Former President Donald J. Trump met with East Palestine, Ohio, residents and officials on Feb. 22, to provide much-needed bottled water and cleaning supplies as the village continues to recover from the aftermath of a recent train derailment and chemical spill.
“We’re bringing a lot of water—thousands of bottles,” Trump told reporters following a tour of the East Palestine Fire House. “We have it in trucks and we brought some on my plane today.”
Although federal and state authorities have assured residents that local air and water testing has yielded no cause for alarm, many remain skeptical of those claims.
Praising the East Palestine community for demonstrating the “tough and resilient heart of America” through their trials, Trump said that he had partnered with nonprofit organizations Blue Line Moving and digital solutions provider KORTX to coordinate the delivery of the donated water and cleaning supplies.
Trump was joined at the press conference by Sen. J.D. Vance (R-Ohio), East Palestine Mayor Trent Conaway, and Rep. Bill Johnson (R-Ohio). Prior to his Wednesday remarks, the former president paid a visit to nearby Little Beaver Creek, where he received a briefing from local officials on the environmental impacts of the spill.
“He can send every agency he wants to, but I found that out this morning in one of the briefings that he was in Ukraine giving millions of dollars away to people over there and not to us, and I’m furious.”
“When I announced that I was coming, they changed their tune,” he said Wednesday, holding that his visit “opened up the dam” for the Biden administration to act.
“What this community needs now are not excuses and all of the other things you’ve been hearing, but answers and results, and that’s what I think you’re going to see,” Trump noted.
And if residents do not receive those answers and results, he added, “We will back.”