Presidential hopeful Elizabeth Warren visits Puerto Rico and slams Trump for ‘dumb’ border wall

Presidential hopeful Elizabeth Warren has continued her war of words with President Donald Trump in Puerto Rico, calling his wall ‘dumb.’ 

The senator slammed Trump for denying the hurricane’s death toll and for suggesting he could use disaster funds to build his ‘dumb’ border wall, provoking laughter from a crowd gathered in San Juan on Tuesday.

Warren told the audience in the US territory that she would help them rebuild after Hurricane Maria and back laws to give them equal treatment and debt relief.

A trip to the island has become an obligatory pit-stop for presidential hopefuls. 

Elizabeth Warren, the US senator from Massachusetts and one of the many Democrats running for president in 2020, speaks in San Juan, Puerto Rico on Tuesday

Warren has been the subject of continual mocking by Trump, prompting a humiliating DNA test video to be uploaded by her in October 2018 to combat his 'Pocahontas' jibes 

Warren has been the subject of continual mocking by Trump, prompting a humiliating DNA test video to be uploaded by her in October 2018 to combat his ‘Pocahontas’ jibes 

San Juan Puerto Rico in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria which struck the island in September 2017

San Juan Puerto Rico in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria which struck the island in September 2017

‘Puerto Rico has not been treated with respect,’ she said. ‘It is insulting. It is disrespectful. This ugliness has gone far enough.

‘Puerto Rico has suffered enough. We will not allow anyone to sabotage your recovery, not even the president of the United States.’

The Senator has been engaged in a war of words with the President, who humiliated her last year over claims she had Native American heritage – dubbing her ‘Pocahontas.’

She told the crowd that Trump’s administration has used its power to inflict cruelty on immigrants and people of color.

‘With Trump, cruelty is not an accident, it is part of the plan,’ she said.

Democrats are using official trips to Puerto Rico as an opportunity to criticize the Trump administration for how it responded to the hurricane and its aftermath.

Last week, former housing secretary Julian Castro, who has declared himself a candidate, visited the island and toured communities still struggling more than a year after the storm.

The visits have perplexed some and annoyed others in Puerto Rico, whose people are U.S. citizens who can vote in primaries but are barred from voting in presidential elections.

Janina Cabret, a 28-year-old San Juan resident who attended Warren’s event, said she hopes whoever wins isn’t delivering empty promises about helping the island.

‘Even though they use it for marketing, at least it puts Puerto Rico on the map,’ she said.

Warren said too many homes still lack a proper roof and too many insurance claims have gone unpaid, among other problems that persist more than a year after Hurricane Maria. She also said many people who fled Puerto Rico after the storm have not been able to find a job, housing or health care.

Trump is currently locked in a struggle to get funding from Congress for his border wall, which Warren called 'dumb'

Trump is currently locked in a struggle to get funding from Congress for his border wall, which Warren called ‘dumb’

Warren told the couple hundred people at the theater that 'Puerto Rico has not been treated with respect'

Warren told the couple hundred people at the theater that ‘Puerto Rico has not been treated with respect’

Warren reminded the crowd that she voted against a 2016 financial aid package that created a federal control board to oversee the debt-burdened island government’s finances, a body that some complain has imposed an excessive amount of austerity.

She also referred to White House comments on Puerto Rico, including a recent one opposing $600 million in nutritional assistance as ‘excessive and unnecessary,’ which angered Governer Ricardo Rossello’s administration.

The senator also talked about the island’s political status, long a key issue for many Puerto Ricans, though five referendums over the years have shown no clear consensus for statehood, the current territorial status or independence.

‘Puerto Rico deserves self-determination on this question, and I will support the decision of the people of Puerto Rico,’ she said.

Warren also called for auditing Puerto Rico’s huge public debt, strengthening unions, protecting the island from climate change, and supporting full child tax credits, Medicaid funding and nutritional assistance for islanders, all things that many Puerto Ricans have long demanded.

Warren enters the stage arm-in-arm with San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulin Cruz Soto

Warren enters the stage arm-in-arm with San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulin Cruz Soto

Warren is one of a number of presidential hopefuls who will visit the island in the run up to the next election 

Warren is one of a number of presidential hopefuls who will visit the island in the run up to the next election 

‘Puerto Rico’s experience in recent years reflects the worst of what Washington has become, a government that works great for the rich and powerful, and not for anyone else,’ she said as she mentioned drug companies, student loan outfits, fossil fuel companies and Wall Street bankers.

‘We need to take back our federal government from the wealthy and well-connected and return it to the people.’ She said.

Warren said she would demand that anyone running for federal office post their tax returns online as she has and touted her anti-corruption legislation, which in part calls for ending lobbying and stopping federal lobbyists from giving money to elected officials.

The audience gave Warren a standing ovation at the end of her speech, many of them tourists thrilled that their visit coincided with hers.

Vandy Young, a tourist from Maryland, said she is hopeful about a presidential bid by Warren.

‘I’ve been waiting for her to run,’ she said. ‘She’s one of the few candidates who can stand up to Trump. She’s not afraid of him.’

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