Thứ Bảy, 17 tháng 11, 2018

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With the death toll from California's wildfire at more than 70 and 1,000 still unaccounted for, President Trump on Saturday will tour the devastation and meet with state leaders

 Trump was expected to tour fire-ravaged areas in and around the community of Paradise in Northern California early Saturday before arriving in Southern California in the afternoon

The Camp and Woolsey fires combined have burned more than 250,000 acres and destroyed more than 10,000 structures

Advertisement  "Many more people are missing than anyone thought possible," Trump said before departing for California

"I wanna be with the firefighters and the FEMA first responders."  The visit will be both a presidential and political moment for Trump, who regularly criticizes the deep blue state and is highly unpopular here

Trump was roundly criticized last week for erroneously blaming the fires on poor forest management and threatening to cut off funding to California

 But in recent days, the president has offered more conciliatory comments about the wildfires, saying Tuesday "we mourn for the lives lost and we pray for the victims of the California wildfires

" Gov. Jerry Brown on Friday pledged to work with Trump to help California and will meet with the president along with Gov

-elect Gavin Newsom, who, like Brown, has argued that climate change has worsened the fire toll in California

 "Now is the time to pull together for the people of California," Brown said Twitter Friday

 Trump responded on Twitter: "Thank you @JerryBrownGov. Look forward to joining you and @GavinNewsom tomorrow in California

We are with you!"  In an interview on Fox News, Trump said climate change might have contributed to the fires but maintained that forest management policies must change

 "Maybe it contributes a little bit,"he said of climate change. "The big problem we have is management…

You need forest management, it has to be, I'm not saying that in a negative way. I'm just saying the facts, and I've really learned a lot

"  Trump told Fox he saw firefighters removing dry brush from the fire scenes. "This should have been all raked out," he said

 In Butte County, eight more bodies were found Friday, and the number of people unaccounted for jumped from 631 to 1,011 as authorities continued to comb through 911 calls, emails and other reports of missing people

 Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea said, however, that the list of the missing is dynamic and may include people who were counted twice, whose names were misspelled or who may not know they were reported missing

 The Camp fire, already the state's worst fire on record, has burned 146,000 acres and destroyed 12,263 structures

Officials said it could take weeks to complete the search for victims and identify them

Thousands of residents are without homes and living in shelters and tent cities.  The Woolsey fire in Southern California burned more than 500 structures and killed three people

 This will be just Trump's second visit to the nation's most populous state since his election

His first California visit, which he made in March to inspect border wall prototypes in the San Diego area and to attend a fundraiser in the Beverly Park home of Edward Glazer, the co-chairman of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers professional football team, came later in his term than for any White House occupant since Franklin D

Roosevelt.  Trump has had a particularly combative relationship with California, over environmental, immigration and other policies

The state's Democratic leaders, including Gov. Jerry Brown, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of San Francisco, Rep

Adam Schiff of Burbank and Rep. Maxine Waters of Los Angeles, have been frequent Trump targets and, to varying extents, the faces of the resistance to him

Advertisement  Last weekend he wrote, "There is no reason for these massive, deadly and costly forest fires in California except that forest management is so poor

Billions of dollars are given each year, with so many lives lost, all because of gross mismanagement of the forests

Remedy now, or no more Fed payments!"  Experts called the tweet uninformed. Many politicians and residents called it insensitive

 "This is not a time for partisanship," Gov.-elect Gavin Newsom responded. "This is a time for coordinating relief and response and lifting those in need up

"  The president of California Professional Firefighters, Brian Rice, called the tweet "ill-informed, ill-timed and demeaning to those who are suffering as well as the men and women on the front lines

"  "At this moment, thousands of our brother and sister firefighters are putting their lives on the line to protect the lives and property of thousands," Rice added

"Some of them are doing so even as their own homes lay in ruins. In my view, this shameful attack on California is an attack on all our courageous men and women on the front lines

"  Times staff writers Nicole Santa Cruz in Paradise and Noah Bierman in Washington contributed to this report

 8:30 a.m.: This article was updated with new comments from President Trump.  This article was originally posted at 7:45 a

m.

For more infomation >> California fires: Trump to tour devastation and mend political fences after Twitter criticism - Duration: 9:18.

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Temperatures Drop As Hazardous Smoke From California Wildfire Blocks The Sun - Duration: 1:59.

For more infomation >> Temperatures Drop As Hazardous Smoke From California Wildfire Blocks The Sun - Duration: 1:59.

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71 Dead, More Than 1,000 People Unaccounted For In California Wildfires - Duration: 1:58.

For more infomation >> 71 Dead, More Than 1,000 People Unaccounted For In California Wildfires - Duration: 1:58.

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Northern California fire brings worst air quality in the world to residents hundreds of miles away - Duration: 6:38.

