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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWill Hurricane ‘Frankenstorm’ Sandy Affect The Presidential Election?
Hurricane Sandy has cut across Jamaica and Cuba and is about to make her way towards the U.S. Florida has already been issued a tropical storm warning from the National Hurricane Center.
--CLIP
The storm will be hitting in the last week before the Nov. 6 election, and early voting already is under way in some states.
Mark McKinnon, a former media strategist for President George W. Bush who later founded No Labels, a bipartisanship promoting group, said the hurricane is bringing the campaigns something they both despise: uncertainty.
Campaigns are all about control, he told the New York Times. So in the closing days, they fear any external events that could disrupt the game plan. Aint no leashes for Mother Nature.
MORE...
http://www.ibtimes.com/will-hurricane-frankenstorm-sandy-affect-presidential-election-obama-romney-854267
Purveyor
(29,876 posts)week or two is not unheard of in these type of '100 year' events.
Could the election actually be delayed and by whose authority could it be.
cthulu2016
(10,960 posts)2on2u
(1,843 posts)will methinks.
democrat_patriot
(2,774 posts)So if it affects election day, we win.
Chorophyll
(5,179 posts)Otherwise, getting worked up over all the things that could possibly befall us between now and Election Day is counterproductive.
ewagner
(18,964 posts)One of the things they can do before the hurricane even strikes is "STAGE" additional power crews on the periphery of the storm so they can move in quickly...they will also need to mobilize front-end loaders, chippers, and dump trucks to haul away debris as soon as possible.
Additional SAR (search and rescue) crews should be alerted and staged also because they take the longest to deploy (12-14 hours usually)
Additional medical crews go without saying...that's a no-brainer.
randome
(34,845 posts)VenusRising
(11,252 posts)If the electricity goes out, they will have to use paper ballots, and those are harder to switch than e-votes.
hrmjustin
(71,265 posts)The rural areas in the northeast go somewhat gop depending on the state, and they always loose power. The suburbs are swing areas here and they always loose power. The cities power supplies are below ground and usually fair well in these things. This storm will make turnout lower only because people will have their hands full with clean-up. It really depends where it hits and what damage is done. We are all election day voters up here.