BURNSVILLE, N.C.—From the hollers to the mountaintops, the rugged North Carolina survivors of Hurricane Helene who lived through hell and high water are turning out in droves to vote.
Political pundits have been discussing if voting would even take place in western North Carolina on Election Day, given the monumental loss and struggle facing Appalachian mountain residents.
Helene, a Category 4 hurricane, struck Florida on Sept. 26, leaving a trail of death and disaster as it traveled northward into North Carolina. At least 95 fatalities tied to the storm were reported in the Tar Heel State, which experienced devastating floods, landslides, and power outages.
The mountains of western North Carolina are considered a Republican stronghold. Storm survivors who spoke with The Epoch Times said the government’s response to what some have called a disaster of biblical proportions was too little, too late.
Former President Donald Trump won the swing state by 1.3 percentage points in 2020.
The state is considered a must-win for both Republican presidential candidate Trump and Democratic presidential candidate Vice President Kamala Harris.
The 25 counties in the disaster area contain 1.3 million registered voters. In 2020, Trump won 604,119 votes to Joe Biden’s 356,902 votes in those counties, according to political analyst Ray Bonifay, who noted the importance of the region, in an Oct. 18 commentary on RealClearPolitics.
Generational Loss
On a warm October day in Mitchell County, North Carolina, Tammy McMahan, 56, proudly wore an American flag sticker on her shirt proclaiming she voted.A little house she inherited from her mother in the next county over, on Micaville Loop in Burnsville, suffered severe damage from the storm. Three generations of her family have lived there.
On the back porch, she pointed out family treasures that survived Helene’s massive flooding: ornate gold mirrors, a wooden magazine rack, concrete garden statues, and a brass clock that her mother loved.
Like others who spoke to The Epoch Times, her voice occasionally broke with emotion.
“And so this is what I have left. This is it,” she said, while scanning the items arranged on the buckled porch.
“I look around. I’m devastated.”
In the midst of the devastation and loss, McMahan said she voted for Trump in Mitchell County on Oct. 21.
McMahan said she believes Trump cares more about “mountain people” than the Democratic nominee because he paid a visit to the disaster area before Biden or Harris.
“We are going to need a lot of help in these mountains,” she said.
Flood waters from Hurricane Helene caused major damage to Tammy McMahan's home in Burnsville, N.C., on Oct. 21, 2024. (Bobby Sanchez/The Epoch Times)
Through her open back door, she pointed to the walls of the house—stained with high water marks.
The water had burst through the back doors of the house, toppling a huge chest so heavy it took two men to move it.
The water had flipped over the living room couch, which was where her mother passed away after being ill. McMahan recalled when her mom took her last breath in that room, now covered with silt.
The force of rushing water washed away much of the concrete yard art that she and her mother had collected over the years.
Yet a little miracle occurred in the midst of all her misery.
McMahan had buried the urn holding her mother’s ashes beneath a statue of an angel standing among the rose bushes her mother loved.
After the floodwaters receded from the front yard, the angel and her mother’s remains stayed intact. Somehow, the roses were still blooming.
McMahan said that the previous week, she had reached the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), which promised to call her back. She checked her phone to see if she had missed a call.
She said that some neighbors didn’t want to apply for FEMA’s $750 in relief because they thought it was a loan. But she had verified with FEMA that the money doesn’t have to be paid back.
Luckily, McMahan wasn’t in the house when Helene hit. A local neighbor who watched the whole thing told her what happened.
“In 15 minutes, the water rose like a lake, and then within 15 minutes, it went down,” she said.
Tammy McMahan moves back foliage where her mother’s remains are interred in an urn at the foot of an angel statue at her home in Burnsville, N.C., on Oct. 21, 2024. Fortunately, the flood left her mother's remains intact. (Bobby Sanchez/The Epoch Times)
Mountain Politics
Mitchell County was one of the hardest-hit areas. Demographically, it consists mainly of white, rural voters—like much of western North Carolina.When reporters from The Epoch Times visited, business was brisk at a Mitchell County early voting site located at the Spruce Pine Fire Department, where McMahan voted.
Roycene Jones, director of the Mitchell County Board of Elections, told The Epoch Times a record 1,380 votes were cast on Oct. 17 and Oct. 18, out of 11,162 registered voters.