Smoke from the Camp fire — California's deadliest wildfire in recorded history — has poured into communities hundreds of miles away, filling the sky with dangerous particles, grayish hues and a bitter odor

The smoke has also dropped temperatures as much as 10 degrees because the haze is blotting out the sun

 It also has led to dangerous and unhealthy air quality. Advertisement  Since the blaze broke out last week, communities in the Sacramento Valley and Bay Area — including Chico, Oroville and Sacramento — have had some of the dirtiest air in the world, according Purple Air, an air-quality monitoring network

 Berkeley Earth, a nonprofit that tracks air-quality data, said Friday that San Francisco, Stockton and Sacramento ranked as the world's three most polluted cities

 The hazardous air quality in Northern California, which rated worse than cities in India and China, has disrupted life for thousands of people not directly affected by the fire and also means that people in any age group, could face health problems

 Dozens of schools have canceled classes, and public health officials are warning people to avoid the outdoors, especially those with heart or lung diseases and older adults and children

 The Environmental Protection Agency's index, which has ranked the air quality in the region in the unhealthy zone, warns that those who go outside could experience runny nose, watery eyes and difficulty breathing

 Tunisia Wiggins, 40, had a 3M mask strapped securely to her face as she took a walk around downtown Sacramento during her lunch break on Friday

 Wiggins said the smoke really has taken a toll her the past few days. When she drives, she avoids turning on her car heater because of terrible air quality, even though the temperatures have dropped into the 30s in the early morning

 "It's the fatigue. Sometimes my eyes burn and I get short of breath," said Wiggins, who works as a clerk at a CHP station in Sacramento

"When I wear the mask, I don't feel too bad."  Weather forecasters don't anticipate the air quality to improve within the next several days

 In the 11 years that Eric Kurth has worked as a meteorologist with the National Weather Service he's said he's never seen such dirty air

 "I've seen a lot of wildfires in California, and we did have smokey conditions, but I did not see the levels as bad as they are now," he said

 A confluence of factors, including an earlier fire season and strong inversion layer that traps cold air, has kept the thick smoke and ash from the Camp fire in the region far longer than normal

 "The Camp fire is the type of fire that we would should have typically had in the summer months and usually the smoke would get blown away," Kurth said

"But the inversion layer acts like a lid and keeps the smoke in the area."  Because heavy smoke and hazardous air quality are expected to continue throughout next week, the Bay Area Air Quality Management District warned residents Thursday that its illegal for them to use their fireplaces, wood stoves and any other solid fuel

Advertisement  To mitigate the problem, communities throughout the region, such as South San Francisco and Daly City, have also been handing out masks to residents who venture outdoors

 Fire stations in Sacramento had distributed around 67,000 N95 masks to the public before the city announced Friday that it would stop, due to health concerns

 Health officials consider N95 or N100 respirator masks the most effective at protecting people from harmful pollutants, but say it can be dangerous for children and those with heart and respiratory diseases

 Kelly Ash of Sacramento said the biggest impact has been at home.  Ash, the Capitol director for Assembly Rocky Chavez (R-Oceanside), said she's kept her 19-month-old son and 4-year-old daughter cooped up in the house

 That's been a little trying, she said, but it's nothing compared with what everyone directly affected by the wildfires has been going through

 Ash said she and her husband, who is a master sergeant at nearby Beale Air Force Base, bought an air purifier for their Sacramento home as a precaution, she said

 "They're all inside all day," said Ash, 35. "They're going stir crazy, but it's better than losing your home

"  3:44 p.m.: This article was updated with information from Sacramento residents affected by the smoke

 This article was originally published at 3:10 p.m.

For more infomation >> Northern California fire brings worst air quality in the world to residents hundreds of miles away - Duration: 6:38.

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Smoke concerns for Pacific Northwest from California wildfires - Duration: 2:07.

For more infomation >> Smoke concerns for Pacific Northwest from California wildfires - Duration: 2:07.

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Local fire experts explain why California fires are so destructive - Duration: 2:10.

For more infomation >> Local fire experts explain why California fires are so destructive - Duration: 2:10.

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california wildfire 2018 - Duration: 0:47.

Don't forget to subscribe !

For more infomation >> california wildfire 2018 - Duration: 0:47.

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President Trump To Tour California Wildfires - Duration: 0:33.

For more infomation >> President Trump To Tour California Wildfires - Duration: 0:33.

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One mother's harrowing escape from California's deadliest wildfire - Duration: 7:26.

JUDY WOODRUFF: It's been one week since California's deadliest fire ever destroyed the town of

Paradise.

As of tonight, 63 are confirmed dead, and 631 missing.

That is double the previous count of missing, but it believed it likely includes some who

survived.

The fire also wiped out 9,700 homes in Paradise, and it displaced 52,000 people.

Special correspondent Cat Wise reports from nearby Gridley on one family who fled.

CAT WISE: A welcome moment of rest for mother and daughter.

Carolina Restrepo and her three children now live in a Red Cross shelter in Gridley, California.

They came here after fleeing the Camp Fire, which engulfed their hometown of Paradise

last Thursday.

She filmed this cell phone footage as their family drove through the flames.

CAROLINA RESTREPO, Evacuee: I was with the three kids in the car, like trying to comfort

them.

But, in the same moment, my mind was totally, like, no clue.

Like, I don't know if we're going to make it.

CAT WISE: Now, the only possessions they have left are donations.

