WASHINGTON: A hurricane that threatened the US East Coast forced President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney to change their campaign plans Monday in the last full week of one of the closest presidential contests in recent US history.
While putting a severe limit on campaigning, the storm gave Obama the opportunity to demonstrate leadership in the face of crisis. On the other side, there was the risk that the federal government, as in past emergencies, could be faulted for an ineffective response.
Obama canceled campaign events in the key battleground state of Florida to hurry back to Washington and oversee the federal response to Hurricane Sandy, which was forecast to send a wall of water into the heavily urban Atlantic coast, from the capital to New York City.
Parts of four competitive states were in the hurricane’s path: Virginia, North Carolina, Ohio and New Hampshire. Those states and five others — Florida, Iowa, Wisconsin, Nevada and Colorado — that don’t reliably vote Democrat or Republican will decide the close election.
The storm threatened to draw attention from both candidates’ campaigns and hinder early voting before the Nov. 6 election. Voters in many states are already casting ballots early, and about one-third of the electorate will have voted before Election Day.
Both campaigns used social media to urge supporters to donate to the Red Cross and said they would stop sending fundraising e-mails on Monday to people living in areas in the storm’s path.
The storm took attention from Romney, and power outages could end up cutting off the deluge of television ads and automatic phone calls in the eastern battleground states.
Obama continues to have a slight lead in the most contested states. The US president is not chosen by the nationwide popular vote, but in state-by-state contests that allocate electoral votes. Each state gets one electoral vote for each of its seats in the House of Representatives, as determined by population, and two electoral votes for each of its two senators. That means there are 538 electoral votes, including three for Washington, D.C. The winning candidate must have 50 percent, plus one, or 270 votes.
Obama is ahead in states and Washington, D.C., representing 237 electoral votes; Romney has a comfortable lead in states with 191 electoral votes.
While Romney and Obama are deadlocked in national polls, there were signs that the burst of momentum Romney achieved after the first presidential debate had waned.
The campaigns continued to pump millions of dollars into TV ads in the decisive battleground states. Total campaign spending has exceeded $2 billion, making this presidential race the most expensive in the history of electoral politics.
Obama canceled campaign stops Monday in Virginia and Tuesday in Colorado to monitor the storm. He also canceled plans to campaign with former President Bill Clinton in Ohio, the swing state seen as key to winning the election.
Romney canceled three stops in Virginia on Sunday, shifting operations to be with running mate Paul Ryan in Ohio before heading Monday to Wisconsin, where Romney has chipped away at Obama’s lead.
Romney’s campaign confirmed Sunday that he would not travel to New Hampshire on Tuesday as planned. The campaign had already canceled a Monday event in New Hampshire.
Vice President Joe Biden canceled a Monday event in New Hampshire. “The last thing the president and I want to do is get in the way of anything. The most important thing is health and safety,” Biden said.
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