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The Guardian - US
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Chris Stein in Washington

Harris warns against price gouging of hurricane evacuees; Tim Walz criticizes electoral college – US politics live

Kamala Harris walks to board Air Force Two.
Kamala Harris walks to board Air Force Two. Photograph: Evelyn Hockstein/AFP/Getty Images

Vance accuses Biden administration of 'incompetence' in Hurricane Helene response

The Trump campaign has spent days criticizing the Biden administration’s response to Hurricane Helene, and vice-presidential nominee JD Vance kept up the attack yesterday, publishing a column in the Wall Street Journal’s conservative editorial pages accusing the president and Kamala Harris of bungling the response to the storm.

“During times of crisis and war, presidential leadership is critical to cut through competing bureaucratic fiefs and protect Americans from death and devastation. The Biden-Harris response to Hurricane Helene, the deadliest storm since Katrina, has the people of the Southeast and especially Appalachia paying an extraordinary price for the administration’s incompetence,” wrote Vance. He currently represents Ohio in the Senate, but before getting into politics made a name for himself with the Appalachian-focused memoir “Hillbilly Elegy”, which got mixed reviews in the region.

Vance continued:

Shortly after Helene made landfall in the U.S. on Sept. 26, Joe Biden was at his house in Rehoboth Beach, Del. Vice President Kamala Harris was flying between ritzy California fundraisers, hobnobbing with celebrities. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas was in Los Angeles, presiding over an awards ceremony. Before the storm, Ms. Harris had blown off her disaster-response briefings, which were a staple of the Trump administration’s disaster-response planning. The lack of prioritization had real-world ramifications.

Yesterday, Donald Trump’s campaign called on North Carolina to change its laws to make it easier for residents displaced by Hurricane Helene to cast their ballots.

North Carolina is one of seven swing states expected to decide the election, but its western half was badly damaged by the hurricane’s flooding days ago.

“These 10 improvements in voting access in North Carolina will ensure the people who have already suffered from the storm don’t lose their right to participate in this important election. Swift action from the North Carolina General Assembly and the Governor will ensure the people of their state have their voices heard on November 5th,” Trump-Vance campaign managers Susie Wiles and Chris LaCivita said in a statement.

Among the voting changes they want North Carolina lawmakers to approve are:

Ensure Election Day Voting Locations provide the ability for any voter in the impacted county to vote from that location, instead of just their local precinct.

Expanding bipartisan election official teams (known as MAT or Multipartisan Assistance Teams) to have the ability to assist displaced voters in requesting and delivering absentee ballots to the county boards.

Allow voters who have been displaced to another North Carolina county to have the ability to deliver their absentee ballot in the new county or to the State Board.

It’s a bit of a shift in strategy for the Republican campaign, whose allies have in recent years tried to make it more difficult for people to cast ballots, citing unproven claims of voter fraud. In 2021 the Guardian’s Sam Levine took a look at some of their efforts:

Hurricane Milton expected to double in size before Florida landfall

Authorities in Florida are warning that Hurricane Milton could double in size and launch a deadly storm surge by the time it reaches the state’s coast, perhaps as soon as this evening.

From the Guardian’s Edward Helmore, who is covering the preparations for the storm’s arrival:

In an 8am update, the governor of Florida, Ron DeSantis, said it was not clear exactly where the eye of the storm would come ashore but the impact would be “broader than that … absolutely every place on the west coast of Florida could get major storm surge.”

“If you are in a single story home that is hit by a 15ft storm surge, which means that water comes in immediately, there’s nowhere to go,” said the mayor of Tampa, Jane Castor.

“So if you’re in it, basically that’s the coffin that you’re in.”

Authorities have issued mandatory evacuation orders across 11 Florida counties with a combined population of about 5.9 million people and said anyone choosing to stay behind must fend for themselves.

Before Helene hit, residents staying behind were encouraged to write their name and social security numbers on their bodies for easier postmortem identification.