Restrepo was working as the manager of a new restaurant in town when she first heard the

news.

CAROLINA RESTREPO: So, one of my customers at the restaurant, he told me that he needs

to leave.

And I ask him why.

He said that my -- they are evacuating my neighborhood right now.

CAT WISE: She dropped everything and rushed to gather her children from school.

CAROLINA RESTREPO: The first image I saw, it was all the teachers hugging the kids,

because it was raining ashes, raining ashes everywhere, dark.

You can't even see, because the smoke was thick.

And they were trying -- putting as much kids in the school buses, you know, getting out

of the town, and a lot of parents running, crying, you know, taking their kids.

CAT WISE: It ended up being a five-hour journey through an inferno.

CAROLINA RESTREPO: Flames everywhere.

The car inside was like an oven temperature.

You can't even touch the glass.

CAT WISE: What happened next was an act of bravery and kindness that very likely saved

the family's life.

CAROLINA RESTREPO: A gentleman, a guy, and he looked at me and he saw my kids, and he

just opened my car doors.

He said, let's go.

CAT WISE: The stranger somehow managed to navigate them out between the abandoned cars.

CAROLINA RESTREPO: Then we saw the most beautiful light, a flashlight from a fireman, in between

everything, like, showing us the way to go out.

CAT WISE: They had escaped, but many others weren't as lucky.

A week after the fire, there are now new questions about why Paradise officials didn't call for

a total evacuation sooner and why residents like Carolina didn't receive emergency alerts,

leaving many trapped in gridlock.

PHIL JOHN, Paradise Ridge Fire Safe Council: We knew that there was going to be an issue

with bottlenecking.

CAT WISE: Phil John is the chair of the Paradise Ridge Fire Safe Council.

It's a volunteer group that helped craft an evacuation plan for a town that also lost

80 homes in 2008's Humboldt Fire.

But John said this fire was unlike any before it.

PHIL JOHN: It worked.

Didn't work perfectly, obviously.

But thousands of lives were saved because of the foresight and the people that worked

so hard to create that.

But who could guess that a town would be that dry, where every single bit of our fuel would

just explode when the embers come flying across?

CAT WISE: Back at the Red Cross shelter in Gridley, Melissa Thompson is one of many residents

still searching for answers.

MELISSA THOMPSON, Evacuee: Oh yes, that's his shed right there.

I believe that's his place.

CAT WISE: When we met up with her last night, she was learning that her dad's house had

been destroyed, but there was no information yet on her own home.

Thompson is from Magalia, five miles from Paradise, and she says she still hasn't heard

if some of her friends and neighbors are alive.

MELISSA THOMPSON: His name is Tracy Hodges (ph).

He's like a brother.

He's a stubborn man.

I can't get my Gmail to give me my contacts, so I can't get his number.

CAT WISE: Carolina Restrepo says she hopes to one day thank the stranger who helped her

family.

CAROLINA RESTREPO: I hope to see him again someday soon.

Yes, of course, I have his face here.

You know, I totally can't forget that face that save us.

CAT WISE: She and her family will be at the Red Cross shelter for the foreseeable future,

but she's committed to rebuilding their life in the town they have come to call home.

Carolina's story is one of many ha rowing accounts that we have heard from folks here

over the last couple of days -- Judy.

JUDY WOODRUFF: Cat, so hard to listen to that.

So thankful that she and her family escaped.

But I want to ask you about the number of missing people.

It was, what, over 300 yesterday.

Now it's jumped to over 600.

What's behind that?

CAT WISE: That's right, Judy.

It was a big jump up overnight last night.

I talked to a press person from the Butte County Sheriff's Office today, and she told

me there is a very large team now working full time on the missing persons list.

They have pulled people in from other agencies.

Part of the reason for that jump on the missing persons list is due to the fact that they

have been consolidating different persons lists over the last couple of days.

I was also told that, in some cases, it's taken people several days to report their

loved ones missing.

Now, they do hope that, over the coming days, as investigators have more time to come to

shelters like this and focus on individual cases, that those numbers will come down.

There will be another update tonight at 6:00 p.m. Pacific time, but, until then, there's

obviously a lot of questions about that big jump up.

JUDY WOODRUFF: And here we are, Cat, what, it's been about a week since this all got

under way, and you have people living in shelters.

What's the story on whether they're going to be able to get back into any sort of housing

situation?

CAT WISE: The estimates are now that more than 11,000 structures burned in this fire.

Many of those are homes.

Now, that is a staggering number.

Last night, we talked about how this county had a very limited housing stock prior to

the wildfires.

Shelters around the area are very full.

I believe there may be only a couple of shelters at this point that have openings, motels,

hotels completely booked.

I spoke today with a FEMA spokesperson who told me that they are here on the ground.

They are registering people both in Northern California and in Southern California.

Some 11,000 individuals have, so far, applied for government assistance.

That is a big number.

FEMA is in the early stages now of talking to local and city authorities here, trying

to figure out what the needs of the community are.

They're trying to figure out, are people wanting to stay here in this area?

Will they be leaving to other places?

