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Trump, Clinton campaigns watch for Matthew’s impact on Fla.

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Michael Blackman, left, and Sam Titus board up a bar a few blocks off the beach Thursday, Oct. 6, 2016, in Daytona Beach, Fla. Hurricane Matthew continues to churn its way toward Florida’s east coast. The bar is planning on staying open during Matthew.

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. >> Like other Americans, Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton are steering clear of battleground Florida, where Hurricane Matthew threatened to wreak havoc on the final stretch of presidential campaigning.

The campaigns rushed Thursday to move staff and volunteers, close offices and cancel events in the path of the storm. And as many Floridians heeded calls to evacuate, both candidates began the delicate and difficult task of pursuing votes during a crisis.

“Even if you want to do politics, no one is there to listen,” said Steve Schale, a Democratic consultant who directed or advised Barack Obama’s campaigns in the state in 2008 and 2012.

Clinton’s campaign asked the state for more time to register voters — a request Florida Gov. Rick Scott rejected — and the Trump team pulled its negative TV ads.

“Please know that we are praying for you and everyone in the path,” Trump said Thursday night at a town hall event in New Hampshire. “You’ve got to take care of yourself, you’ve got to get out of the area, you’ve got to listen.”

The hurricane is expected to hit Trump’s prized Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach. Campaign spokeswoman Hope Hicks said Trump had spoken with employees to ensure they are safe and are following instructions from local officials.

Clinton, who was speaking at fundraisers in New York, tweeted: “Hurricane Matthew is a major storm. … Stay safe Florida.”

Both stayed far away, preparing for their second debate, a town hall-style faceoff on Sunday in St. Louis.

Along the Southeast coast, Matthew was expected to bring dangerous conditions to Georgia, South Carolina and, possibly, North Carolina. But it was the impact on vote-rich Florida, a must-win state for Trump, that had the campaigns on high alert. The hurricane closed in just as both sides ramped up their early-vote push and just days before a voter registration deadline.

Vote-by-mail ballots are being sent to voters across the state this week, leaving the potential for ballots to arrive just as voters temporarily abandon their homes. So far, a record 2.5 million people — nearly one-third of those who voted in 2012 — have made requests for the early ballots.

Scott said Thursday evening that he would not consider extending the Oct. 11 voter registration deadline.

“Everyone has had a lot of time to register,” Scott said, adding, “I don’t intend to make any changes.”

Scott, a Republican, is a strong supporter of Trump and chairman of a super PAC running Clinton-bashing television ads.

Officials said they were hoping that any disruption to voting would be less severe than with Superstorm Sandy, which struck New Jersey and New York just before the 2012 presidential election and kept many voters away from polls.

At least half of Florida voters typically cast ballots early, either by mail or in person, compared with just a fraction in New York and New Jersey.

Still, disruptions in Florida campaigning were immediate.

In Palm Beach County, local Republican Chairman Michael Barnett said Matthew already had forced cancellations, including phone-bank operations and an event where Ivanka Trump was to have been the headliner. Local GOP officials also will miss an opportunity for outreach to Latino leaders, because an annual gala of a local Hispanic civic group was canceled.

“There is no good time, but this is just the worst time,” Barnett said. “Whatever happens, I think we can make up for the lost time, as long as we are not cleaning ourselves out from under a catastrophic mess.”

Democrats, too, prepared for high-power campaigning to grind to a halt in affected areas. Television advertising often fails to reach voters preoccupied by an impending storm and the aftermath.

How and where to advertise became an immediate flashpoint between the campaigns. After Clinton ads were spotted on the Weather Channel, the Trump campaign accused her of a “tone deaf” attempt to capitalize on the situation.

A Clinton spokesman said ads had been scheduled on local Weather Channel stations in Florida and other states. But the storm’s potential severity prompted the campaign to cancel the Florida portion.

The storm posed unusual challenges and opportunities for the candidates, particularly Trump, who is trying to prove his leadership.

The New York businessman has sometimes appeared clumsy in his response to crises — including sending out tweets in which he seemed to pat himself on the back for predicting terror attacks.

In the aftermath of the flooding in Louisiana earlier this year, Trump and his running mate, Mike Pence, rushed to the Baton Rouge area to tour the damage. During the trip, Trump criticized the president and later Clinton for failing to do the same, despite request from local officials for them to steer clear of the area.

10 responses to “Trump, Clinton campaigns watch for Matthew’s impact on Fla.”

  1. 64hoo says:

    after the hurricane lets see which candidate buy’s votes by donating supplies to people that need help, typical political move.

    • 64hoo says:

      also Hillary’s husband can donate his used Underware for tax breaks.

    • MillionMonkeys says:

      “In the aftermath of the flooding in Louisiana earlier this year, Trump and his running mate, Mike Pence, rushed to the Baton Rouge area to tour the damage. During the trip, Trump criticized the president and later Clinton for failing to do the same, despite request from local officials for them to steer clear of the area.”

    • Keonigohan says:

      Washington (CNN) The governor of Louisiana said Sunday that Donald Trump’s trip to his state was “helpful” in getting the country’s attention on the devastating flooding around Baton Rouge.
      Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat, had released a statement before the GOP nominee’s visit decrying a “photo-op,” but Edwards told CNN’s Dana Bash on “State of the Union” Sunday that Trump had always been welcome if he were coming to be “helpful.” (Mr. Trump also donated $100,000 aside from the trailer filled with supplies that they, Mr. Trump & Gov. Pence, help distribute.)

      “Because it helped to shine a spotlight on Louisiana and on the dire situation that we have here … it was helpful,” Edwards said.
      Terry Phinney was not always a fan of Donald Trump’s, but when the Republican presidential candidate arrived at his Baptist church to meet flood victims Friday, Phinney was impressed.
      “It was a good little boost for folks who are tired,” said Phinney, 42, a church maintenance supervisor whose father’s home flooded.

      • MillionMonkeys says:

        Trump gets points for showing up, he earned it.

        That’s not to say Obama and Clinton “abandoned” the people. Both have showed up at countless other situations, don’t need to make a PR appearance.

        Again, give Trump points for showing up. But keep in mind it’s no sacrifice on his part to hop on his private jet, put on a hard hat, shake a few hands. He needed the PR points in thus respect, and he earned them.

        Does that convince the masses that he’s a nice guy? Not really. But it doesn’t make him a bad guy either.

  2. Keonigohan says:

    hiLIARy was going to show her campaign attack ads on the Weather Channel but had to be told that wasn’t right…stupid is as stupid is told.
    NO CLASS Crooked hiLIARy!

  3. Ikefromeli says:

    Breaking news, the Trump is on his final death knell, and those are the words of a very senior R official, previously supporting this town fop. So, somehow celebrity confers an absolution to do whatever you want with woman???

    For anyone who previously and/or still supports him, not only are you of a marginal intellect, your morals and treatment of women are non-existent.

    This campaign is dead and look for many to abdandon him in the next 48 hours.

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