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British intervention in poll backfires
New.Telegraph ^ | Filed: 21/10/2004 | David Rennie in Springfield, Ohio

Posted on 10/21/2004 4:27:38 AM PDT by Ginifer

Dan Harkins, a political activist in the vital swing state of Ohio, was excited when he first heard that the Guardian newspaper was recruiting readers to write to voters in his state in the hopes of giving foreigners a voice in the American election.

Yesterday, the first of about 14,000 Guardian readers' letters started arriving in the mailboxes of Clark County, Mr Harkins's home region - chosen by the British paper as a pivotal election district where President George W Bush and Senator John Kerry are neck and neck. Terry Brown Terry Brown with an anti-Bush letter sent to his soldier son from a Guardian reader

The first letters to be made public all urged Clark County voters to reject Mr Bush. As he watched the reaction of friends and neighbours, Mr Harkins was delighted.

He is the chairman of the Clark County Republican Party, and his neighbours' reaction was outrage. "It's hysterical," laughed Mr Harkins, showing off sheaves of incensed e-mails and notes from local voters.

The Republicans' delight compares with the gloom among local Democrats, who fear that "foreign interference" is hurting Mr Kerry.

Terry Brown had received a letter from a Scottish Guardian reader. The navy veteran and retired lorry builder was "offended" as he read the polite note, from Nicola Smith of West Lothian, with its denunciation of the Iraq war as a "farce", and closing plea to remove from power "the parties responsible for this war".

The Clark County press has not taken kindly to the letters

Mr Brown looked out at his front garden, decorated with a US flag on a tall pole, a giant carving of an American eagle and a wooden cross marked: "September 11, 2001".

"I feel very strongly that this was an invasion of my privacy," he said. "The right of my wife and myself to decide whom to vote for should not be affected by any other country. That was a freedom we fought for many years ago. It was 1776."

Ms Smith's letter was addressed to Mr Brown's son, Sean. Mr Brown opens the mail because his son is in the army in Missouri, pending a possible posting to Iraq.

"My son will have choice words to say about this that you can't print," said Mr Brown.

The young soldier's mother, Sarah, was indignant at the letter's talk of Iraq war casualties. "If our son has to go to Iraq, and is killed, it's something we are ready to sacrifice for freedom, and so is he." Mrs Brown suspected that the name "Nicola Smith" was false, and planned to take the envelope to her local post office for analysis of its markings.

Dan Harkins, the local Republican leader, says it has boosted Bush

Across town, Beverly Coale and her elderly mother, Thelma Arnold, received a letter from Neil Evans from Kent. Heeding the Guardian's pleas to "be courteous", he began gently: "Please act now to preserve your once-great name internationally. We know the majority of you didn't vote for Bush the first time around."

Less happily, Mr Evans concluded that another Bush victory would so anger the world that Americans would have to "put on a Canadian accent when travelling abroad". His tone so alarmed Ms Coale, a Kerry voter, that she feared the letter came from terrorists. "With so much going on today, you wonder about some of these groups," she said.

The readers' letters are being sent only to voters flagged as "undeclared" in the county's electoral roll, a public document the newspaper bought from local officials, then placed on the internet.

The Guardian says it chose Clark County not just because winning Ohio is vital to Mr Bush's hopes of victory, but because the rolls showed such a large number of undeclared voters - 54,000 not affiliated with either party.

But the newspaper misunderstood Ohio polling law, according to the county's elections supervisor, Linda Rosicka. Being "undeclared" on the roll means someone did not choose to vote in the last two party primaries, in which party candidates are chosen. "It doesn't have anything to do with being undecided," she said.

Many local Democrats expressed sympathy with the desire of British voters to have a say. That does not mean they are happy the letters are coming.

Particular gloom has been spread by letters to Clark County from chosen Left-wing celebrities, published on the Guardian website and widely read in Ohio.

Ken Loach, the film director, began his letter: "Friends, you have the chance to do the world a favour. Today, your country is reviled across continents as never before. You are seen as the greatest bully on earth."

Antonia Fraser, the historian, suggested: "If you back Kerry, you will be voting against a savage, militaristic foreign policy of pre-emptive killing, which has stained the great name of the US so hideously in recent times."

