{"id":1897,"date":"2025-08-11T22:54:40","date_gmt":"2025-08-11T22:54:40","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.vecimasupport.com\/?p=1897"},"modified":"2025-08-12T00:32:38","modified_gmt":"2025-08-12T00:32:38","slug":"gov-abbot-still-beat-newsom-in-disaster-relief-despite-texas-democrats-stalling-hiding-out","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.vecimasupport.com\/index.php\/2025\/08\/11\/gov-abbot-still-beat-newsom-in-disaster-relief-despite-texas-democrats-stalling-hiding-out\/","title":{"rendered":"Gov. Abbot still beat Newsom in disaster relief despite Texas Democrats stalling, hiding out"},"content":{"rendered":"
Despite Democratic lawmakers fleeing and holding up vital relief efforts, Texas Republican Governor Greg Abbott<\/a>\u2019s flood relief was faster than California Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom\u2019s response to the L.A. wildfires.<\/p>\n This weekend, Abbott helped to present more than 60 of the families most impacted by the catastrophic floods<\/a> in the Texas Hill Country with $25,000 relief checks, which the governor called an initial “down payment” on the relief still incoming.<\/p>\n In an interview with Fox News Digital, Abbott explained the funds were a result of Texas partnering with country music legend George Strait and other private groups to ensure that funds raised by the star went straight to those who suffered the worst damage.<\/p>\n Abbott said that both he and Strait agreed there is a “<\/i>need for speed to help these people as quickly as possible.”<\/p>\n ABBOTT VOWS INDEFINITE SPECIAL SESSIONS, SAYS FLEEING DEMS COULD FACE ARREST \u2018FOR LITERALLY YEARS\u2019<\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n “<\/strong>We’ve seen in other states when there’s been travesties that occurred there, like the fires in California<\/a>, and so much money was raised and never has gotten to the people who needed it, we want to make sure that did not happen in the state of Texas,” Abbott explained.<\/p>\n “There has been an outpouring of support to Texas organizations to help the people of this state,” he added. “Now our job is to make sure it gets into the hands of the people who need it the most.”\u00a0<\/p>\n This comes just over a month after much of central Texas suffered a devastating flood that killed over 100 and decimated homes and businesses.<\/p>\n In response to the suffering, Strait, a Texas native, held a concert on July 27 to raise funds for those most impacted. Just two weeks later, victims are already receiving relief checks from the concert.<\/p>\n Abbott said that Strait was insistent that “he was doing this for one reason, because he was sick and tired of the people who’ve been damaged and harmed the most by the storm are not getting the money they need.”<\/p>\n CALIFORNIA LAUNCHES REDISTRICTING FIGHT TO \u2018NULLIFY\u2019 TEXAS GOP PLAN, WITH DEMS POISED TO GAIN 5 SEATS<\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n “So, what we did we set up an operation to make sure we were able to identify who sustained the worst damage, then make sure that they would be on the receiving end of these checks,” he explained.<\/p>\n Strait\u2019s concert closely resembles a similar star-studded benefit concert, titled “FireAid,”<\/a> in California that raised more than $100 million for victims of the wildfires in Los Angeles.<\/p>\n FireAid billed itself as “a benefit concert for wildfire victims.” Aside from music by the likes of Lady Gaga<\/a>, Jelly Roll, Katy Perry and Olivia Rodrigo, the five-hour show featured multiple stories from victims of the Altadena and Palisades fire who had lost their homes.<\/p>\n Fox News Digital reported in July that six months later, victims in the city\u2019s most impacted neighborhoods still had not received any direct funds raised by the concert.\u00a0<\/p>\n In a statement to Fox News Digital, a spokesperson for FireAid told Fox News Digital that “to most effectively deliver aid to the community as quickly as possible, we partnered with vetted and trusted local nonprofits who had the capacity and infrastructure to directly reach the individuals in need.”<\/p>\n The spokesperson said “this assistance provided food security, housing, resources for schools and more directly to individuals in the affected communities.”<\/p>\n TRUMP AND NEWSOM FIGHT OVER NATIONAL GUARD HEADS TO TRIAL IN CALIFORNIA<\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n They said that to date, FireAid has “distributed two rounds of funding totaling close to $75 million to organizations helping people on the ground and expect to distribute the remaining $25 million by the end of the year.”\u00a0<\/p>\n “The funds address the urgent needs from individuals in our communities\u2014 from immediate financial assistance, to childcare, groceries, mental health and housing and rebuilding public spaces as well as fire prevention. The grants have been distributed to more than 160 frontline nonprofits, schools, and local organizations which were identified and selected by FireAid,” said the spokesperson.\u00a0<\/p>\n Abbott claimed that several factors have made Texas\u2019 response to the flooding disaster very different from California\u2019s.<\/p>\n “It starts with generosity \u2026 but the second thing is we don’t let things slow us down. We are very empathetic with those who have lost their homes, who’ve had their lives turned upside down, who are trying to get back into their homes,” he said. “So, we were able to cut through all the red tape and make sure that the money got into the hands of those who needed it the most.”<\/p>\n He went on to say that “now we’re working with the local governments to make sure these people are going to be able to take these dollars, these resources, and actually begin that construction process to get their homes rebuilt.”<\/p>\n This comes despite the governor\u2019s ongoing showdown with Democrats in the Texas House of Representatives, who fled the state and brought the legislature\u2019s efforts to pass new flood relief measures to a grinding halt. The Democrats fled the state in protest of redistricting plans that would potentially give Republicans five additional seats in Congress.<\/p>\n