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Bill Nasso's avatar

Voters in Western North Carolina won’t be thinking about the upcoming election. They won’t be seeing campaign ads on TV or posts on social media. No door knocking or phone banks will urge them to vote. Surrounded by devastation and struggling to recover, many won’t get to their polling place despite their previous intention; where they would vote is not likely to be the same place as before the storm.

It’s reasonable to expect a significantly lower turnout from the hardest hit areas. So it’s up to the rest of the state to vote with what Thomas points out in mind.

It may be an old, trite saying but in this election the stakes are critically high.

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LuEllen  Huntley's avatar

If ever PoliticsNC has provided us with straight, no-nonsense reality, this post does and then some. It's been a "gut check blast" to comprehend the distress/destruction/disaster one bad storm can quite quickly create--anywhere in our nation or beyond. And the timing? Sobering. ANYONE who chooses not to see who and what MAGA means, ANYONE who will cast votes for a former president whose appetite for violence and cruelty IS fact, and whose acolytes are frothing over themselves for power--and some doozies are on our NC ballot--, I pity more than loathe.

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