Hurricane Sandy Could Be Obama’s October Surprise
Business + Economy

Hurricane Sandy Could Be Obama’s October Surprise

iStockphoto/The Fiscal Times

As Hurricane Sandy threatens to plow its way northeast through the political battleground states of Florida, North Carolina and Virginia early next week, this potentially disastrous freak of nature could well become the October Surprise of the presidential campaign.

With mounting signs that the late season hurricane or tropical storm could combine with a nor’easter to wreak havoc and flooding up and down the nation’s Eastern seaboard, Sandy could become the perfect storm that tests President Obama’s mettle in juggling his critical last-minute campaigning with the urgent demands of his office.

RELATED: Weather Related Disasters on the Rise

Obama has been criss-crossing the country on Air Force One at a frenetic clip as Republican rival Mitt Romney inches ahead  in the national polls and in a few key battleground states. If the two or three day storm that meteorologists are now predicting materializes just before Halloween, Obama may have to cancel a slew of campaign appearances to focus on the federal government’s  responses.

Given the downward trend of his campaign, some experts think that wouldn’t be a bad idea.

“Any time a president is put in such a difficult situation, you have a real chance to show presidential leadership,” said Jim Manley, a Washington political strategist and former press secretary to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev. “It’s always difficult to discuss these kinds of natural disasters, but the fact is – depending on what happens – this has a chance to show the president once again in command, and showing leadership as the country tries to deal with the impact of the storm.”

John Hudak, a presidential and governance scholar with Brookings Institution agrees: “If there is a serious disaster in the next few days anywhere on the Eastern seaboard, no one talks about Romney then. Romney is no part of any story, except, of course, I’m sure he’ll hold a press conference to speak on the tragedy, as anyone would do as the challenger. But all eyes are on the president. It’s something money can’t buy.”

Concerns about the hurricane caused the Romney campaign to cancel a Sunday rally planned for Virginia Beach, The Washington Post reported Friday.

Obama has been briefed repeatedly  on Hurricane Sandy and the White House is urging people in the storm’s path to listen to local officials and monitor weather reports. White House press secretary Jay Carney says federal emergency management officials have been working with local officials to prepare.

Back in early September, while touring the damage in New Orleans caused by Hurricane Isaac, Obama took a thinly veiled potshot at former president George W. Bush for his slow and inadequate response to Hurricane Katrina. “I want to particularly thank FEMA and the state and local authorities, because sometimes in the past we haven’t seen the kind of coordination that is necessary in response to these kinds of disasters. . . . We made sure that we had the disaster declarations happen quickly so that we weren’t behind the eight ball.”

Hurricane Sandy raged through the Bahamas early Friday after leaving 40 people dead across the Caribbean, following a path that could see it blend with a winter storm to hit the U.S. East coast with a super-storm next week. Sandy knocked out power, flooded roads and cut off islands in the Bahamas as it charged through Cat Island and Eleuthera, with authorities reporting one death in the scattered archipelago.

Eager to avoid another Katrina-like disaster, the Obama administration ordered emergency supplies sent to New Orleans five days before Isaac hit. And if the deadly Sandy turns into another weather calamity for the eastern part of the country, the president is all but certain to don his FEMA rain slicker and visit devastated areas that also happen to be rich in swing and undecided voters.

The storm will be hitting in the last full week before the Nov. 6 election, and early voting is already underway in many states, notably Ohio and in-person balloting in Florida, where Democrats hope to gain a decisive lead before Election Day. Political scientists have long studied the effects of inclement weather on voter turnout and – far from surprising – found that people would rather stay home than brave bad weather to vote.

According to a recent survey by the Weather Channel, 35 percent of undecided voters say bad weather will have a “moderate to significant” impact on whether they vote, compared to 27 percent of Democrats and 20 percent of Republicans.

TOP READS FROM THE FISCAL TIMES