Instead of Promised Debt Relief, Trump Pushes More Loans on Devastated Puerto Rico

Despite loud and growing demands that Puerto Rico’s debt be cancelled outright, President Donald Trump is being blasted for doing the exact opposite by calling on Congress to saddle the U.S. territory with even more loans amid a massive humanitarian crisis on the storm-ravaged island.

On Tuesday, the Trump administration requested that Congress include a $4.9 billion Treasury loan for Puerto Rico in a $36.5 billion disaster relief package, which the U.S. House of Representatives is set to vote on this week. The island would also receive a $150 million loan to cover matching funds for FEMA grants, bringing the loan total to $5.05 billion.

But as the progressive advocacy group Justice Democrats declared, “additional debt isn’t relief.”

Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.)—who supports the Justice Democrats—has added his voice to the call for major debt relief.

“Puerto Rico’s recovery from Hurricane Maria must be driven by direct aid and debt relief,” Khanna tweeted, “not more loans and austerity.”

Hurricane Maria struck the island three weeks ago, wiping out the island’s electric grid and leaving 3.4 million American citizens with limited access to fuel, food, and drinking water. So far, the federal government’s disaster relief efforts have been widely condemned as woefully inadequate.

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