While en route to Maui, three weeks after the wildfire that devastated the Hawaiian island began, White House spokesperson Olivia Dalton said President Joe Biden will “make sure that he communicates to that not only have we been there since day one, has he been there since day one.”
The false claim did not appear to be challenged by any of the corporate media in tow, traveling with the President.
Indeed since the start of the fatal fires, Joe Biden has actually taken two vacations; including a weekend at his Rehoboth Beach, Delaware home, while most recently he has been relaxing at the luxurious home of the radical billionaire environmentalist Tom Steyer.
Biden spokesperson Olivia Dalton says Biden will "make sure that he communicates to [Maui residents] that not only have we been there since day one, has he been there since day one…" 🤔 pic.twitter.com/NgK2quOhxf
— RNC Research (@RNCResearch) August 21, 2023
“No comment” was the initial response from 80-year-old Biden on August 13th, when asked by the press about his plans to visit Hawaii in the midst of the bizarre and unexplained carnage. When Biden returned to Washington, D.C. on August 14th, he walked past the assembled media and again offered no response to the Maui wildfires. The next day – while speaking in Milwaukee, Wisconsin – Biden appeared to forget the Hawaiian islands’s name referring to it as “the one where you see on television all the time.”
During his speech in Milwaukee, the president appeared to forget the name Maui, referring to the island as 'the one where you see on television all the time.' 🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️ pic.twitter.com/Ao5DWp8PJb
— Joni Job (@jj_talking) August 16, 2023
Finally, on August 21, Biden issued a formal statement on the deadly wildfires and said he would be cutting his Lake Tahoe vacation short to tour the island and the recently-established government response efforts.
The Maui wildfires currently have a known death toll of 114. They began in early August and in relatively short order became a significant threat to those who live on the island. The Federal Emergency Management Agency didn’t open its first relief center until eight days later on August 16th.