But in terms of a long-term housing solution for this community, it's very much still in

the early days.

JUDY WOODRUFF: Such a massive undertaking, is what it sounds like.

Well, Cat Wise reporting tonight from a Red Cross shelter in Gridley, California.

Cat, thank you.

CAT WISE: Thank you.

For more infomation >> One mother's harrowing escape from California's deadliest wildfire - Duration: 7:26.

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Central Ohio church helping those affected by California wildfires - Duration: 2:30.

For more infomation >> Central Ohio church helping those affected by California wildfires - Duration: 2:30.

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Assisting Those Fighting the California Wildfires on This Week @NASA – November 17, 2018 - Duration: 3:29.

Data from space are informing those fighting the California wildfires …

A U.S. commercial resupply mission launches to the space station …

And showcasing the powerhouse for our Orion spacecraft … a few of the stories to tell

you about – This Week at NASA!

Satellites in space have captured imagery and data of wildfires that have continued

to plague California — including the Woolsey Fire near Los Angeles and the Camp Fire in

Northern California.

The Camp Fire, which began Nov. 8, has led become the deadliest wildfire in the state's

history.

It has also become the most destructive wildfire in California history, with a vast number

of structures destroyed by the blaze.

Our Advanced Rapid Imaging and Analysis team used the satellite data to produce damage

maps to help officials and first responders identify heavily damaged areas and allocate

resources as needed.

On Nov. 17, our commercial partner, Northrop Grumman launched its Cygnus cargo spacecraft

to the International Space Station on the company's 10th commercial resupply mission

for NASA.

The Cygnus, dubbed the SS John Young in honor of the late astronaut, launched from our Wallops

Flight Facility in Virginia with about 7,400 pounds of research, crew supplies and hardware

for the crew aboard the orbiting outpost.

A Nov. 16 event at our Kennedy Space Center, in Florida showcased the recently arrived

European Service Module for our Orion spacecraft – which is provided by ESA, the European

Space Agency – and highlighted our history of cooperation and collaboration with ESA

for deep space exploration.

"This is a momentous occasion, where we're going to have the opportunity to fly into

deep space, and the European Service Module is a huge element of this architecture."

The service module will power, propel, and cool Orion on Exploration Mission-1, its first

uncrewed flight test with our Space Launch System rocket.

The first group of restored Historic Mission Control consoles, which helped land humans

on the Moon, arrived recently at Houston's Ellington Field, near our Johnson Space Center,

and were unveiled before Apollo alumni, NASA personnel, and media.

This event marks a major milestone in the ongoing restoration of Historic Mission Control,

a National Historic Landmark, and its preservation for future explorers.

Expedition 58 – the International Space Station's next crew – conducted final

qualification training in Russia in preparation for its flight to orbit.

Our Anne McClain, Oleg Kononenko of Roscosmos, and David Saint-Jacques of the Canadian Space

Agency are targeted for launch Dec. 3 for a six-month mission on the station.

We began research flights off the coast of Galveston, Texas, in support of the Quiet

Supersonic Flights 2018 series.

The project uses F-A/18 aircraft flying at supersonic speeds, to test community response

to the "quiet thump" technique designed to reduce loud sonic booms typically associated

with supersonic flight.

The X-59 Quiet SuperSonic Technology X-plane we are developing will be able to demonstrate

quiet supersonic technologies in straight and level flight over a larger area than the

F-A/18.

That's what's up this week @NASA …

For more on these and other stories follow us on the web at nasa.gov/twan

For more infomation >> Assisting Those Fighting the California Wildfires on This Week @NASA – November 17, 2018 - Duration: 3:29.

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Aumentan muertos y desaparecidos por incendios | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 2:57.

For more infomation >> Aumentan muertos y desaparecidos por incendios | Al Rojo Vivo | Telemundo - Duration: 2:57.

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Trump arrives in California to survey wildfire damage - Duration: 3:42.

For more infomation >> Trump arrives in California to survey wildfire damage - Duration: 3:42.

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California is still fighting fire as death toll exceeds 70 - Duration: 3:16.

>> Sreenivasan: THE CAMP FIRE'S

DEVASTATION IN AND AROUND

PARADISE, CALIFORNIA, MEANS MANY

THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE ARE

HOMELESS.

SOME ARE IN SHELTERS, OTHERS

WITH FAMILY OR FRIENDS, AND

STILL OTHERS ARE CAMPED OUT IN

TENTS.

FOR THE LATEST, WE TURN NOW TO

JULIA SULEK, A REPORTER FOR THE

"SAN JOSE MERCURY NEWS."

SHE JOINS US VIA SKYPE FROM

CHICO, CALIFORNIA.

FIRST, TELL US WHERE YOU'RE

STANDING.

>> Reporter: I'M STANDING IN

FRONT OF WHAT THEY'RE CALLING A

TENT CITY ON THE EDGE OF THE...

OF A WALMART PARKING LOT HERE.

PEOPLE WITH NO PLACE TO GO HAVE

PUT UP TENTS HERE.

THEY'VE BEEN WELL TAKEN CARE OF

BY... BY WALMART AND LOTS OF

DONORS.

