RANCHO PALOS VERDES, California — Former President Donald Trump on Friday threatened to withhold federal disaster response funding from California over Gov. Gavin Newsom's position on water deliveries to farmers.
What happened: Speaking to reporters from a golf course in Rancho Palos Verdes on Friday, Trump said he would strong-arm California’s governor into agreeing to send more water from California’s lush north to farm fields in its drier south.
"Gavin Newscum [Newsom] is going to sign those papers," Trump said, seemingly referencing a 2020 federal decision to increase water deliveries by weakening endangered species rules that Newsom sued over. "If he doesn't sign those papers, we won't give him money to put out all his fires, and if we don't give him the money to put out his fires, he's got problems."
Newsom snapped back within minutes of Trump’s remarks, saying in an X post the former president “admitted he will block emergency disaster funds to settle political vendettas.”
“Today it’s California’s wildfires. Tomorrow it could be hurricane funding for North Carolina or flooding assistance for homeowners in Pennsylvania,” Newsom wrote, referencing two swing states where Kamala Harris and Trump are neck-and-neck in polls ahead of November.
California currently has several large fires burning, including the Airport, Line and Bridge fires in mountains outside of Los Angeles, which have burned more than 100,000 acres combined. The state received federal aid to help combat the fires this week at Newsom’s request, most recently on Wednesday for the Airport and Bridge fires.
Context: Trump has long threatened to withhold disaster money from California as punishment for its environmental policies. He has also long used California's water wars as a way to appeal to agricultural interests in the Central Valley, who depend on deliveries from the State Water Project and the federally run Central Valley Project.
The former president stayed true to a campaign promise when he changed Obama-era rules in order to send more water to farmers four years ago.
"The reason you have no water is because Gavin Newscum didn't want to do it," he said Friday. "I had it all done."
Newsom sued over the Trump administration's rules in February 2020, the day after Trump finalized them at a rally-style speech in Bakersfield, touting their effect on water deliveries. The rules aim to deliver more water to Central Valley farmers by incorporating more flexible pumping rules that would let managers of the massive set of canals, reservoirs and pumping plants take more water from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.
“To protect a little tiny fish called a ‘smelt,’ they send millions and millions of gallons of water out to the Pacific Ocean,” Trump said Friday, referencing California’s efforts to protect vulnerable fish species. “If they turned it back, all of that water would come right down here and right into Los Angeles.”
The Biden administration is currently rewriting the rules and plans to release its version by the end of the year, before a potential 2025 Trump presidency. Newsom's administration has said it will seek a separate state permit that would allow it to operate the state side of the pumps according to more-stringent endangered species rules, regardless of who wins in November.
Newsom officials didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.
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