Voters in North Carolina and Georgia have bigger problems than politics. Helene changed everything

Video: NC Gov. Roy Cooper speaks on Tropical Storm Helene in North Carolina

VILAS, N.C. (AP) — Brad Farrington pulls over to grab a case of water bottles being passed out in Vilas, a small rural community tucked away in the Blue Ridge Mountains. He’s on his way to help a friend who lost much of what he owned when Hurricane Helene blew through last weekend.

His friend, like countless others across western North Carolina, is starting over, which explains why Farrington isn’t thinking too much about politics or the White House race between Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Kamala Harris right now.

“I don’t believe people’s hope is in either people that are being elected,” he said.

Farrington pauses, then gestures toward a dozen volunteers loading water and other necessities into cars and trucks.

“I believe we’re finding a lot more hope within folks like this,” he said.

In the election’s final weeks, people in North Carolina and Georgia, influential swing states, are dealing with more immediate concerns: widespread storm damage. If that weren’t enough, voters in Watauga County, a ticket-splitting Appalachian county that has become more Democratic in recent years, must contend with politicians laying blame while offering support as they campaign in a race that could be decided by any small shift.

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