Donald Trump seeks to boost presidential bid in Hurricane Helene’s wake, analysts say

Republican presidential nominee and former U.S. President Donald Trump stands during a moment of silence at an event about the damage caused by Hurricane Helene, in Valdosta, Georgia, U.S., September 30, 2024. REUTERS/Elijah Nouvelage/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights

Donald Trump is using the destruction of Hurricane Helene to boost his presidential bid against Kamala Harris, political analysts said on Tuesday, after the Republican candidate spread falsehoods about the federal response during a visit to a storm-hit city.
Trump is leveraging the potential political danger of the hurricane to the presidential campaign of Democrat Harris, his 2024 White House rival, the analysts said.

Trump visited the city of Valdosta in the battleground state of Georgia on Monday and falsely stated that Democratic President Joe Biden had been unresponsive to the hurricane’s destruction. Harris is also Biden’s vice president.
Trump said he brought “truckloads of things” to Georgia, including oil, water and equipment, and that he partnered with evangelical Christian leader Franklin Graham’s relief organization to deliver them.

Natural disasters have damaged U.S. administrations in the past and Trump is trying to tie Harris to this hurricane, which tore through the U.S. Southeast including the battleground states of Georgia and North Carolina, said Andrew Reeves, a professor at Washington University in St. Louis who has studied how natural disasters affect U.S. politics.
“If there is a massive screw-up in the response, it could come back to bite her,” Reeves said. “Trump is trying to look presidential and trying to create a media story around his attention to the crisis.”

Georgia and North Carolina will play a key role in the outcome of the Nov. 5 election between Trump and Harris. North Carolina’s hardest-hit area, Buncombe County, voted for Biden in 2020, while most of the other counties in the western part of the state went to Trump.
Georgia’s Lowndes County, where Valdosta is located, voted for Trump in 2020. But even a few thousand votes in each state could decide which presidential candidate wins those states and potentially determine the outcome of the White House race.

More than 3,500 federal workers are involved with response efforts in affected states, according to the White House.
Analysts said it was unusual for a presidential candidate who is not in office to visit a disaster area.
Natural disasters, especially hurricanes, have shaped U.S. politics in recent years and could alter the course of the race this year as well, said Stuart Rothenberg, a nonpartisan political analyst.
“It gives Donald Trump an opportunity to ride into the rescue as the savior,” he said.
It is not the first time Trump has sought to use a disaster for political gain. While visiting the site of a toxic train derailment in Ohio in 2023, Trump criticized the Biden administration’s response as a “betrayal.”
Presidents and presidential candidates usually do not visit a storm-hit region immediately because of fears they will distract from rescue efforts and drain resources from local law enforcement officials and emergency responders.
Biden said he would visit North Carolina on Wednesday and Georgia and Florida soon after. He may also ask Congress to return to Washington for a special session to pass supplemental aid funding.
Harris plans a visit to Augusta, Georgia, on Wednesday and a trip to North Carolina in the coming days, the White House said.
She spoke with local leaders by phone and cut short a West Coast campaign swing to participate in a hastily-arranged briefing at Federal Emergency Management Agency headquarters on Monday. There, she grimaced and shook her head when a reporter asked whether the crisis was being politicized.
The Harris campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Tuesday.
“While Biden and Harris abandon Americans in times of crisis, President Trump leads,” Trump spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said in a statement.
The storm killed more than 100 people across North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Tennessee and Virginia, and the death toll is expected to rise.
Survivors will be eligible for federal disaster aid, but Trump has also authorized a GoFundMe fundraising campaign “as an official response for MAGA supporters.” The campaign has raised over $2 million so far. “MAGA” refers to Trump’s “Make America Great Again” campaign slogan.

Source:https://www.reuters.com/world/us/wake-hurricane-trump-seeks-boost-his-presidential-bid-2024-10-01/

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