Both
presidential candidates can brag that they have strong supporters who are real
Washington outsiders … as in thousands of kilometers and an ocean or two away
from Capitol Hill. These foreign supporters can't vote in the United States and
don't live in the country, and the eventual winner won't represent them. But
many are dedicating countless hours to getting their man elected. Nancy
Greenleese reports from Italy.
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| Gondoliers sing of their support for Barack Obama in a video on YouTube |
There is a making the rounds. The scene is a classic Italian backdrop. In Venice, a gondola with two
gondoliers aboard bobs on the Grand Canal in front of the Piazzo San Marco.
It's the postcard view ... with a message.
"We,
like many other Italians, wish that we too could vote for Senator [Barack]
Obama for president," Gondolier Roberto Nardin explains. "But since
we can't, we want to contribute to the grassroots effort of Americans in Italy
by doing what we do best: singing."
And
then he does, starting on a melancholy note.
"People
are hurting, and the world is falling apart," he sings, as the gondola
slowly sways on the water. "Now there's Obama to bring back the American
dream."
He
picks up a T-shirt emblazoned with the slogan "Americans in Italy for
Obama" and continues, to the tune of the pop hit, Volare:
"Obaaama! Goooo vote! Joe Biden, vice president. Yes, this time. Yes, you
can elect Obama your next president. Obaaama! Goooo!"
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| Obama campaign bumper stickers can be seen on the streets of Rome |
Foreigners are getting into the swing of the U.S. election campaign, joining
rallies and helping with get-out-the-vote efforts. Roberto Nardin is
politically active but says he's never gone to these lengths, even for an
Italian politician. However, Obama's message of unity and peace spoke to him.
"Senator
Obama is fresh. He's new. He's clean. He's crystal clear," Nardin says. He
sighs heavily and adds, "Look, Italian politicians, I don't trust them as
much as I trust Senator Obama."
Abroad,
the Democratic candidate is heavily preferred over his Republican rival,
Senator John McCain, even though the race at home is somewhat tighter. The BBC
conducted a poll of people in 22 foreign countries in late summer. Foreigners
supported Obama by more than 4 to 1. In Italy, Obama might consider running for
pope.
Ugandan
Johnbaptist Lusala, 27, is studying religion in Rome. Like many foreign Obama
campaigners, he believes the Bush administration has trampled civil liberties,
bullied other countries and conducted wars that wasted money that might have
been better used in places like Africa.
"I'm
so excited to have the Obama election campaign in full gear to which I'm a
member," Lusala says.
Lusala
predicts that Obama - the son of a Kenyan - would look beyond U.S. borders if
he is elected.
"Because
at the end of the day, he's an African," Lusala points out. "I don't
think he's going to forget about his people."
Lusala
calls it "a blessing in disguise."
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| Obama supporters in Italy campaign for their candidate even while enjoying a ride on the Grand Canal |
Lusala has never visited the United States. In fact, he was denied a student
visa several years ago, but he doesn't hold a grudge. He says he realizes the
global ramifications of this election, so he's signed on as a volunteer with
the local chapter of Democrats Abroad. That is the official overseas arm of the
Democratic Party, with offices in 30 countries. Like its Republican
counterpart, it works to keep the six million American citizens now living
outside the United States plugged into the presidential election process and,
naturally, encourages them to contribute funds and cast their absentee ballots
for the party's nominee.
Lusala
says through his volunteer work for Democrats Abroad, he's reaching out to his
American friends, making them understand the issues and what is at stake in
this election.
"Not
all Americans are interested in politics," he admits. "I may not
force them to vote the way I would love, but then through our discussions they
get to understand the issues in a better way."
But
not everyone is giving the classic American thumbs-up to these foreign
campaigners. Claudio Lodici, American University of Rome political science
professor, says they don't make a difference.
"They
can't grasp the complexities of the political process in the United
States," Lodici says. He says foreign campaigners don't know that the U.S.
president has limited influence on foreign policy and don't understand American
domestic issues very well.
He
says the campaigners just think Obama is cool.
"It
pretty much comes from the fact that Obama is an African-American," he
says. "But I'm not sure they know much about him as a legislator, as a
U.S. Senator, as a former organizer in South Chicago. It's a very superficial,
very superficial perception."
He
calls it, "Obamamania."
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Jean Louis Lozier is following the U.S. election campaign from a distance
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Meanwhile, McCain isn't getting as much amore. But Frenchman Jean Louis Lozier,
who is working in Rome, confesses that the Republican is his preference, adding
with a laugh, "I know that I'm really in a minority in Europe. But why
not?"
He's
not campaigning for McCain, though. For Lozier, that's a job for American
citizens.
Lozier
believes McCain is a pragmatist with experience. He thinks Obama is too
idealistic. But there is another reason why he supports McCain: he's not George
W. Bush.
"I,
like most of European people, are quite happy to see the end of the Mr. George
W. Bush era, because I think it's been really dreadful," he says.
That's
the campaign rhetoric heard most often from foreigners of every political
stripe - along with a rallying cry for all Americans to make certain they vote
on Election Day, Nov. 4.
Even
religion student Jeanbaptist Lusala sounds a nonpartisan tone about the
election's final outcome.
"As
a Christian, I pray for all the people," he says with a laugh.
"Because I believe God has a purpose for each person. Whether Obama or
McCain, God knows what is good for them and who the country deserves."