The state website shows that Mitchell County has registered 6,460 Republicans, 1,049 Democrats, and 3,601 unaffiliated voters.
“We’ve never had this many voters in the first two days since I’ve been here,” said Jones, who has worked elections for nine years.
“We are mountain people, and we are resilient. We will build back, and we will be stronger.”
David Frye, 49, who has a side business selling Trump flags, estimated that about 90 percent of Mitchell County votes Republican.
Frye said people who grew up in the hollers were raised on faith in the Lord and hard work. They believe in self-reliance, with many growing their own crops.
“We live on faith and the promise of tomorrow,” he said.
Voters go to the polls in Spruce Pine, N.C., on Oct. 21, 2024. (Bobby Sanchez/The Epoch Times)
Nonetheless, he said, people in the area are grateful for the help they have received from groups all over the country and the National Guard.
While FEMA offices were listed in the rural towns of Burnsville and Bakersfield, some of the locals felt the federal government wasn’t providing as much support as they did to suburban areas such as Asheville.
Frye said there were more “boots on the ground” in Asheville, which he could understand, in one respect, because more people lived there.
But he also attributed the difference in the response to politics.
“I think a lot of the resources went to Asheville because it’s Asheville,” he said. “We’ve got a Democratic governor, a Democratic president, and that’s a Democratic area.”
Buncombe County, which includes the city of Asheville, suffered a death toll of 42 people.
“The devastation here is from one end of the county to the other,” Frye said of Mitchell County.
“They can’t get out; they can’t get food; they don’t have electricity; they don’t have running water,” he said of those in the mountains who remain cut off due to the damaged roads.
He said he believes the disaster will drive more people to vote, especially for Trump, due to his early presence in the disaster area.
David Frye sells Trump memorabilia in Spruce Pine, N.C., on Oct. 21, 2024. (Bobby Sanchez/The Epoch Times)
In neighboring Yancey County, the storm caused 11 deaths, while two deaths occurred in Mitchell County, according to the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services.
Heavy turnout was reported at the early voting site at the Yancey County Board of Elections building.
Inside, several residents were ready to vote. One said the last time she voted was when President Barack Obama was in office. Another young man from Colorado showed a clerk documentation proving he is now a local resident.
Misty Silvers, deputy director of the Yancey County Board of Elections, said the first day of early voting, Oct. 17, at their Burnsville location broke a record, with 745 votes cast.
She said there were a total of 1,600 votes cast as of Oct. 21. The state lists 14,209 registered voters for Yancey County, with 5,379 Republicans, 3,729 Democrats, and 5,009 unaffiliated voters.
“I feel like they really want their voices heard,” Silvers said as a way of explaining the turnout. “We were determined to do it.”
Clarence Randolph, 82, and Nancy Randolph, 74, have been married for 55 years. The residents of Yancey County told The Epoch Times they were definitely voting in this election.
The open border issue is a top concern for Clarence Randolph because he’s heard of gang activity around Asheville. For his wife, it’s inflation.
“I can hardly afford to go to the grocery store,” Nancy Randolph said.
Nancy Randolph shows a picture on her phone of her standing next to a cut-out of former President Donald Trump, in Spruce Pine, N.C., on Oct. 21, 2024. (Bobby Sanchez/The Epoch Times)
Democrat Beverly Hill, 76, said her party in Yancey County has been urging its voters to turn out early, as have the Republicans.
More Democrats showed up to vote on the second day of early voting than on the first day, she said.
On social media, the Yancey County Democratic Party was calling for volunteers to help get out the vote in a highly consequential election.
“Understanding that our current focus is on survival, mourning those we lost, and grappling with a new reality, we also need to step out and help one another vote,” the party wrote in a Facebook post. “Our country and our own future here in Yancey County is on the ballot.”
Beverly Hill, 76, hands out pins supporting Vice President Kamala Harris outside the poling station in Burnsville, N.C., on Oct. 21, 2024. (Bobby Sanchez/The Epoch Times)
Hollers and Hills
In a holler off Big Brush Creek Road near Green Mountain, 64-year-old John Kruppenbach had braved the storm alone.Kruppenbach, a proud mountain man, walked barefoot around his property, pointing out storm damage.