BUT THEY'RE ASKING THAT THE TENT

CITY BE BROKEN UP AND PEOPLE GO

TO SHELTERS.

THE RAIN'S COMING NEXT WEEK, AND

IT'S REALLY COLD OUT HERE.

>> Sreenivasan: AND WHAT KIND

OF SHELTER CAPACITY EXISTS IN

THE AREA?

IS FEMA ON THE GROUND?

AND WHAT ARE THEY DOING?

>> Reporter: FEMA IS HERE.

THEY HAVE SET UP IN AN OLD

SEARS, EMPTY SEARS BUILDING.

LOTS OF SERVICES FOR PEOPLE.

WITH EVERY DISASTER, THE

CHURCHES HAVE OPENED THEIR

DOORS, THE ELKS CLUB.

THERE'S ENOUGH ROOM FOR PEOPLE.

.>> Sreenivasan: THERE'S QUITE

A BIT OF FOCUS THIS WEEK NOW,

LATER IN THE WEEK NOW, ABOUT THE

SOURCE OF THIS AND WHETHER OR

NOT P.G.& E., THE UTILITY

COMPANY THERE, SHOULD BE HELD

RESPONSIBLE.

WHAT'S THE CASE AGAINST THEM?

>> IN PREVIOUS FIRES, THERE

CERTAINLY HAVE BEEN TRANSFORMERS

THAT HAVE BLOWN AND WINDS THAT

HAVE KNOCKED THEM DOWN AND

STARTED FIRES.

THERE'S ALREADY BEEN A LAWSUIT

FILED AGAINST P.G.& E.

AND ANOTHER INTERESTING THING:

AFTER THE FIRES IN SANTA ROSA

LAST YEAR, P.G.& E. STARTED A

SYSTEM WHERE, WHEN THEY HAD

THESE RED FLAG WARNINGS AND

THE... THE WINDS GOT OVER A

CERTAIN SPEED AND THE HUMIDITY

WAS LOW, THAT THEY WOULD TURN

OFF POWER.

AND THEY ACTUALLY WERE WARNING

PEOPLE THAT THEY WERE PLANNING

TO TURN OFF POWER IN THE

PARADISE AREA.

THEY DIDN'T.

BUT, OF COURSE, IN THE MEANTIME,

AS PEOPLE WERE GETTING THESE

NOTICES, YOU KNOW, LOCALS WERE

COMPLAINING, "HEY, I'VE GOT A,

YOU KNOW, FREEZER FULL OF MEAT,"

OR, YOU KNOW, "DO YOU REALLY

HAVE TO TURN THEM OFF?"

SO, IT WAS JUST AN INTERESTING

DYNAMIC OF PEOPLE NOT REALLY

REALIZING WHAT WAS COMING.

>> Sreenivasan: IN TERMS OF

THE NUMBER OF PEOPLE WHO ARE

STILL MISSING AND UNACCOUNTED

FOR, NEW YORKERS ARE FAMILIAR

WITH IT AFTER 9/11-- OR I SHOULD

SAY THE COUNTRY IS FAMILIAR WITH

IT-- BUT YOU SEE THESE BULLETIN

BOARDS AND JUST THESE INCREDIBLY

EMOTIONAL PLEAS TO TRY TO FIND

RELATIVES.

>> Reporter: OH, IT'S JUST...

IT'S SO, SO AWFUL.

AND I'M TELLING YOU I'VE BEEN AT

THESE PRESS CONFERENCES WITH THE

SHERIFF EVERY NIGHT, AND HE GETS

UP WITH THE GRIM NEWS, AND IT

GOES UP BY EIGHT OR TEN EVERY

DAY.

I SPOKE WITH A SEARCH-AND-RESCUE

GUY WHO'S UP THERE WITH, YOU

KNOW, HUGE TEAMS.

LIKE, 600 PEOPLE ARE ACTUALLY

LOOKING FOR THE REMAINS OF THE

DEAD.

AND IT'S HORRINGIFYING, AND THE

SCALE OF IT.

I MEAN, THIS IS DOUBLE, ALMOST

TRIPLE WHAT... WHAT FORMER

FIRES... THE MOST DEVASTATING

FIRES EVER.

SO, I ACTUALLY GOT A CALL LAST

NIGHT FROM A MAN WHO WAS MISSING

HIS MOTHER AND STEPFATHER.

I HAD BEEN IN TOUCH WITH HIM

EARLIER IN THE WEEK.

AND HE TOLD ME THAT HE GOT A

CALL THAT HIS MOTHER AND

STEPFATHER WERE FOUND DEAD IN

THEIR HOME.

AND THAT'S, YOU KNOW, WHAT, TEN

DAYS LATER.

IT'S JUST... JUST HORRIFYING.

>> Sreenivasan: JULIA SULEK, A

REPORTER FOR THE "SAN JOSE

MERCURY NEWS," JOINING US VIA

SKYPE LIVE FROM CHICO,

CALIFORNIA, THANKS SO MUCH.

>> YOU'RE WELCOME, HARI.

