Former first daughter Chelsea Clinton’s involvement in the recent deadly floods that ravaged areas of Texas took a shocking turn after it was uncovered that the Clinton-backed charity working to help victims could be a complete fraud.
On Wednesday, the former first daughter took to X to announce that the Clinton Global Initiative was ready to step in and help the victims of the Texas floods.
Clinton posted: “Members of the @ClintonGlobal community are on the ground in Texas, supporting families, communities and ongoing search and rescue efforts.”
Members of the @ClintonGlobal community are on the ground in Texas, supporting families, communities and ongoing search and rescue efforts.
Thread:
— Chelsea Clinton (@ChelseaClinton) July 9, 2025
Other charities, like Catholic Charities and Samaritan’s Purse, are already on the ground assisting flood victims in any way that is needed.
However, Clinton’s announcement of the Clinton Global Initiative doing “boots on the ground” work quickly backfired and set off a firestorm of social media posts that resurrected the last time the Clinton-backed charity was “on the ground” during a natural disaster.
In 2010, the Clinton Global Initiative announced at the time they were going to support the recovery efforts of the catastrophic Haiti earthquake.
A 7.0 magnitude earthquake hit the island of Hispaniola, about 15 miles from the capital city of Port-Au-Prince, nearly destroying the poverty-stricken country.
In the aftermath of the earthquake, several international aid organizations arrived to assist victims, including the Clinton Global Initiative, which Chelsea Clinton has a major role in.
Through a series of donations, nearly $90 million was raised for Haiti’s recovery. But years after the earthquake, almost all of the the funds raised never ended up where they were intended.
Instead, much of the money allegedly went into the hands of Clinton friends and allies who were connected with the Clinton Foundation.
Social media users quickly pounced, reminding Chelsea Clinton of what happened in Haiti.
The Clinton Foundation was also “on the ground” in Haiti and tens of thousands of children ended up missing and the government collapsed.
I hope Texas keeps a very close eye on you people.
— Nick Sortor (@nicksortor) July 10, 2025
To help like you helped Haiti? NO THANKS!
— The Dibster (@TheDibsterX) July 9, 2025
Your whole family should be in prison. Nobody is buying thst you're out there trying to help. This organization needs to be shut down. Period crimes against humanity. Look to Haiti…
— Jennifer Parker (@JJParker62) July 10, 2025
Kim Ives, editor of Haiti Liberte newspaper, told the BBC in 2016 that “a lot of Haitians are not big fans of the Clintons,” and that they “did a pretty poor job” during the recovery efforts following the earthquake.
Jack Brewer, a former NFL player and philanthropist who has pursued initiatives to help rebuild Haiti back in 2010, told Fox News in 2024 that Clinton-headed efforts to help rebuild never actually happened.
“I got a chance to watch a lot of the things that happened on the ground,” Jack Brewer said in his 2024 interview.
“After the earthquake in 2010, I worked with the NFL Players Association, and we partnered with the Clinton-Bush Haiti Fund. … It was called the Clinton Haiti Fund … and we raised a lot of money through that, and it started to be allocated,” he explained.
“Then other countries came in and started to allocate a lot of money. You would think that the long-term goal was to rebuild the city of Port-au-Prince and the surrounding areas that were impacted by the earthquake, but I was there, and a few years went on, and we’re still working.”
Brewer said he feels many Haitians “believe that America is one of the roots of the problem,” going back to the Clintons and their rebuilding efforts following the earthquake.