Politics

DeSantis apparently sending new plane of migrants to Biden’s summer home

President Biden made light of the potential arrival of migrants at an airport near his “summer White House” in Delaware on Tuesday by sarcastically inviting Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to the area.

During an unrelated event at the White House, Biden brushed off a reporter’s question about DeSantis’ apparent plan to send a planeload of migrants to the president’s home state, just days after targeting a posh liberal enclave in Massachusetts.

“He should come visit,” Biden cracked.

“We have a beautiful shoreline.”

Earlier, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said the White House was bracing for the migrants’ pending arrival.

“We have received word of the flights,” Jean-Pierre said during an afternoon briefing.

“We are coordinating closely with state officials and local service providers who are prepared to welcome these families in an orderly manner as they pursue their asylum claims.”

A charter jet that DeSantis used to send migrants to Martha’s Vineyard, Mass., was scheduled to take off Tuesday morning from San Antonio, Texas, and make a stop in Crestview, Florida, before landing at the Delaware Coastal Airport, according to the founder of the Popular Information newsletter.

The tiny airport, outside Georgetown, Del., is less than 20 miles from Rehoboth Beach, where Biden and first lady Jill Biden bought a $2.7 million vacation home just blocks from the Atlantic Ocean in 2017.

But flight tracking sites listed the plane as delayed or with an “unknown” status and San Antonio Kelly Field airport confirmed to the Post no flight had taken off for Florida by midday, four hours after the plane was scheduled to depart.

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Ron DeSantis.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis wants to send migrants to President Biden’s summer home.AP
The migrants got off the planes from Florida and could be seen on the tarmac at Martha’s Vineyard Airport.
Migrants from Florida arrive at Martha’s Vineyard Airport.Office of Gov. DeSantis
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Venezuelan migrants are seen at the Martha's Vineyard Regional High School.
Venezuelan migrants are seen at Martha’s Vineyard Regional High School.via REUTERS
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Instead, the plane appeared to have left Longview, Texas, without stopping in San Antonio, and was headed to Nashville, with its next stop in Teterboro, N.J.

The plane landed in Teterboro Tuesday night with no migrants aboard, according to a reporter on scene.

The change in plans raised the possibility that authorities had intervened or that the charter was a decoy.

But a representative of Delaware Gov. John Carney and a contingent of state troopers were waiting at the Delaware Coastal Airport in case the migrants showed up.

“We will be ready to help them and ensure they have food, medical and mental health support,” Carney spokesperson Emily Hershman told The Post.

“To be quite candid, that’s sort of all I know right now.”

DeSantis’ office didn’t immediately return a request for comment Tuesday.

But on Monday night, DeSantis rejected the liberal outrage that greeted his Martha’s Vineyard flights.


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“Millions of people since Biden’s been president, illegally coming across the southern border. Did they freak out about that? No,” he told Fox News host Sean Hannity.

“You had migrants die in the Rio Grande. You had 50 die in Texas in a trailer because they were being neglected. Was there a freakout about that? No there wasn’t.”

DeSantis added: “It’s only when 50 get put into Martha’s Vineyard…And not only did they not welcome them, but they deported them the next day with the National Guard. Give me a break.”

Biden's home.
President Biden’s home in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware. Thomas Hengge

A representative for the City of San Antonio said it had been discouraging migrants from accepting rides or assistance from strangers outside of its Migrant Resource Center.

US Rep. Joaquin Castro (D-San Antonio) said he had spoken to the city’s mayor and sheriff about DeSantis’ planned flight and blasted the Florida governor’s “continued use of false promises to lure people … onto planes” but did not say if he had intervened to stop the flight.

On Wednesday, DeSantis flew about 50 migrants from Texas to Martha’s Vineyard, an island off the coast of Massachusetts that’s become a favorite summer destination for left-leaning celebrities and Democratic politicians.

A group of immigrants gather outside St. Andrews Episcopal Church.
A group of immigrants gather outside St. Andrews Episcopal Church on Martha’s Vineyard. AP

Former President Barack Obama vacationed there while he was in office and he and former first lady Michelle Obama bought an $11.75 million estate along the Edgartown Great Pond in 2019.

The migrants’ unexpected arrival caused chaos, with a local homeless shelter coordinator saying the liberal enclave didn’t “have the services to take care of 50 immigrants, and we certainly don’t have housing” — even though 63% of homes are owned by seasonal residents and there were reportedly nearly 300 available for rent on Airbnb.

Less than 48 hours later, Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker called in the National Guard to move the migrants from Martha’s Vineyard to a military installation on Cape Cod.

Florida reportedly paid Vertrol Systems Co. $615,000 on Sept. 8 to handle the initial relocation and paid the company another $950,000 on Monday, bringing the total cost to more than $1.5 million.

The plane that was reportedly bound for Delaware is a 30-passenger. twin-engine Dornier operated by the Ultimate Jet charter company of North Canton, Ohio, according to online records. Ultimate Charters declined to comment when contacted by The Post.

The sheriff of Bexar County, Texas, Javier Salazar, has said he’s investigating the Martha’s Vineyard flights, alleging that the migrants were “exploited and hoodwinked into making this trip.”

Meanwhile, Alianza Americas, a Chicago-based nonprofit network of migrant groups, and three Venezuelan migrants filed a class-action civil rights suit Tuesday against DeSantis, Florida Transportation Secretary Jared Perdue and others over the flights to Martha’s Vineyard.

The individual plaintiffs — using the pseudonyms Yanet Doe, Pablo Doe and Jesus Doe — alleged that they were “induced” to board the planes with McDonald’s gift cards and “false promises” that they’d be given jobs, housing and schooling after they landed.

The filing in Massachusetts federal court seeks at least $75,000 in damages and a court order barring DeSantis from using “fraud and misrepresentation” to continue what it calls his “inhumane scheme” and “political stunt.”