For more infomation >> California is still fighting fire as death toll exceeds 70 - Duration: 3:16.

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California Firefighters To President Trump: 'You Are Wrong' About Wildfires | The 11th Hour | MSNBC - Duration: 6:39.

For more infomation >> California Firefighters To President Trump: 'You Are Wrong' About Wildfires | The 11th Hour | MSNBC - Duration: 6:39.

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California GIRLS react to MAGIC - Magic of Y on Streets - Duration: 9:45.

For more infomation >> California GIRLS react to MAGIC - Magic of Y on Streets - Duration: 9:45.

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Asciende a 66 el número de muertos por los incendios en California | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 2:17.

For more infomation >> Asciende a 66 el número de muertos por los incendios en California | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 2:17.

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Chico, California Mayor On Wildfires: It's Catastrophic | Hardball | MSNBC - Duration: 5:25.

For more infomation >> Chico, California Mayor On Wildfires: It's Catastrophic | Hardball | MSNBC - Duration: 5:25.

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President Trump to visit California wildfire victims - Duration: 14:06.

ROBERT COSTA: Hello. I'm Robert Costa. And this is the Washington Week Podcast, where

we continue the conversation where we left off on the broadcast.

Joining me at the table, Jonathan Swan, national political reporter for Axios; Vivian

Salama, White House reporter for The Wall Street Journal; Jonathan Lemire, White House

reporter for the Associated Press; and Seung Min Kim, White House reporter for The

Washington Post and a CNN political analyst.

President Trump heads to California on Saturday, where wildfires are burning in the

north and south and have claimed at least 66 lives as of this moment. Northern

California's Camp Fire is the worst fire in state history. It has burned over 140,000

acres and destroyed almost 10,000 homes. Mr. Trump will meet with individuals who are

affected by the wildfires when he's there this weekend. Jonathan, you will be

traveling with President Trump, I believe part of the White House reporting pool.

JONATHAN LEMIRE: That's right.

ROBERT COSTA: The president rarely travels to California, but this is a presidential

moment for him, perhaps.

JONATHAN LEMIRE: Right, he's certainly painted California as the enemy in many ways,

blaming them in some ways inaccurately for problems with illegal immigration and unlawful

voting. He says they're the source of many of the millions of illegal votes that perhaps

cost him the popular vote in 2016. But yes, this is a moment where, you know, he's the

president and this is part of the job description, is to be out there to provide some

comfort, to provide federal resources, disasters like this.

It is one that he has perhaps struggled with, at least the idea of displaying empathy.

We remember him in Puerto Rico in the aftermath of that hurricane a year ago, you know,

shooting paper towels into the crowd like they were basketballs and later feuding with

the officials and suggesting they manipulated the death total. Tomorrow he's expected

to meet with first responders, meet with victims, people affected by these terrible fires.

He's going to be on the ground for a number of hours. And interestingly, despite his feuds

with the state, the current governor of California, Governor Brown, and Governor-elect

Newsom, both Democrats, are going to meet with him and meet with us tomorrow in California.

ROBERT COSTA: Do we expect Congress to consider some more funding for California this winter?

SEUNG MIN KIM: It's definitely one of the many agenda items.

Senator Patrick Leahy, who is the top Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Committee,

has estimated about $720 million just for wildfire relief.

That's on top of emergency funding that's needed to deal with the continuing hurricane

relief in Texas, in the Carolinas, and elsewhere. But that doesn't even begin to get

into the complications of the funding fight that we have in the coming weeks because

we know that the president is still insistent on funding for his border wall.

The top Senate Republican leaders met with the president earlier this week.

Mitch McConnell came back to Capitol Hill saying - kind of saying to us that he has a

plan and not really disclosing that plan to us - (laughs) - in order to make President

Trump happy on his border wall funding, but that's another - on the list - many list of

things that Congress has to get done before the end of the year.

ROBERT COSTA: Is this a check-the-box trip for President Trump, or do we expect this

administration to focus on California for quite some time?

JONATHAN SWAN: Well, I don't think there's any - he has any choice.

I mean, it is a disaster such magnitude that he really doesn't have any choice.

Were it not for this disaster, President Trump has no plans to visit California.

I mean, you could probably go eight years without visiting California.

I don't think he's been there once, has he, in his -

JONATHAN LEMIRE: Maybe once.

SEUNG MIN KIM: He has. He has, yeah, once, to visit a border wall prototype.

JONATHAN SWAN: Maybe once? OK. So, you know, again, all that's been said. But he

really does struggle sometimes with these disasters, and Puerto Rico is a good example.

I mean, we reported last week he has been saying privately no more money, not another

penny for Puerto Rico. He's got - he's come to a theory actually based on a story he

read in your newspaper that he perhaps misinterpreted where he believes that Puerto

Rico's government is using the disaster relief to pay down debt, and there's no

evidence of that. But he has come to the conclusion that they're scammers, and he

has made very clear to congressional appropriators and leadership that he does not

want any more money going to Puerto Rico. In a meeting in October he asked to

rescind money already given to Puerto Rico; this is with administration officials.

