Back-to-back hurricanes reshape 2024 campaign’s final stretch
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[October 11, 2024]
By JOSH BOAK
WASHINGTON (AP) — A pair of unwelcome and destructive guests named
Helene and Milton have stormed their way into this year's presidential
election.
The back-to-back hurricanes have jumbled the schedules of Democrat
Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump, both of whom devoted part of
their Thursdays to tackling questions about the storm recovery effort.
The two hurricanes are forcing basic questions about who as president
would best respond to deadly natural disasters, a once-overlooked issue
that has become an increasingly routine part of the job. And just weeks
before the Nov. 5 election, the storms have disrupted the mechanics of
voting in several key counties.
Vice President Harris is trying to use this as an opportunity to project
leadership, appearing alongside President Joe Biden at briefings and
calling for bipartisan cooperation. Former President Trump is trying to
use the moment to attack the administration's competence and question
whether it is withholding help from Republican areas, despite no
evidence of such behavior.
Adding to the pressure is the need to provide more money for the Small
Business Administration and the Federal Emergency Management Agency,
which would require House Republicans to work with the Democratic
administration. Biden said Thursday that lawmakers should address the
situation immediately.
“Dealing with back-to-back crises will put FEMA under more scrutiny and,
therefore, the Biden administration will be under a microscope in the
days leading up to the election,” said Timothy Kneeland, a professor at
Nazareth University in Rochester, New York, who has studied the issue.
“Vice President Harris must empathize with the victims without altering
the campaign schedule and provide consistent messaging on the widespread
devastation that makes FEMA’s work even more challenging than normal,”
Kneeland added.
Already, Trump and Harris have separately gone to Georgia to assess
hurricane damage and pledge support, and Harris has visited North
Carolina, requiring the candidates to cancel campaign events elsewhere
and use up time that is a precious resource in the final weeks before
any election. Both Georgia and North Carolina are political
battlegrounds, raising the stakes.
The hurricane fallout is evident in the candidates' campaign events as
well.
On Thursday, the first question Harris got at a Univision town hall in
Las Vegas came from a construction worker and undecided voter from
Tampa, Florida. Ramiro Gonzalez asked about talk that the administration
has not done enough to support people after Helene and whether the
people in Milton's path would have access to aid — a sign that Trump’s
messaging is breaking through with some potential voters.
Harris has called out the level of misinformation being circulated by
Republicans, but her fuller answer revealed the dynamics at play just a
few weeks before an election.
“I have to stress that this is not a time for people to play politics,”
she said.
On the same day, Trump opened his speech at the Detroit Economic Club by
praising Republican governors in the affected states and blasting the
Biden-Harris administration.
“They’ve let those people suffer unjustly,” he said about those affected
by Helene in North Carolina.
The storms have also scrambled the voting process in places. North
Carolina 's State Board of Elections has passed a resolution to help
people in the state's affected counties vote. Florida will allow some
counties greater flexibility in distributing mail-in ballots and
changing polling sites for in-person voting. But a federal judge in
Georgia said Thursday the state doesn't need to reopen voter
registration despite the disruptions by Helene.
Tension has begun to override the disaster response, with Biden on
Wednesday and Thursday saying that Trump has spread falsehoods that are
“un-American.”
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Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris, right,
receives a briefing from North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper on the
damage from Hurricane Helene, Saturday, October 5, 2024 in
Charlotte, N.C. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson)
As the Democratic nominee, Harris has suddenly been a major part of
the response to hurricanes, a role that traditionally has not
involved vice presidents in prior administrations.
On Thursday, she participated virtually at a Situation Room briefing
on Milton while she was in Nevada for campaign activities. She has
huddled in meetings about response plans and on Wednesday phoned
into CNN live to discuss the administration's efforts.
At a Wednesday appearance with Biden to discuss Milton ahead of it
making landfall, Harris subtly tied back the issues into her
campaign policies to stop price gouging on food and other products.
“To any company that — or individual that might use this crisis to
exploit people who are desperate for help through illegal fraud or
price gouging — whether it be at the gas pump, the airport, or the
hotel counter — know that we are monitoring these behaviors and the
situation on the ground very closely and anyone taking advantage of
consumers will be held accountable,” she said.
Harris warned that Milton “poses extreme danger.” It made landfall
in Florida late Wednesday and left more than 3 million without
power. But the storm surge never reached the same levels as Helene,
which led to roughly 230 fatalities and for a prolonged period left
mountainous parts of North Carolina without access to electricity,
cell service and roadways.
Trump and his allies have seized on the aftermath of Helene to
spread misinformation about the administration's response. Their
debunked claims include statements that victims can only receive
$750 in aid as well as false charges that emergency response funds
were diverted to immigrants.
The former president said the administration's response to Helene
was worse than the George W. Bush administration's widely panned
handling of Hurricane Katrina in 2005, which led to nearly 1,400
deaths.
“This hurricane has been a bad one, Kamala Harris has left them
stranded," Trump said at a recent rally in Juneau, Wisconsin. “This
is the worst response to a storm or a catastrophe or a hurricane
that we’ve ever seen ever. Probably worse than Katrina, and that’s
hard to beat, right?"
Asked about the Trump campaign's strategic thinking on emphasizing
the hurricane response, campaign press secretary Karoline Leavitt
said it reflects a pattern of “failed leadership” by the
Biden-Harris administration that also includes the withdrawal of
U.S. troops from Afghanistan and security at the U.S. southern
border.
“Kamala has left Americans behind and proven she is not equipped to
solve crises at the highest level," Leavitt said.
John Gasper, a Carnegie Mellon University professor who has
researched government responses to natural disasters, said storm
victims generally want to ensure foremost that they get the aid they
need.
“These disasters essentially end up being good tests of leadership
for local, state and federal officials in how they respond," he
said.
But Gasper noted that U.S. politics have gotten so polarized and
other issues such as the economy are shaping the election, such that
the debate currently generating so much heat between Trump and the
Biden-Harris administration might not matter that much on Election
Day.
“On the margin, it will matter," he said. "Will it define the
election? Probably not. There’s so many other things out there.”
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AP writer Adriana Gomez Licon contributed to this report.
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