now.
Donald Trump signed a wide-ranging executive order demanding federal and state officials deliver more water and other resources to southern California.
The Trump administration’s mass-deportation offensive expanded into Los Angeles Saturday with pre-dawn roundups, part of a West Coast operation expected to run seven days a week, sources told The
As the president makes his way to L.A. to survey fire damage, he says extended full federal aid for recovery should come only if the state establishes voter ID.
Newsom and California are frequently the target of Trump’s ire. Some of his most memorable criticisms of the state have been over how it manages its wildlands in the face of wildfire risk. In his first term, Trump suggested California should be “raking” their forests to clean up dead brush and trees.
In a meeting with local, state and congressional leaders, Trump assured them "the federal government is standing behind you 100%."
President Donald Trump landed in Los Angeles Friday afternoon to survey the devastation from the firestorms that swept through L.A. County. It was his first presidential visit since taking office — and a potentially contested one after his repeated threats to withhold federal aid to California.
President Donald Trump, who has criticized ... Southern California Reps. Brad Sherman, D-Sherman Oaks, Young Kim, R-Anaheim Hills, and Judy Chu, D-Pasadena, and many other politicians and local ...
Gov. Gavin Newsom faces what may be his greatest political test and leadership challenge. He planned to greet President Trump upon his arrival in Southern California on Friday.
The president raised the possibility of withholding aid to California unless the state changes its water policy.