So, you know, yes, there will be this moment tomorrow, but I wouldn't expect some kind

of, you know, awakening about, you know, California and some sea change in his view.

VIVIAN SALAMA: Yeah, I agree. I mean, like Jonathan said, it's - he really had no

choice because there have already been other wildfires and mudslides in California

that have also been deadly and he has not chosen to go to visit victims there.

But this, because of the magnitude, obviously, it's compelling for him to go.

Also, you know, this whole entire role of consoler in chief that we so frequently talk

about, it's just never been a natural fit for him. And so to also go to a place that

is politically unfriendly, in his view, is just something that has never been very

appealing to him. Now, when disasters struck in Florida and Texas, he was very eager

to go and be among the people he felt like it was a natural place for him to be.

Places like Puerto Rico and California, not so much.

ROBERT COSTA: In the days and weeks leading up to the midterm elections, President Trump

spoke a lot about the caravan of migrants en route to the southern border of the U.S.

He called it an invasion and deployed active-duty U.S. troops. Defense Secretary

Jim Mattis visited soldiers in Texas on Wednesday, but the topic appears to have

faded into the background for the Trump White House, at least until Friday night.

Jonathan, we've seen the president starting to tweet about the caravan on Friday.

How do you see this White House handling this matter - focusing on it politically,

leaving it a little bit on the shelf in the wake of the midterms, now coming back to it?

JONATHAN LEMIRE: That's right.

It'll be interesting to see how much it really is revived, if this almost might be the

president responding to all this wave of stories noting that he hadn't been talking about

it in a while, the AP among them; wrote about how this was sort of the dominant storyline

for him in the - as his closing argument of the midterm elections.

Night after night at the rallies he would talk about it, he would tweet about it, and so

on, but once the election came and gone there were no tweets.

He mentioned it once when asked at a press conference, and it really seemed to fade.

And now, you know, he - this evening he did revive it and he did tweet about it again.

Whether or not this leads to actual substantial policies we will see.

He is still talking that he's going to reevaluate, say, birthright citizenship.

You know, there are troops deployed to the border; will there be more sent?

You know, the White House is certainly looking at this stuff, but it's clearly not the

front-burner issue that it was a few weeks ago.

VIVAN SALAMA: There already has been the effort, though, to reinterpret the asylum law.

And that's been very controversial, although perhaps not grabbing headlines as much,

where this has been something that's concerned a lot of people because the law is very

set. But there's a statute in the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Act which says

that the president has the executive authority, essentially when there's a national

security issue, that he can reinterpret the asylum laws and anything to protect the

borders. And so that's something that the White House has really grabbed onto post-election,

and they're really looking to kind of manipulate those laws in their favor.

ROBERT COSTA: What about Chief of Staff John Kelly and Defense Secretary Mattis? Are

they trying to rein the president in at all, or are they encouraging him behind the scenes?

SEUNG MIN KIM: Well, I think the fact that - well, Mattis has gone ahead with - before

the election - with the president's request to go along with these troops.

And we saw that with his visit to the - with his visit to the troops this week.

But again, we'll have to wait and see how long this goes on,

I mean, whether this is just a temporary revival of the issue or not.

But in terms of going back to Vivian's point about the asylum law issue, I mean this is

something that Democrats on Capitol Hill are very resistant towards.

And it's also going to be a subject of many legal challenges.

So this issue, on those fronts, is not going away anytime soon.

ROBERT COSTA: What's your read, talking to people close to the administration?

Stephen Miller's in there. You have the Cabinet members. Is this caravan going to

be a signature issue in 2019, late 2018? Or is it just a flash here and there?

JONATHAN SWAN: This seems much more, to me, to be Trump reacting to television -

ROBERT COSTA: Political?

JONATHAN SWAN: And images, and political. It really doesn't seem to be much more

thoughtful than that. But birthright citizenship is something he's been thinking

about for months and has been causing quite a lot of internal consternation both in

the White House counsel office and some people on the - on the policy side of things.

Trump has formed the view, based on conversations he'd had with certain people on the

outside, including Michael Anton who wrote an op-ed in your newspaper, that he can get

rid of birthright citizenship without changing the Constitution, which obviously the vast

majority of legal scholars say you can't. He is really quite dug in on that issue, and

I expect he will do something, because it's something that he has formed a core belief on.

ROBERT COSTA: For a final topic tonight, President Trump was in Paris last weekend to

commemorate the end of World War I. He met with Emmanuel Macron and other world leaders

but cancelled a planned trip to a cemetery. That experience, and an awkward relationship

among Trump, Macron, and other world leaders like Angela Merkel, came to dominate coverage

of the trip. Two of our panelists tonight were on that journey with President Trump as

pool reporters - Vivian, Seung Min. When you think back to your time in Paris,

what is - well, beyond the croissants, and the coffee -

VIVIAN SALAMA: The wine. (Laughter.)

JONATHAN LEMIRE: It sounded so nice. It's like, wow.

SEUNG MIN KIM: We did have a lovely time.

VIVIAN SALAMA: We did work in the middle. We did. We did work.

