TRUMP DEMANDS 3.5 BILLION FROM GAVIN NEWSOM

February 15, 2019 in News by RBN Staff

 

Source: Steadfast and Loyal | STEVEN AHLE

 

Gavin Newsom is riled up, because President Trump wants the 3.5 Billion back that US taxpayers sank into their high speed rail plan that California has dropped. Trump’s reasoning is that if California did not finish the project, the taxpayers deserve their money back.

If you called a plumber and he failed to make the repair you wanted, would you still pay him or her? I doubt it. It’s just common sense. Newsom believes that he should keep the money because they are still going to connect two rural areas together with a high speed rail.

The traffic for that train will be a money loser from day one. The LA to Frisco rail would have been the high volume run, but that’s been abandoned.

Donald J. Trump

@realDonaldTrump

California has been forced to cancel the massive bullet train project after having spent and wasted many billions of dollars. They owe the Federal Government three and a half billion dollars. We want that money back now. Whole project is a “green” disaster!

92.6K people are talking about this

Gavin Newsom

@GavinNewsom

Fake news. We’re building high-speed rail, connecting the Central Valley and beyond.

This is CA’s money, allocated by Congress for this project. We’re not giving it back.

The train is leaving the station — better get on board!

(Also, desperately searching for some wall $$??)

Donald J. Trump

@realDonaldTrump

California has been forced to cancel the massive bullet train project after having spent and wasted many billions of dollars. They owe the Federal Government three and a half billion dollars. We want that money back now. Whole project is a “green” disaster!

9,207 people are talking about this

From Breitbart News

Newsom devoted the opening portion of his first “State of the State” address Tuesday to attacking Trump and his policies on the border. Yet he then bowed to conservative criticism — and, arguably, to fiscal reality — by canceling the high-speed rail project championed by his predecessors.

The governor added that while the bullet train would no longer connect San Francisco and Los Angeles, as first envisioned, the state would still continue “phase one” of the project between the rural towns of Bakersfield and Merced. “I know that some critics will say this is a ‘train to nowhere,’” he said. “But that’s wrong and offensive.”

Newsom added that the state had to continue the project if it wanted to keep the federal funds it had taken: “I am not interested in sending $3.5 billion in federal funding that was allocated to this project back to Donald Trump.”

The money was granted to California as part of President Barack Obama’s stimulus, which set aside “$8 billion in federal stimulus money to create 13 high-speed rail corridors,” the New York Times reported at the time.