Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Will The Americans Elect A Dark-Skinned President With Quite A "Robl

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Will The Americans Elect A Dark-Skinned President With Quite A "Robl

    WILL THE AMERICANS ELECT A DARK-SKINNED PRESIDENT WITH QUITE A "PROBLEMATIC" MIDDLE NAME HUSSEIN?
    Karine Ter-Sahakyan

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    18.10.2008 GMT+04:00

    Presidential candidates are always inclined to forget their
    pre-election promises, especially on such Â"embarrassingÂ" issues as
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide or the right of Nagorno-Karabakh
    people to self-determination.

    Somewhat more than two weeks is left before the US Presidential
    Elections. Despite the convincing victory of Barack Obama in all the
    three TV debates it would be a bit optimistic to claim that Americans
    are ready to elect as a US president a dark-skinned democrat candidate
    with quite a Â"problematicÂ" middle name Hussein.

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The American system of voting is rather bulky
    and archaic, and on the whole it can hardly be called purely
    democratic. Rather than directly voting for the President, United
    States citizens cast votes for electors. Voters cast ballots for a
    slate of electors of the U.S. Electoral College, who in turn directly
    elect the President and Vice President. The number of electors
    from each state is determined by its population, plus two votes of
    senators. Washington D.C is given a number of electors equal to the
    number held by the smallest states, i.e. three electors. Two states,
    Maine and Nebraska, select one elector within each congressional
    district by popular vote, and additionally select the remaining two
    electors by the aggregate, statewide popular vote. Most states allow
    voters to choose between statewide slates of electors pledged to vote
    for the presidential and vice presidential tickets of various parties;
    the ticket that receives the most votes statewide 'wins' all of the
    votes cast by electors from that state. That is why U.S. presidential
    campaigns concentrate on winning the popular vote in a combination of
    states that choose a majority of the electors, rather than campaigning
    to win the most votes nationally. Thus candidates other than those
    representing the two main parties have hardly any chance to be
    elected, though from time to time they introduce people to their
    political and economic views. Besides the names of Barack Obama and
    John McCain, another four independent candidates are included in
    the ballot-papers of 2008. However, most of the electors do not know
    them at all. About 55 million Americans support the Republicans, 72
    million - the Democrats, while 42 million are independent in their
    preference. These are rough estimates however. The last democrat
    in the White House used to be President Bill Clinton, and now, if we
    should follow the unvoiced tradition, after Republican George Bush, the
    United States is to have a democrat president. On the other hand, the
    proved method of the current President may be used, i.e. when George
    Bush became Head of State by the decision of the US Supreme Court.

    To some extent repetition of this scenario is unlikely, but
    anything can be expected from America lately. Though the financial
    crisis seriously shook the confidence of Americans in the current
    Administration, there is no guarantee that they will not elect a
    Republican for the mere reason that he is white, fought in Vietnam
    and his Vice-President is a woman, who will play some role in public
    organizations like Â"Women for equal electoral rightsÂ", and the like.

    Meanwhile, on October 17 the Los Angeles Times, The Chicago Tribune,
    The San Francisco Chronicle and the largest and oldest Spanish-language
    daily newspaper in New York City El Diario/La Prensa endorsed Barack
    Obama in their issues. Â"Obama is educated and eloquent, sober and
    exciting, steady and mature. He represents the nation as it is,
    and as it aspires to beÂ",- reported Los Angeles Times.

    The Chicago Tribune, which usually backs up Republican candidates in
    its Friday issue, endorsing a Democratic presidential nominee for the
    first time, expresses "tremendous confidence" in Obama's "intellectual
    rigor, his moral compass and his ability to make sound, thoughtful,
    and careful decisions." Â"He is readyÂ",- the paper concludes. In
    its turn, The San Francisco Chronicle compares the behavior of the
    two major-party candidates at the time of the economic crisis, and
    concludes: "Barack Obama is the right president for these troubled
    times". Earlier such influential US papers as The Washington Post,
    The New Yorker, The Financial Times and Rolling Stone had announced
    about their endorsement of Obama.

    Such a rare unanimity may really help Obama win. We shouldn't
    also forget about the powerful Armenian Community in the US. The
    organization "Armenians for Obama" founded by the Community, has
    directed its activity not only to Armenians, but to other ethnic
    groups as well. It is only the European lobby that is against Obama,
    but as a matter of principle it may still review its position.

    Â"Armenian Community in the US has the same problems as all the
    Americans do, but alongside with these problems Armenian-Americans
    attach great importance to the recognition of the Armenian Genocide
    in the Ottoman Empire. Of course, this issue is not the most central
    concern, but it is neither secondaryÂ",- said Arpi Vartanian, Country
    Director for Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh in the Armenian Assembly
    of America.

    As far as Senator McCain is concerned, he is quite reluctant to
    recognize the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire and is relatively
    indifferent towards bilateral relations between the United States
    and Armenia. However, the present stance may seriously hurt McCain,
    at least in the states with a substantial Armenian-American presence,
    such as California, New Jersey, Michigan, and Nevada.

    In its most recent edition The Atlantic Monthly focuses on the Armenian
    vote in the upcoming elections in an article entitled "McCain's Armenia
    Problem". As the article claims McCain is the first presidential
    candidate in the past two decades who is on the record as opposing
    genocide recognition without already being a member of the incumbent
    Administration. In 1990, McCain voted against a recognition resolution
    that was sponsored by then-Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole. In 2000,
    campaigning for the Republican nomination in California, McCain
    confirmed that he would not support such a resolution. "I don't
    see what this resolution does to improve this situation one iota,"
    said McCain. The Senator has stuck to his position also in 2008,
    attracting widespread criticism from Armenian groups. By contrast,
    Obama has pledged that his Administration would recognize the 1915
    extermination as an act of genocide. His campaign released two
    statements on this issue on January 19 and on April 28. "The facts
    are undeniable," his statements said. Obama's January 19th statement
    also pledged to maintain Armenian foreign aid and to move toward a
    resolution of the Karabakh conflict that would respect the "principle
    of self-determination" - a language close to Armenian demands.

    Presidential candidates are usually inclined to forget their
    pre-election promises, especially on such Â"embarrassingÂ" issues as
    recognition of the Armenian Genocide or the right of Nagorno-Karabakh
    people to self-determination. Will Barack Obama break this tradition?

    --Boundary_(ID_dnDwZUWiU57JAtJs5v3Vyg) --

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X