Towering trees around his property dipped and swayed like “one of those inflatable dudes,” he told The Epoch Times.
Wind and rain lashed the mountaintops, snapping the trees like toothpicks.
Kruppenbach said he heard “boom, boom, boom” as trees crashed onto the roof of his house, punching holes in it.
He scrambled to get buckets to catch the rainwater pouring into his home, surprised by the savagery of the storm.
“With trees hitting and water coming in, it seemed possible it was the end,” he said.
After the storm, communications were cut out for the most part. A brigade of local volunteers with chainsaws and backhoes cleared felled trees from driveways and roadways, he said.
Kruppenbach said he was grateful when a group from Bitcoin Veterans showed up at his home one day with a generator.
Bitcoin Veterans, with many ex-special forces members, volunteered their help after the disaster in some of the hardest-hit areas. The unusual name comes from members’ shared interest in the emerging currency system.
Even as the storm lashed his home, Kruppenbach said the thought crossed his mind that the hurricane might affect voting.
Shane Hazel hugs John Kruppenbach during a visit to his home in North Carolina on Oct. 20, 2024. Hazel and his Bitcoin Veteran organization helped residents in the early aftermath of the storm. (Bobby Sanchez/The Epoch Times)
Like others, he said he was not impressed with the federal government’s response.
“I would hope folks see the lack of what the government has done here, and that it sways them to vote,” he said. “I can’t wait to cast my vote to fire this whole administration, which has been a dismal failure.”
Shane Hazel, a U.S. Marine Force Recon combat veteran and member of Bitcoin Veterans, said his group sought out veterans in the hills of western North Carolina as a “force multiplier.”
Their mission was to find veterans and outfit them with communications equipment so they could help other locals.
“These hills are covered with guys like that,” Hazel said.
His group hiked to the top of Big Bald Mountain, on the border of North Carolina and Tennessee, to place a Meshtastic repeater for radio communication service.
Both FEMA and mountain folk had to deal with false rumors. FEMA ultimately issued a disinformation page about its North Carolina operation.
Meanwhile, rumors about bands of armed men in the mountains hunting FEMA were circulating.
The Rutherford County Sheriff’s Office reported getting a call on Oct. 12 that a man with an “assault rifle” commented “about possibly harming” FEMA employees working in the hard-hit areas of Lake Lure and Chimney Rock in the North Carolina mountains.
A suspect was charged with a misdemeanor for “going armed to the terror of the public” and was released after posting bond.
The sheriff’s office said initial reports that a “truckload of militia” was involved in the threat were false. Further investigation determined that the man acted alone.
Daniel Stiles, 38, and his wife, Valerie Stiles, 37, are the chief and first captain, respectively, of the Double Island Volunteer Fire Department in Green Mountain, North Carolina. It’s named “Double Island” because it is surrounded by streams.
Volunteer firefighters Daniel Stiles, 38, and his wife, Valerie Stiles, 37, talk about Hurricane Helene outside the Double Island Volunteer Fire Department on Oct. 20, 2024. (Bobby Sanchez/The Epoch Times)
They said they were thankful for help from groups like Samaritan’s Purse, which made it into the holler with donations of water, medical supplies, hay, and animal feed for hard-hit farmers in the area.
The firefighters also said they know of people who thought the $750 from FEMA was a loan, so they didn’t apply. But they said the disaster encouraged people to vote.
“Oh, it’s made people think a lot more about [voting],” Valerie Stiles said. “We’re going to vote.”
Her grandparents, who are in their 70s, are coming out of the mountains to vote for the first time in their lives, she said.
Even as the relief efforts continued in the mountains, on Oct. 21 Trump visited Swannanoa, a hard-hit area east of Asheville, to praise those in storm-ravaged communities who were voting for him.
In the RealClearPolitics average of opinion polls, Trump is leading North Carolina by less than 1 percentage point.
That means a strong Republican turnout in western North Carolina will be necessary for Trump to retake the White House.
Epoch Times reporter Janice Hisle and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump holds a press conference in Asheville, N.C., on Oct. 21, 2024. (Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times)