Chuck Schumer says Puerto Rico relief effort has been "slow-footed" and "not adequate"

Sen. Schumer says the relief effort in Puerto Rico has been slow and inadequate

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-New York, had strong words for President Trump Sunday amid the ongoing crisis in Puerto Rico.

"The president, instead of tweeting against the mayor of San Juan, who's watching her people die and just made a plea for help, ought to roll up his sleeves and get to work here," Schumer said on CBS News' "Face the Nation." "The bottom line is at least for the first week and a half the effort has been slow-footed, disorganized, and not adequate."

His remarks followed Mr. Trump's criticism of the mayor of San Juan, Carmen Yulín Cruz, who has said the administration's response was "killing us with the inefficiency." The president tweeted Saturday that Cruz had "poor leadership ability."

San Juan Mayor says not enough is being done

Schumer said the Puerto Rico response "needs the president to stop calling names, stop downgrading the motives of people who are calling for help." Schumer called the response "not good" and urged the deployment of more military troops to the area. 

Mr. Trump is set to arrive in the region on Tuesday to survey storm damage. Schumer said the president should have been on the ground much earlier. 

"He should have gone to Puerto Rico earlier than two weeks. He'll go Tuesday. That's good. But two weeks after it hit. He was in Texas twice after that. Obama was up at Sandy two days afterwards. They say, 'There are logistics that get in the way, but the president going makes a huge difference. And logistics didn't get in the way in the past," said Schumer. 

Meanwhile, Schumer said Republican leadership's efforts to provide tax reform through reconciliation "excludes Democrats" in the process. 

"It's the same process that led to the demise on health care. And let me just address one thing, John," Schumer said, speaking to CBS News' John Dickerson. "Speaker Ryan keeps saying it helps the middle class. That's not true. What he's saying and what the plan is are totally different."

Sen. Schumer says the GOP tax plan will not create growth

The Republicans' plan, rolled out last week, aims to decrease the number of individual tax brackets from seven to three and lower taxes on businesses. However, it leaves many of the details -- such as the income levels accompanying those tax levels -- to the tax-writing committees in Congress. 

Schumer noted that Democrats instead would like Republicans to consult their colleagues before rolling out a major tax plan. 

He added, "They can't just put down a plan and say, 'Bipartisanship is you guys come over and do what we want,' when it's against our principles."

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