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'Trees can explode': Trump again blames California for causing wildfires with poor forest management

California’s Democratic governor uses briefing with president to warn about climate crisis

John T. Bennett
Tuesday 15 September 2020 06:01 EDT
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Donald Trump dismisses science of climate change during California visit

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Donald Trump again blamed Democratic state leaders on the West Coast for forest fires raging across the region for poor forest management, saying they should be ready because dry trees can “just explode.”

Fires have spread up and down the West Coast, from California up through Oregon and Washington state, displacing thousands and sowing doubt among some residents about whether they will remain in the region long term.  

The president criticized state and local officials in the region for not “cutting,” like he said one European leader put it, areas of forest to prevent active fires from spreading. “They don’t do that,” he said Monday as he landed in Sacramento for a briefing on the fires and another event.

“When trees fall down after … 18 months ...they become dry” like a “match stick,“ Mr Trump said. “They just explode. They can explode.”

It was unclear if he was just using an expression to make a point, or really thinks the trees detonate when they become very dry.

“They have to do something about it. They have to do cuts in between,” he said of state leaders.  

California Governor Gavin Newsom, at that briefing with Mr Trump, said his state has fires from its northern border with Oregon to its southern one with Mexico. Twenty-four people have died so far, he said.

“No one disputes that,” Mr Newsom said of Mr Trump’s claim that Western states have done too little on forest management. But he said the overwhelming majority of forest land is under the purview of the federal government, not his state.

Seated just to Mr Trump’s right, he said “it is self-evident that climate change is real” and the “hots are getting hotter.”

Mr Trump, who has taken many sides of the climate crisis debate, did not dispute what the California governor said.

But moments later, Mr Trump said of the crisis: “I’m not sure science knows, actually,” telling local officials, without supporting evidence, he thinks temperatures “will get cooler.”

Officials told the president 1,100 fires have broken out over the last 29 days alone.

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