TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- Like thousands of other Americans, Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton upended their plans Thursday in Florida, where Hurricane Matthew threatened to wreak havoc on final-stretch presidential campaigning in a critical swing state.
The campaigns rushed to move staff and volunteers, close offices and cancel events in the path of the storm. And as many Floridians heeded calls to evacuate, both candidates began the delicate task of pursuing votes during a crisis.
Clinton's campaign asked the state for more time to register voters, and the Trump team pulled its negative TV ads.
"Nothing is more important than the safety of your family," Trump said in an unusually restrained statement. "Please stay safe."
The hurricane is expected to hit Trump's prized Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach.
Campaign spokeswoman Hope Hicks said, "Mr. Trump spoke with employees yesterday to ensure they are safe and following instructions from local officials."
Clinton tweeted: "Hurricane Matthew is a major storm. ... Stay safe Florida."
Both stayed far away, preparing for their second debate, a town hall-style faceoff Sunday in St. Louis.
Trump was holding a dry-run town hall in Sandown, New Hampshire, while Clinton was speaking at fundraisers in New York.
Along the Southeast coast, Matthew was expected to bring dangerous conditions to Georgia, South Carolina and possibly North Carolina. But it was the impact on vote-rich Florida, a must-win state for Trump, that had the campaigns on high alert.
The hurricane closed in just as both sides ramped up their early-vote push and just days before a voter-registration deadline.
Vote-by-mail ballots are being sent to voters across the state this week, leaving the potential for ballots to arrive just as voters temporarily abandon their homes. So far, a record 2.5 million people -- nearly one-third of those who voted in 2012 -- have made requests for the early ballots.
Jackie Schutz, a spokeswoman for Florida Gov. Rick Scott, said officials would not consider extending the Oct. 11 registration deadline -- as Clinton requested -- while dealing with the storm.
"Right now, our No. 1 focus is protecting life," Schutz said. "There will be another day for politics."
Scott, a strong backer of Trump, suggested earlier in the week he didn't think an adjustment would be necessary. Officials said they were hoping any disruption to voting would be less severe than with Superstorm Sandy, which struck New Jersey and New York just before the 2012 presidential election and kept many voters away from polls.
At least half of Florida voters typically cast ballots early, either by mail or in person, compared with just a fraction in New York and New Jersey. Still, disruptions in Florida campaigning were immediate.
In Palm Beach County, local Republican chairman Michael Barnett said Matthew already had forced cancellations, including phone-banking operations and an event where Ivanka Trump was the headliner.
Local GOP officials also will miss an opportunity for outreach to Latino leaders, because an annual gala of a local Hispanic civic group was canceled.
"There is no good time, but this is just the worst time," Barnett said. "Whatever happens, I think we can make up for the lost time, as long as we are not cleaning ourselves out from under a catastrophic mess."
Democrats, too, prepared for high-power campaigning to grind to a halt in affected areas.
Television advertising often fails to reach voters preoccupied by an impending storm and the aftermath.
"Even if you want to do politics, no one is there to listen," said Steve Schale, a Democratic consultant who directed Barack Obama's 2008 Florida campaign and was an adviser for his re-election efforts in the state.
How and where to advertise became an immediate flashpoint between the campaigns. After Clinton ads were spotted on the Weather Channel, the Trump campaign accused her of a "tone-deaf" attempt to capitalize on the situation.
A Clinton spokesman said ads had been scheduled on local Weather Channel stations in Florida and other states. But the storm's potential severity prompted the campaign to cancel the Florida portion.
Associated Press Writers Hope Yen, Steve Peoples, Jill Colvin and Julie Bykowicz in Washington; Bill Barrow in Columbus, Ohio; and Ken Thomas, Lisa Lerer and Jonathan Lemire in New York contributed to this report.
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