President Donald Trump is preparing to reshape the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which has been on the frontlines of responding to recent wildfires in California and last year's hurricane in North Carolina.
President Trump on Wednesday was sharply critical of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), suggesting at one point states should handle their own response to natural disasters but still
The new president doesn’t appear interested in overhauling or reforming FEMA, only in eliminating the agency altogether.
Trump's suggestion that states should "take care of their own problems" could have major implications for GOP states in the South.
President Donald Trump sat down with Fox News host Sean Hannity for his first one-on-one interview since returning to the White House, answering a range of questions.
Trump said domestic and international challenges over the last four years would not have happened had he been president.
President Trump plans to have a "whole big discussion very shortly" on the Federal Emergency Management Agency because he'd "rather see the states take care of their own problems," according to an interview broadcast Wednesday evening.