Bill Buscemi, a lifelong Democrat from Springfield, Ohio, said: "The Americans do end up electing a world leader, and it must be rather frustrating for Europeans that the choice rests in the hands of a few undecided voters in Clark County. But I doubt this is going to help the Democratic Party."

Across America, the Guardian project has sparked disdain from the Right, and dismay from Kerry campaigners. Coverage in the US media has stressed the risks of offending voters. Furious e-mails have reached the Guardian, such as this one from Texas, stating: "Real Americans aren't interested in your pansy-ass, tea-sipping opinions."

In Clark County, Mr Harkins, the local Republican chairman, has no doubt that the Guardian has helped him - and Mr Bush.

He showed figures from Republican polls, indicating that only four per cent of the county's voters were still undecided last week.

"This is a very competitive county, where the undecided vote is very small. What the Guardian has done is firm up the Republican base. What a gift."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: eurotwitsforkerry
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To: Ginifer
The flavor of this reminds me of the Spanish explanation for the destruction of the Spanish Armada sent to conquer England and convert it to Roman Catholicism. The Armada was destroyed when it encountered a storm.

The Spanish consoled themselves by thinking that God had decided that the English didn't deserve to be Catholics. The British Loony Left's Letters being shipwrecked of the shoals of public resentment only prove that Americans are undeserving of the manifest benefits of their superior British Faith, Wisdom and Virtu.
41 posted on 10/21/2004 5:21:17 AM PDT by Lonesome in Massachussets (NYT Headline: "The Protocols of the Learned Elders of CBS", Fake But Accurate, Experts Say)
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To: AmericanMade1776; MozartLover; jtill; ride the whirlwind; lysie; kassie

A nice little "patriot" read from 2000..

http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.seacoastnh.com/arts/res/patriot1.jpeg&imgrefurl=http://www.seacoastnh.com/arts/please071500.html&h=330&w=175&sz=27&tbnid=IS0_G7n10-YJ:&tbnh=113&tbnw=60&start=13&prev=/images%3Fq%3DMel%2BGibson%2BThe%2BPatriot%26hl%3Den%26lr%3D%26newwindow%3D1%26sa%3DG


42 posted on 10/21/2004 5:22:12 AM PDT by DollyCali (Polls, polls, polls.. Please stop this bashing of our good allies!)
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To: Ginifer

tell this paper to go back and read the magna carta where it talks about the rights of the various social classes, and was written ca 1250. how dare the peasants of lowly england (tony blair excepted) tell the mighty, loft, wealth creating nation, global safety net, burgher (entrepreneurial) society of the united states how to vote.


imagine what would have happened if another european power, such as france, was in charge of vietnam in the 1950s [sarcasm].


43 posted on 10/21/2004 5:22:59 AM PDT by mlocher
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To: DollyCali

Just remember that all democRATS are to vote in a little town named Montreal, where they also speak French.


44 posted on 10/21/2004 5:24:25 AM PDT by Chairman_December_19th_Society (Got wood?)
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To: DollyCali

Thanks for the link!


45 posted on 10/21/2004 5:27:00 AM PDT by kassie ("It's the soldier who allows freedom of speech, not the reporter..")
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To: KateatRFM
I think we ought to set up a foundation to provide copies of the Declaration of Independence for every reader of the Guardian. In fact, for every "undecided" voter in America, too.

When in the course of human events it becomes necessary to remind people why this great Nation exists...

46 posted on 10/21/2004 5:29:49 AM PDT by Chairman_December_19th_Society (Got wood?)
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To: Ginifer

They never learn.


47 posted on 10/21/2004 5:31:44 AM PDT by mewzilla
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To: Ginifer

But the newspaper misunderstood Ohio polling law, according to the county's elections supervisor, Linda Rosicka. Being "undeclared" on the roll means someone did not choose to vote in the last two party primaries, in which party candidates are chosen. ''It doesn't have anything to do with being undecided,'' she said.

And that isn't the only thing the paper misunderstands. What they also don't understand is that there was a fundamental difference between their countrymen & women who took their lives in hand, venturing into the dangerous unknown and those who played it safe & stayed at home.

48 posted on 10/21/2004 5:54:06 AM PDT by elli1
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To: Peach

"Are you from the part of Europe whose arsed we saved or whose arse we kicked?"

Very well put!


49 posted on 10/21/2004 5:59:14 AM PDT by jocon307 (Don't let Australia down: Re-elect President Bush!)
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To: MistyCA; MadIvan; knighthawk; weegee

Delicious example of the leftists shooting themselves in the foot...