ROBERT COSTA: Well, when you were working, Vivian, hopefully more play than not.

VIVIAN SALAMA: So I actually - I actually went - I was pool for last year's Paris trip

and this year's Paris trip. And let me tell you, it was like a one -

ROBERT COSTA: Can I have your - can we switch jobs?

VIVIAN SALAMA: Yeah. I mean, it's really hard, you guys. It's a really hard life.

ROBERT COSTA: I'm missing out. I'm going to Erie, Pennsylvania.

I love Erie, but you're going to Paris, I'm going to Erie on the pool.

VIVIAN SALAMA: Play it right. You just got to play it right.

But, yeah, so it was - it was like a 180 change in terms of the relationship with the

pats and the hugs and, like, the bromance that everybody was reporting.

And this time, we walked into the Elysees and there wasn't a smile in sight.

Of course, the president had gotten off the plane - no, we hadn't actually gotten off the

plane yet where he accused Macron of insulting him, because Macron suggested that the

Europeans need their own army to protect themselves. And so President Trump -

JONATHAN SWAN: Against the U.S.? That was kind of hot. That was a bit of a hot take.

VIVIAN SALAMA: I mean, but it was also misinterpreted.

SEUNG MIN KIM: Exactly. There as a mistranslation of his comments.

ROBERT COSTA: Explain this.

SEUNG MIN KIM: So what happened was -

JONATHAN SWAN: It wasn't that much of a mistranslation. (Laughter.)

SEUNG MIN KIM: So Macron had given an interview to Europe 1 radio where he said he did

want to build this, you know, true European army. And the reference to Russia, China,

and the United States was more in terms of cyber threats.

And if you look at his comments, it was kind of allying with Trump's view in some sort of

way, because the president keeps talking about how the United States can't protect everyone.

They can't spend all this money protecting other countries, it has to be America first.

And Macron was kind of almost trying to make that point, that we want to be self-sufficient

as well. But there was - there was a little bit of mis - you know, lost in translation -

JONATHAN SWAN: But it's one thing to be self-sufficient. It's another thing to say the

U.S. is an adversary that we need to defend against in the cyber realm and lumping them

together with Russia and China. Like, that was - I felt like that was, like,

red meat to his base with, like, 20 percent popularity.

SEUNG MIN KIM: And there was - definitely. And there was also another awkward

moment - I don't know if awkward is the right word. But on the second day of the Paris

trip, when Macron did give that speech under the Arc de Triomphe, celebrating the

centennial commemoration of the end of World War I, where he made these really pointed

remarks about nationalism, when we know that the president has proudly called himself

a nationalist at campaign rallies, saying: I'm a nationalist. I'm America first.

VIVIAN SALAMA: Just days earlier at the press conference he said it.

SEUNG MIN KIM: Exactly. And then - but then Macron really rebuked that, saying:

Nationalism is not patriotism. Look what happened to our continent 100 years ago.

The president, I don't believe, has commented publicly on Macron's apparent rebuke of

him, but it was really a fascinating kind of latest chapter in that maybe perhaps

bromance gone bad.

VIVIAN SALAMA: He actually did lash out at France in general and the way that it's been

governed. And he said that the French were speaking German before the end of the war.

And that's something that really got under the skin of many French people. And so -

JONATHAN SWAN: I think it ended with all caps, "MAKE FRANCE GREAT AGAIN!"

VIVIAN SALAMA: Make France great again. It was the second tweet by itself,

"MAKE FRANCE GREAT AGAIN!" And so obviously some tension going into this meeting and

coming out of it. And we have to remember that there are also differing policy views

in the middle of everything, where Macron has been very outspoken against Trump's

decision to withdraw from the Iran nuclear agreement.

They differ on climate issues. They differ on the way Trump has gone -

JONATHAN SWAN: Tariffs.

VIVIAN SALAMA: Trump has imposed tariffs on EU allies on steel and aluminum.

You name it, just the president going after a number of NATO allies for their lack of

contribution - or what he says is a lack of contribution.

JONATHAN LEMIRE: And the president also generated a wave of bad headlines for not going

to that cemetery that's so important, where a lot of American dead lie, very important

to the Marines, because of bad weather. The helicopter couldn't go. They nixed a long

motorcade ride. And instead of finding a site closer to Paris, he remained in the

ambassador's residence for hours on end, drawing consternation from both sides of the

aisle. He did the next day attend a cemetery, as you guys know. He did pay tribute there.

But then returned to the United States and on Veterans Day did not go across the bridge,

the short ride to Arlington.

ROBERT COSTA: He told Chris Wallace of Fox News in a Friday interview, that's going to

air on Sunday, that he regrets not doing more on Veterans Day.

JONATHAN LEMIRE: A rare - a rare moment. A rare admission of a mistake, where he said that

he should have made the ride over to Arlington to pay tribute to the fallen on Veterans Day.

ROBERT COSTA: That's it for this edition of the Washington Week Podcast. You can listen

wherever you get your podcasts or watch on the Washington Week website. And while you're

online, check out the Washington Week-ly News Quiz. I'm Robert Costa. See you next time.

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