Fox News criticized the “finger-pointing” that has unfolded around the crisis — while glossing over Trump's role in the blame game
In a February 16 Truth Social post, Trump sparked a blame game over the Potomac River sewage spill, specifically calling out Wes Moore. In a second post on February 17, Trump said that “Maryland, Virginia, and Washington, D.C., who are responsible for the massive sewage spill in the Potomac River, must get to work, IMMEDIATELY. If they can’t do the job, they have to call me and ask, politely, to get it fixed.”
In response, Moore’s office pointed out that the “the federal government has been responsible for the Potomac Interceptor” for a century, and in response to Trump’s second missive, Moore responded: “If the president wants me to ask politely, here's my ask: Mr. President, yes, I had to do your job for the past month, but please, will you please start doing your job?”
It cannot be overstated how much outrage would ensue if a Democratic president told Republican state leaders that they needed to “ask politely” for federal assistance during a crisis like this. But Fox personalities did not flinch at the president’s post — in fact, some even seemed to revel in it. Unfortunately, this isn’t the first time Trump has played politics during disasters and withheld federal support for blue states. As one correspondent gleefully put it: “Welcome to Trump politics.”
On America Reports, correspondent Aishah Hasnie said federal assistance in dealing with the sewage clean-up “depends on if the Democrats ask him nicely.” She continued, “The president coming out with a Truth Social today, basically saying this is all D.C., Virginia, and Maryland's responsibility. … So he goes on to remind everybody that FEMA is currently not being funded right now because of the partial government shutdown.”
On Special Report with Bret Baier, Hasnie said that the fact that Democratic-run states need FEMA help is “such an ‘I told you so’ moment for Republicans and for the president. For a couple of weeks now there has been a pretty negative narrative around the Department of Homeland Security.”
On America’s Newsroom, anchor Dana Perino reported that “Trump is deploying FEMA to respond to the massive sewage spill in the Potomac River. But the government shutdown is hindering the agency's response.” She concluded that there had been “a lot of finger-pointing, and hopefully it gets resolved soon.”
On America Reports, White House correspondent Peter Doocy said Trump had “laid down a marker” that “he was not going to offer federal help unless Abigail Spanberger and Muriel Bowser here in D.C. and Wes Moore in Maryland asked him politely. Well, Wes Moore just put out a statement saying, Mr. President, please do your job. So if that is polite enough we might have an update about the federal response to the big stinky spill in the Potomac.”
On The Five, co-host Emily Compagno said, “Constituents are sick and tired of seeing the ecology be destroyed, humans' health being suffering or being risked, and then having everyone in charge just point fingers.” Without acknowledging that Trump’s initial response to the crisis was to cast blame on Democrats, she went on to say that “real leadership means arguing about how it started later – and infrastructure failures, they are not ideological, right? It's managerial, so I need a leader.”
Compagno then compared Trump telling Democrats to ask politely for federal assistance to “one time in college” when a tow truck driver “was like, if you ask nicely I will let your car go. … Then I was like, sir, may please have my car, and he was like, yes. Bing. And like released it down. Maybe it takes some eating crow, but I'm not quite sure why if you're here to serve constituents, not yourself.”
Fox News personality Tyrus on Gutfeld! said, “I think the hilariousness of this is that Trump is like yes, I will clean it up, no problem. Say please. And they're like, no. So maybe they should have woke baptisms in the river.”
Like it did with the East Palestine train derailment and Hurricane Helene, Fox News is wielding this crisis to advance its political goals — attacking Democrats, disparaging climate advocates, and following Trump’s lead.