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    Analysis: Doing his job, Obama a subtle campaigner

    WASHINGTON (AP) — It may look to America like President Barack Obama is off the campaign trail. He's really not.

    By commanding the response to a ferocious October storm a week before the election, Obama is employing a major political advantage in the race to be president.

    He is the president.

    Clearly, Obama's imperative to act transcends the election. The wrath of the massive storm Sandy is real. At a time of death and danger, any president is expected to lead for the people of every state, battleground or otherwise.

    Yet in a political sense — and politics are absolutely part of this — Obama has a remarkable last-minute chance to campaign for his job just by doing his job.

    Republican nominee Mitt Romney can load canned food onto donation trucks; Obama can order aid and assets to the entire Northeastern corridor.

    Labeled by Romney as the big government guy, Obama is the one slashing red tape and telling governors to call him directly if they hit a single bureaucratic snag.

    The presidential race is tied or close to it in all the states that matter, so Obama is taking on risks, too, by halting days of official campaign events as Romney resumes them.

    Every rally Obama scraps means one less chance to implore people to vote early, as many states allow, or to vote at all. The storm is consuming attention for much of the East Coast, particularly in New York and New Jersey, but has far less resonance in the key states where the weather is fine.

    And, of course, Obama can blow it.

    Each major storm still lives in the harrowing legacy of Hurricane Katrina, which is why Obama has offered declarations like "There are no unmet needs."

    Advisers to Obama said that in a data-driven campaign, the storm emerged as an unpredictable factor — and, therefore, so is how voters will respond to Obama's moves.

    The politics of Obama's storm response are not overt. The point is to go the other direction and just be presidential.

    So gone, for three days and counting, are the rallies in which Obama expressly asks people to re-elect him. Instead, voters see images of Obama in charge in the Situation Room, or addressing the country from the White House briefing room, or assuring the hurting while visiting the American Red Cross that "America is with you."

    To the independent and undecided voters sick of the mess in Washington, Obama appears bipartisan and positively unconcerned about his own political fate.

    His best friend is suddenly a prominent Romney supporter, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who was touring storm damage with the president on Wednesday.

    "The president has been all over this, and he deserves great credit," Christie, a Republican, gushed in a TV interview. By contrast, when Christie was asked whether Romney was coming to help, he said, "I have no idea, nor am I the least bit concerned or interested."

    The White House, not the re-election campaign, drove the decision on Obama would shift back from a heavy governing role to traditional campaigning. Either way, members of the tight inner circle of both operations appear plenty content with the position Obama commands so far this week.

    "The president is focused on exactly what the American people elected him to do, which is manage the country in the event of crisis," campaign spokeswoman Jen Psaki said.

    It is the kind of statement that leaves Romney little counter, because there is no good political move in undermining American unity.

    On the flipside, even with a priority on safety and recovery for storm victims, the Obama camp's underplaying of all things political seems a mighty stretch.

    On Tuesday, one week from Election Day, Vice President Joe Biden went so far as to say, "Honest to God, I don't think anyone's thought about that."

    Romney, without government authority but with a real shot of unseating the president, has been mindful of his tone, too.

    "We are looking for all the help we can get for all the families that need," Romney said in an Ohio gym. He stood in front of a neatly lined table of toothpaste, diapers and blankets. His donate-for-storm-relief event, though, welcomed supporters with a campaign video declaring how he would make America strong again.

    More than one Obama adviser suggested Romney was blurring precisely the line that the president would never dare cross.

    "Soon enough we'll need to get back to work on the most important campaign of our lifetime," campaign manager Jim Messina said in an email. It looked like so many of the fundraising appeals he has sent out for Obama's re-election bid. In this one, he was lobbying people to donate to the American Red Cross.

    And soon enough, indeed, Obama was going back to official campaigning. Aides confirmed he would be blitzing through Wisconsin, Nevada and Colorado on Thursday.

    Meanwhile, he was still monitoring the storm.

    And voters were monitoring him, not campaigning, even as he is.

    ___

    EDITOR'S NOTE — Ben Feller has covered the presidencies of Barack Obama and George W. Bush.

    ___

    Follow Ben Feller on Twitter at www.twitter.com/BenFellerDC

    An AP News Analysis

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