50 posted on 10/21/2004 6:15:44 AM PDT by MizSterious (First, the journalists, THEN the lawyers. :: Kerry promises, but Bush delivers!)
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To: DollyCali

Thanks Dolly.


51 posted on 10/21/2004 6:38:11 AM PDT by ride the whirlwind (Poor John Kerry, he can't help it. He was born with a silver flip-flop in his mouth.)
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To: tjwmason
Aside of God, the British are the best thing ever to happen to this planet.

It should come as no surprise that Great Britain has her fair share idiots....just like the rest of us.

52 posted on 10/21/2004 6:40:59 AM PDT by laotzu
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To: tjwmason
You Americans inherited your stubborn and contrary nature from us Brits, nothing would make me more fervent in my Toryism than a letter from a N.Y.Times reader telling me to vote Labour. This is exactly the same thing in reverse.

Or an email campaign from the French, chiding the Brits for Tony Blair...

What in the world was the Guardian thinking???

53 posted on 10/21/2004 7:07:59 AM PDT by COBOL2Java (If this isn't the End Times it certainly is a reasonable facsimile...)
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To: tjwmason
Why they call it the Grauniad

(nobody over here is going to know that. We're still calling it the Manchester Guardian ;-) )

The leftist twits of Farringdon Road made a real miscalculation here. Ohioans (really, most Midwesterners) are considered somewhat phlegmatic and dull (at least by us hot-headed, romantic and downright loony Southerners), but they are stubborn and contrary. Fastest way to get a Midwesterner to NOT do something is to stick your nose in his business and tell him he HAS to. He'll hunker down and simply refuse. On the other hand, seems like most of the abusive letters and Emails back to the paper have been from Southerners, who will cuss you out if they can't reach you to deliver a corporal "attitude adjustment".

Do you suppose there's a mole on the staff?

54 posted on 10/21/2004 7:32:47 AM PDT by AnAmericanMother (. . . Ministrix of ye Chace (recess appointment), TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary . . .)
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To: kahoutek
"Real Americans aren't interested in your pansy-ass, tea-sipping opinions."

Do you think the gentleman made his point..............?

Ahem . . . the TEXAS gentleman.

55 posted on 10/21/2004 7:48:59 AM PDT by geedee (Who is more foolish, the child afraid of the dark, or the man afraid of the light?)
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To: tjwmason
I see you are British, and will apologize for the bashing you are about to take on this thread. The letter writing was a dumb idea, as you have said. Know that in our hearts we still love you ........ though you food leave a bit to be desired! ;-)
56 posted on 10/21/2004 7:56:58 AM PDT by HoustonCurmudgeon (I early voted 18 Oct 2004 and took a car full with me.)
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To: coconutt2000
Anyone catch the following line?

Many local Democrats expressed sympathy with the desire of British voters to have a say.

See anything wrong with it?

Wrong, yes --- but it makes sense.

The left has gone insane.

57 posted on 10/21/2004 8:00:26 AM PDT by Psycho_Bunny
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To: Ginifer
The young soldier's mother, Sarah, was indignant at the letter's talk of Iraq war casualties. "If our son has to go to Iraq, and is killed, it's something we are ready to sacrifice for freedom, and so is he." Mrs Brown suspected that the name "Nicola Smith" was false, and planned to take the envelope to her local post office for analysis of its markings.

Ah, but John Kerry doesn't think her son's death would be honorable. You see, he isn't fighting under the U.N. banner, don-cha know...

58 posted on 10/21/2004 8:10:22 AM PDT by COBOL2Java (If this isn't the End Times it certainly is a reasonable facsimile...)
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To: AmericanMade1776
December 15, 1782 - In France, strong objections are expressed by the French over the signing of the peace treaty in Paris without America first consulting them.

Sheesh, they were demanding to be consulted even back then!

59 posted on 10/21/2004 8:26:13 AM PDT by McGavin999 (We have planted the seeds of democracy and watered them with our blood, now let freedom reign)
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To: MadIvan
Man, you have to ping your list to this!
60 posted on 10/21/2004 8:45:25 AM PDT by Mr. Silverback (Twelve days left to be a Bush goon! Freepmail me to get on your state's Kerrytrack list today!)
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