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As campaigns surrender to storm, Obama is in the spotlight and under pressure

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“If you make a promise on the campaign trail and don’t keep it, voters may or may not remember,” said Dan Schnur, a USC political analyst who helped former California Gov. Pete Wilson raise his political stock by navigating a series of natural disasters. “But when they’re struggling with the basic necessities of life, an elected official can be either a hero or a villain, depending on how well they respond.”

The judgment may be all the more acute coming at the very moment many voters prepare to cast their ballots. President George W. Bush had already been safely reelected when the federal government’s haphazard response to Hurricane Katrina caused his popularity to plunge. It was other Republicans who paid the political price, in the 2006 midterm election and, to a degree, in 2008.

With the storm building Monday, it was too soon to say whether Obama or Romney stood to gain or lose the most from nature’s unscripted intervention.

Would the president, abandoning his role as campaigner in chief, rise in voters’ esteem by attending to his duties? Or would the cancellation of several big rallies, doubling as get-out-the-vote efforts, cost him support next Tuesday?

Absent an official role, how would Romney, never the most supple of politicians, walk the fine line between showing compassion and at the same time promoting his own candidacy with a rival pinned down in Washington?

Would house-bound viewers absorb the endless TV advertising and the campaigns’ last-minute messaging, since they had little choice, At least until the electricity fails? Or would they grow so disgusted by the onslaught that they turn away from one candidate or the other and decide not to vote?

Neither Obama nor Romney can get back the days lost campaigning among the people, which, in the final advertising-saturated days of such a close contest, can be the most important thing the contestants do.

Campaigns, to a great extent, are about control: the words a candidate speaks, the themes they emphasize, the places they go, the audiences they address. The end days come down to a particularly fine series of calculations — all of which have been, literally, blown away by Hurricane Sandy.

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