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Sandy a test for Bloomberg, Christie, Cuomo

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“While Sandy has been tragic, with the amount of rescues that have taken place and the amount of life-saving that has gone down, it has helped keep the death toll not commensurate to the damage,” he said. “In Hurricane Katrina, you lost 2,000 people. And a lot of them died because nobody got to them for a week.”

Not everything went perfectly. Many of Sandy’s victims have complained that the power outages went on for too long, that the gas station lines were infuriating, and that temporary housing against November’s cold seemed to be an afterthought.

At times, the crisis threw all three men off balance: Bloomberg reversed himself in the face of a huge backlash and canceled the New York City Marathon, Christie picked a fight with the Atlantic City mayor for sending people to city shelters instead of evacuating them, and Cuomo’s attacks on utilities thudded when he took on the Long Island Power Authority, a state utility over which he has some control.

Christie provided the defining moment for a country torn by gridlock and partisanship, boarding a helicopter with President Barack Obama for a tour of the battered Jersey shore. On the first full day after Sandy, six days before the presidential election, the Republican Christie talked up Obama like an old bowling buddy.

When Rush Limbaugh and other conservatives branded him a traitor to the GOP, the brash and sometimes bullying Christie took a politics-be-damned stance: “They haven’t been to New Jersey. Come see the destruction. Come see the loss.”

“Not being a Christie voter and not particularly appreciating a lot of what he’s done as governor, you have to give the guy an A-plus,” said Doug Muzzio, political science professor at New York City’s Baruch College. “He was totally engaged, and he was engaged in a way that Bloomberg certainly wasn’t and even Cuomo wasn’t, and that was in a very visceral way. He not only managed, but he led.”

In the storm’s aftermath, Christie had reassuring words for New Jersey children, saying they should “let the adults in your community take care of you. We’ll be there for you.” He said he had been hugging distraught adults but got choked up when he met a 9-year-old girl whose home had been destroyed.


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