US presidential race clouded by looming storm

 

US presidential race clouded by looming storm

PENSACOLA, Florida — A looming “Frankenstorm” threw an October surprise into the US presidential contest on Saturday as Barack Obama and Mitt Romney hunted for votes amid fears of major disruptions ahead of the November 6 vote.

By (AFP)

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Published: Sat 27 Oct 2012, 11:24 PM

Last updated: Fri 3 Apr 2015, 1:29 PM

With a newly strengthened Hurricane Sandy now stalking the US East Coast, Romney and Vice President Joe Biden cancelled rallies in Virginia to get out of the way of the frantic storm preparations.

The president and his Republican rival were campaigning at opposite ends of the eastern seaboard Saturday — Obama in New Hampshire and Romney in Florida — while their campaigns kept an eagle eye on the coming storm.

Obama, who made no changes in his campaign schedule, reviewed emergency preparations in a conference call with top domestic security and emergency assistance officials Saturday as he flew to New Hampshire, the White House said.

“This an example yet again of the president having to put his responsibilities as commander-in-chief and leader of the country first while at the same time he pursues his responsibilities as a candidate for re-election,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters on the flight.

Currently a category one hurricane, Sandy was forecast to ride slowly up the Atlantic coastline, bringing heavy rains and gusting winds to the Carolinas, before making landfall early this week somewhere between Virginia and New Jersey.

Forecasters predict the storm will collide with a seasonal “nor’easter,” creating a supercharged cold weather system that could burst through the Mid-Atlantic states as far inland as Ohio.

Huge tidal surges, power outages, inland flooding and even heavy snowfall could then be in store for the final, frantic week of the US election campaign, adding a nasty twist to what already is a neck and neck race.

Governors, anticipating the worst, declared states of emergency in New Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, the US capital Washington and a coastal county in North Carolina.

Aside from the threat to tens of millions of residents, the storm could upend election-related preparations across several states, interfere with early voting and cause problems at polling stations.

Both Obama and Romney were pushing supporters to vote early. So far, 10.5 million people have already cast their ballots, according to a count by experts at George Mason University near Washington.

That is about eight percent of all votes cast in 2008, and analysts said the early voting was on track to beat the record set in the last presidential elections when more than 30 percent of ballots were cast before election day.

Prospective voters have been deluged with calls from the rival campaigns, with 40 percent of voters in eight key battleground states contacted by the Obama camp and 35 percent by Romney’s get-out-the-vote operation, according to a Washington Post/ABC News survey published Friday.

With just 10 days to go until Americans go to the polls, the candidates are readying cross-country travel blitzes to hammer home their well-worn messages.

The Republican nominee has tried to turn the tables on the 2008 Obama, billing himself as the hope-and-change candidate and the Democratic incumbent as representing the political “status quo.”

“The president’s campaign falls far short of the magnitude of the times. And the presidency of the last four years has fallen far short of the promises of his last campaign,” Romney told a crowd in Ames, Iowa.

Team Obama quickly attacked Romney for peppering his speech with “dishonest attacks and empty promises of change, but no new policy.

“That’s because all Mitt Romney has is a one-point economic plan that he’s been running on for two years: the very wealthy get to play by a very different set of rules than everyone else,” said Obama campaign spokeswoman Lis Smith.

Meanwhile, the government released data showing economic growth picked up steam in the third quarter, reaching an annual pace of 2.0 percent.

The rate was a little better than had been expected but Romney called the news “discouraging,” saying growth was less than half what had been predicted by the White House when it passed the 2009 stimulus bill.

Obama spent Friday back in Washington after his own 40-hour, eight-state tour, in which he asked Americans to defy the omens of a weak economy and high unemployment by voting for his re-election.

He spent the day campaigning from the White House, where he launched a media blitz of sorts with 10 interviews Friday, including a half-hour live session with youth-oriented MTV.


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