Region opts for Obama
Published on November 07, 2008
Yes,
they could - help deliver the groundbreaking victory to Barack Obama
with high turnouts and lopsided margins for the Democratic presidential
candidate in Amherst and surrounding towns.
"Historic," "euphoric" and "momentous" were some of the words voters used to describe the feeling they sensed all around them.
"Never
in my life have I been so excited," said Mohammad Idrees, a 67-year-old
native of Pakistan. He told his son, Ameer, who is 7, "When you grow up
you will remember this night. You will say I saw the USA change."
Electing
"a nonwhite person president," said Idrees, an adjunct professor at
Holyoke College and local farmer, "shows the world that really color
doesn't matter much."
Obama won in every Hampshire County
community - and by significant margins in many. Pelham voters went the
biggest for Obama, giving him 85 percent of votes cast, followed
closely by Leverett, Shutesbury and Northampton.
Leverett, with 86.8 percent turnout was among the highest in the Valley.
Pelham
voters also weighed in most emphatically in favor of decriminalizing
marijuana as described in statewide ballot Question 2.
In Amherst, 12,849 voters cast ballots, representing a 68 percent turnout.
Olver wins
Democratic
Congressman John Olver, of Amherst, was returned to office by a wide
margin as was Stanley Rosenberg, the Democratic state senator from
Amherst, U.S. Sen. John Kerry and District 8 Governor's Councilor
Thomas Merrigan, of Greenfield.
Area voters firmly rejected eliminating the income tax as described in Question 1 and approved banning dog racing in Question 3.
By
a 5,294-5,122 margin, Amherst voters rejected increasing the Community
Preservation Act property tax surcharge proposed in Question 4, but
resoundingly approved nonbinding Questions 5 and 6 promoting
single-payer health care and a green economy, respectively.
About
150 of Olver's supporters celebrated at Hickory Ridge Country Club,
where a great cheer went up at about 9:30 p.m. at the news that Barack
Obama had prevailed in Ohio.
"It's over," the newly re-elected
congressman said, before he continued outlining what Congress could do
with a Democratic majority and Obama. There would be health care
reform, more effective financial regulation and a chance to
meaningfully address climate change.
All day long, local Obama supporters had expressed cautious optimism their candidate would win.
Amherst
resident Carol Johnson described the mood among the people she knows as
"euphoric." Some of them were planning to take Wednesday off to
celebrate.
Voters who favored McCain seemed less excited than Obama supporters, well before the results were known.
‘Just another election'
"It's
just another election," said Rich Hall, of Pelham, a businessman and
town firefighter, who was a poll worker in Amherst. "If either wins,
that's fine, you know, even though I'm a registered Republican. Bush
can't do anything because he's basically a lame duck president. You
just have to hope until the new one comes in hopefully he can stimulate
the economy and get things back on track"
"Oh, God, yeah, of
course that's true that Obama supporters are more excited," said
businessman Larry Kelley, who had predicted on his blog that McCain
would win. "Obama has personalty, style, charisma. I don't think anyone
would describe McCain has having charisma."
But Kelley trusts McCain. "That's what I think about these days - my wife and two kids - and he's got the experience."
Comparisons with the election of John F. Kennedy abounded.
Select
Board candidate Calvin Brower recalled meeting Kennedy when Brower was
a 10-year-old paper boy in Worcester. Obama stands for the same things
Kennedy did, which is why Brower was so excited about his candidacy, he
said.
At World Apart Games on North Pleasant Street, a "gaming"
collective, Alison Leuchtenburg, a UMass student who was watching the
returns said, "It's like when Kennedy ran and he got all the young
people excited. He's got the vision. Or like with FDR when people
really were concerned about the country."
Question 2 activist
Terry Franklin, who was at World Apart, said he voted for Libertarian
Bob Barr for president. He was mainly interested in the ballot
questions.
"The presidential stuff - that's not really contested in Massachusetts," Franklin said. "I haven't paid much attention to that."
Rockin' the vote
University
of Massachusetts students arrived by the busload all day at the Bangs
Community Center, which houses Precincts 4, 5 and 10.
For many of
the students it was the first time they have voted, among them Eli
Nunes, 18, who cast an absentee vote in his hometown of Swampscott last
week. He has been a volunteer with MASSPIRG, which set up a table
outside the community center to help any students having problems with
their registration.
Most people were able to vote, Nunes said,
although there was some confusion about where some people had
registered, which led to some students having to cast provisional
ballots.
Yasmin Abbyad, a UMass junior from New Orleans, was also
working for MASSPIRG, her third year working with the public interest
research group.
"The fact that we got to work on this election is really, really exciting," Abbyad said.
"There
are all these gender, race and minority issues that campuses are really
involved with. It applies to the issues we actually care about."
Nunes
thinks the excitement "grew out of the anger" over President Bush,
stoked by cartoons, television shows and Internet sites. "It all kind
of morphed into excitement about this election - with Obama who's
pledging with all his heart not to be like Bush," Nunes said.
Nancy
Farber, director of the Cushman Scott Children's Center, was selling
baked goods outside the polls to benefit the North Amherst children's
center. They had made about $500, she estimated.
"I was amazed at
how many voters there are. I saw people taking pictures; they were so
excited to be voting for the first time," she said. "People seem to be
so thrilled to be making part of history."
Some people thought
they got a free cookie for voting, which wasn't the case - but there
was free coffee at Starbucks and ice cream for all at Ben & Jerry's.
Mary Carey can be reached at mary.carey@att.net.