We have a live blog covering the latest on the storm, and you can read it here:

Harris warns against price gouging of storm evacuees as Hurricane Milton nears Florida

Kamala Harris has warned businesses against defrauding or raising prices on people affected by recent storms like Hurricane Milton, which is expected to soon make landfall on Florida’s west coast, and Hurricane Helene, which devastated a swath of the southeast days ago.

“Let us all be clear: Americans impacted by a crisis should never be ripped off,” Harris’s statement begins. It continues:

I have seen firsthand the devastating impact of price gouging during an emergency. As Attorney General of California during devastating wildfires that displaced thousands of residents, I took on those attempting to take advantage of the situation by raising hotel prices. As Senator, I worked to stop price gouging during the pandemic.

Those evacuating before Hurricane Milton or recovering from Hurricane Helene should not be subject to illegal price gouging or fraud – at the pump, airport, or hotel counter. Any company or individual that tries to exploit Americans in an emergency should know that the Administration is monitoring for allegations of fraud and price gouging and will hold those taking advantage of the situation accountable.

Joe Biden made cracking down on price gouging and junk fees a priority of his administration in response to the inflation that battered US consumers during his presidency, with mixed results. Here’s more on that:

Donald Trump plans to hold a rally at New York City’s iconic Madison Square Garden about a week before election day, the New York Post reports.

Trump is a New York native and has held rallies in and around the heavily Democratic city during this campaign, including one earlier this year in the Bronx that was seen as attempting to promote his candidacy to voters of color:

Economy top of voters' minds, democracy, terrorism, supreme court also important - survey

A new survey by Gallup today confirms that the economy remains the most important topic to voters in this election, though they will also be looking at candidates’ stances on the supreme court, fighting terrorism and preserving America’s democracy.

The finding on the economy is not exactly new – previous surveys by Gallup and others have found voters ranking it as the issue they are most concerned about. And, as other polls have likewise found, Gallup reports that Donald Trump is more trusted than Kamala Harris on that issue, and others:

Voters view Donald Trump as better able than Kamala Harris to handle the economy, 54% versus 45%. Trump also has an edge on perceptions of his handling of immigration (+9 percentage points) and foreign affairs (+5), while Harris is seen as better on climate change (+26), abortion (+16) and healthcare (+10). The candidates are evenly matched on voters’ impressions of who would better address gun policy.

Here’s more on what Gallup’s survey found:

The current 52% of voters rating the economy as an “extremely important” influence on their vote for president is the highest since October 2008 during the Great Recession, when 55% of voters said the same. In polls conducted closest to the election in other presidential election years since 1996, between 38% and 44% of voters rated candidates’ positions on the economy as extremely important to their vote. Half of these readings are from September or October polling; the exceptions are 2000 (August), 2012 (February) and 2016 (May).

Besides the economy, no other issue receives an “extremely important” rating from most voters; however, majorities consider most issues as “extremely” or “very important.” Just two issues -- climate change (50%) and transgender rights (38%) -- are viewed by less than a majority of voters as extremely or very important to their presidential vote choice.

Between 41% and 49% of voters say four issues are extremely important to their vote -- democracy in the U.S., terrorism and national security, the types of Supreme Court justices the candidates would pick if they became president, and immigration. Ten issues are rated as extremely important by 31% to 38% of voters, including education, healthcare, gun policy, abortion, taxes, crime, the distribution of income and wealth in the U.S., the federal budget deficit, foreign affairs, and the situation in the Middle East between the Israelis and Palestinians.

Fewer voters, 23% to 27%, consider five issues as extremely important to their vote choice -- energy policy, relations with Russia, race relations, relations with China and trade with other nations. Twenty-one percent of voters say climate change and 18% say transgender rights are of the utmost importance to their vote.

In the latest sign of just how close this presidential race appears to be, a new Reuters/Ipsos national poll shows Kamala Harris’s lead over Donald Trump has shrunk.

The vice-president had a six percentage point lead over Trump in a late September poll by the same firms, but the gap is now three points, with Harris at 46% support to Trump’s 43%.

