Federal disaster aid under President Donald Trump is arriving slower and being denied more often than under any president since 1989, and states that didn’t vote for him face a much higher chance of rejection, according to an Associated Press analysis.
Since taking office last year, Trump has approved roughly 65 requests for major disaster declarations while denying more than two dozen others from states, tribes and territories seeking federal money after hurricanes, tornadoes, storms, floods and fires. The AP’s review of data going back to 1989, when federal law first set standards for disaster determinations, found no other president has shown such a gap in approval rates between states that supported him politically and those that didn’t.
The slower pace and higher denial rate come as Trump’s administration weighs a broad restructuring of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which oversees disaster aid. Major disaster declarations are meant to cover events that exceed what state and local governments can handle on their own.
Republican states fare better than Democratic ones
During his second term, Trump has denied a larger share of disaster requests than any president in the AP’s 36-year dataset, and those denials fall unevenly by party. Trump has approved 80% of requests from Republican governors, compared with about 60% from Democratic governors, based on FEMA data reviewed by the AP.
A batch of denials earlier this month affected four Democratic-led states: Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York and Rhode Island, all seeking aid tied to a February snowstorm. Rhode Island’s Democratic members of Congress said in a joint statement that the denial reflected “extreme partisanship” and argued Trump was shifting a larger financial burden onto states that didn’t back him. White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson disputed that characterization, saying there is “no politicization” in the president’s disaster relief decisions.
The pattern marks a reversal from Trump’s first term, when he actually approved a higher share of requests from states that had opposed him than from those that supported him. No other president, including Trump during his first term, has shown as wide a partisan split as exists now. During Barack Obama’s second term, he approved 87% of requests from Democratic governors and 79% from Republican governors, but Obama’s approval rate was identical regardless of how a state voted in the presidential election.

When a request is denied, the cost of recovery falls on individuals, insurers and local governments instead of the federal government.
Approval times have roughly tripled
Since Trump returned to office, it has taken an average of six weeks for him to approve a major disaster declaration after a governor, tribal leader or territorial official submits a request, according to the AP. Because damage assessments often take several weeks to complete before a request is even filed, the total time between disaster and approval frequently stretches past two months.
By comparison, Trump approved disaster requests in about three weeks on average during his first term, a pace close to Joe Biden’s. Presidents before them, including Barack Obama, George W. Bush, Bill Clinton and George H.W. Bush, all averaged under two weeks for approval.
Every president has had some requests that took longer than average to process. But under Trump’s second term, that has become the rule rather than the exception. Seventy percent of Trump’s approvals during this term have taken at least a month, compared with about a quarter during his first term and under Biden, and fewer than 10% under Bush, Clinton and the two Obama terms.
Jackson said Trump’s administration conducts a more thorough review than prior administrations “to ensure American tax dollars are used appropriately and efficiently by the states to supplement, not substitute, their obligation to respond to and recover from disasters.”
Longer approval times mean longer waits for individuals who depend on federal aid for temporary housing, daily expenses and home repairs. The delays also complicate planning for local officials, who often need to know whether the federal government will reimburse them for debris removal and infrastructure repairs before starting that work.
A FEMA nominee promises faster decisions
FEMA has cycled through four temporary leaders since Trump’s second term began in January 2025. One of them, Cameron Hamilton, is now awaiting Senate confirmation to lead the agency permanently.
At a Senate committee hearing last month, Hamilton said he would work to speed up both disaster declaration decisions and reimbursements to states. He also said he would push FEMA to remain objective and fair when reviewing requests and making recommendations to the president.
Hamilton, a former Navy SEAL, was fired from his role as FEMA’s acting director in May 2025 after publicly opposing Trump’s plan to dismantle the agency entirely. His return to consideration for the permanent post suggests Trump may now favor reshaping FEMA rather than eliminating it.
Proposed changes could mean more denials ahead

A council appointed by Trump has recommended a series of changes to FEMA that would shift more financial responsibility onto states, a move that could reduce both the number of approved disaster declarations and the total amount of federal money distributed.
Among the council’s proposals is a requirement that states, territories and tribes meet a minimum level of annual spending before qualifying for a presidential disaster declaration. A separate recommendation, which would need congressional approval, would cut the federal government’s share of disaster costs from a current minimum of 75% down to 50%, leaving state and local governments to cover the rest.

In exchange, the council proposed speeding up payments for governments that do get approved, with federal funds arriving within 30 days of a declaration instead of the months or years it can currently take for reimbursements tied to documented expenses. For individual disaster victims, the council recommended combining several separate categories of federal aid into a single payment for those whose homes become uninhabitable.
The proposed overhaul would represent one of the most significant changes to federal disaster response since the underlying law took effect in 1989, and its outcome will likely shape how quickly, and how fully, future disaster victims receive help from Washington regardless of which party controls their state government.






