National polls can be useful in gauging the overall mood of the country, but the election is expected to be decided in seven battleground states clustered in the Sun Belt and along the Great Lakes. Here’s more on their poll, from Reuters:

The four-day poll completed on Monday showed Trump, who had trailed Harris by six points in a Sept 20-23 Reuters/Ipsos poll, was the preferred candidate for a range of economic issues and that some voters might be swayed by his claims that immigrants in the country illegally are prone to crime, assertions that have been largely discredited by academics and think tanks.

The poll had a margin of error of about 3 percentage points.

Respondents rated the economy as the top issue facing the country, and some 44% said Trump had the better approach on addressing the “cost of living,” compared to 38% who picked Harris.

Among a range of economic issues the next president should address, some 70% of respondents said the cost of living would be the most important, with only tiny shares picking the job market, taxes or “leaving me better off financially.” Trump had more support than Harris in each of those areas as well, although voters by a margin of 42% to 35% thought Harris was the better candidate to address the gap between wealthy and average Americans.

Trump appeared buoyed by widespread concerns over immigration, currently at its highest level in America in over a century. Some 53% of voters in the poll said they agreed with a statement that “immigrants who are in the country illegally are a danger to public safety,” compared to 41% who disagreed. Voters had been more closely divided on the question in a May Reuters/Ipsos poll, when 45% agreed and 46% disagreed.

Harris campaign does not back changes to electoral college – report

While Tim Walz has made clear he is no fan of the electoral college, switching the country’s system for electing presidents to a national popular vote is not a position Kamala Harris’s campaign is taking, Politico reports.

“Governor Walz believes that every vote matters in the electoral college and he is honored to be traveling the country and battleground states working to earn support for the Harris-Walz ticket. He was commenting to a crowd of strong supporters about how the campaign is built to win 270 electoral votes. And, he was thanking them for their support that is helping fund those efforts,” a Harris-Walz campaign spokesman said in response to Walz’s comments yesterday calling for the adoption of a national popular vote.

As governor of Minnesota, Walz last year signed into law legislation that made the state part of the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact, whose members pledge to give their electoral votes to the winner of the national popular vote. Eighteen states have signed the compact so far, though it it only goes into effect once states whose electoral votes total 270 sign it.

Updated

Walz criticizes electoral college as polls continues to show presidential race up in the air

Good morning, US politics blog readers. The Democratic vice-presidential nominee Tim Walz made a curious comment yesterday, criticizing the electoral college and calling for a national popular vote. “The electoral college needs to go,” Walz said at a fundraiser in Sacramento. “We need a national popular vote that is something. But that’s not the world we live in.” The United State’s system of electing presidents based on the electoral votes of individual states rather than overall popular support has confounded Democrats in recent decades, with Republicans Donald Trump in 2016 and George W Bush in 2000 winning the White House despite losing the popular vote. Deciding the presidency by a national popular vote would require a significant political push that you can bet the GOP would resist and won’t happen anytime soon, but Walz’s comment is notable for another reason: the election is so close, whoever wins the electoral college on 5 November may not win the popular vote.

Neither Trump nor Kamala Harris appear to have yet gained a decisive edge in the swing states that will decide the vote. Our poll tracker shows you just how close the two candidates are, with as little as a tenth of a percent separating them in some swing states. Walz, Trump and his running mate JD Vance all have campaign events today – perhaps these will be the ones that put their ticket over the top.

Here’s what’s going on today:

  • Arizona is getting a lot of attention today, specifically the southern city of Tucson. Vance campaigns in the city at 3pm ET, while Walz will at 2pm campaign with Democratic Senate candidate Reuben Gallego, and Jim McCain, son of the state’s late Republican senator John McCain. Walz also has a rally in the area planned for 6.30pm.

  • Trump campaigns in Scranton, Pennsylvania at 3pm. The city is Joe Biden’s childhood home, and also located in the swing state believed to be the most crucial in deciding this election.

  • Hurricane Milton continues to churn towards Florida’s west coast, amid warnings it could do terrible and widespread damage, including to communities that were struck by the recent Hurricane Helene. Follow our live blog for more.

Updated

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