[USA] Liberal Californians ready to bail if Bush wins

lars

Legacy
Didn't we hear this 4 years ago? Yawn.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Nov 1. 04

http://www.canada.com/national/nationalpost/news/story.html?id=38493f63-f315-4296-a271-6b057b42f16d


<b>Some Californians vow move to Canada if Kerry loses</b>

Catherine Elsworth

The Daily Telegraph





LOS ANGELES - Some left-leaning Californians say they would rather leave the United States -- and go to Canada or elsewhere -- than stay with George W. Bush as president.

''I certainly don't love the climate of Vancouver, but I love the sanity,'' said Steve Crawford, 54, a singer and actor working as a volunteer at the Democratic Party offices in Santa Monica.

He and his wife, Karen, have been investigating selling their home in Pacific Palisades, an upmarket area close to the coast, and moving to Canada.

''For someone like me, if this happens, I can't in good conscience allow myself to support another Bush government, even benignly. And a lot of other people are saying the same.

''I have a good friend who is adamant he will leave if Bush is re-elected. He's picked two countries and will definitely go to one should this happen.''

In the heavily Democratic state, famous for its Hollywood- and San Francisco-inspired latte liberal politics, such talk has become increasingly common at Starbucks and at dinner parties.

At first, the threat was little more than a joke. Now, on the eve of one of the most polarized elections in recent history, some say they really do intend to leave should ''the worst'' occur.

There seems little doubt Californians will deliver the state's valuable 55 electoral votes to the Democratic candidate. In a poll on Friday, Mr. Kerry had a seven-point lead statewide, with a 24-point lead in Los Angeles county and a 35-point lead in the San Francisco Bay area.

But fear at what may happen in the key swing states of Ohio, Florida and Pennsylvania has led to an escalation in coffee-shop chatter about emigration to Canada, Britain and elsewhere.

''Do you think Great Britain would give us political asylum?'' a woman in Starbucks asked. ''It's just ... I don't think I can stay if Bush wins again.''

Mr. Crawford said it would be a difficult decision to move his nine-year-old son from his elementary school. ''But if I feel he's going to be living in an environment that's not safe for him, then I will do it. First and foremost I'm a dad.''

Gretchen Witte, 35, from Alhambra, east of Los Angeles, who runs her own Internet business, is making plans to move to London, where she previously lived for eight years, should Mr. Bush win.

''As a woman, the current climate is becoming intolerable. Bush has just appointed a man to the FDA reproductive health panel who believes that women with medical trouble should pray to Jesus for relief. If this is what America is becoming, I cannot live here. The only reason I can sleep at night is the thought that I can leave the country if he wins.''

Robert Boleyn, a 35-year-old independent consultant from Los Angeles, says he hears people ''all the time' 'saying they will emigrate if Mr. Bush wins.

''But I think it's often more a measure of frustration with the last four years than a real intention to leave,'' he added.

Voluntary exile as a political statement is nothing new. Democrat-supporting celebrities have a habit of making (usually empty) threats to leave should the election not go their way. Robert Redford, a vocal critic of Mr. Bush's policies, was reported this month to have vowed to move to Ireland, where he owns homes near Dublin, if Mr. Bush is re-elected.

Before the 2000 poll, Alec Baldwin's then wife, Kim Basinger, told Germany's Focus magazine the actor ''might leave the country if Bush is elected ... and then I'd probably have to go, too.'' Mr. Baldwin did not leave.

The only public figure to carry out his promise was Pierre Salinger, the White House press secretary during the Kennedy administration, who died last month. Before the 2000 election, he said: ''If Bush wins, I'm going to leave the country and spend the rest of my life in France.'' He did.
 

Pearl

Inactive
Naah, I'll stay here on the Left Coast no matter who wins. I figger BOTH are bad. It's not bad enough to make me want to leave my job and home.

BTW, I'm neither liberal nor conservative, so I get grief from both sides.
 

cin

Inactive
Weren't a bunch of celebrities saying this same thing four years ago, the first time Bush won?
 

lars

Legacy
Dear Bob O'Redford,

We are fraternity brothers, you and I. We know the secret handshake and the secret words.

But if you do this thing, I will never again call you brother. Please reconsider. You are so very important to us all.


AEKDB,

Brother Lars
 

sssarawolf

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Oh Please leave, & if u cant put up, shut up. & yes they did say that 4 years ago. If they dislike it so much here then they should go, & the rest of us would be better off.
 

A.T.Hagan

Inactive
Liberal or conservative, if you'll run out on your country because of an election you'll run for other reasons too.

Get the hence and get thee gone.

The rest of us will stay to fight the good fight.

.....Alan.
 

WitsEnd

Contributing Member
I hope they all go and stay gone. I gets really sickening that politicians can't have a rally without various movie and rock stars in tow. Maybe in four years, if they're all gone, it will be different.

Don't let the door hit you in the ______ on the way out!
 

bigwavedave

Deceased
''For someone like me, if this happens, I can't in good conscience allow myself to support another Bush government, even benignly. And a lot of other people are saying the same."

you mean you're gonna end your US citizenship? not pay taxes? oh wait, i forgot, we don't pay taxes anymore. bush fixed that. now the govt borrows everything it needs.
 

Mr_Larry

Inactive
I would gladly help them pack their belongings. Unfortunately, the liberals talk a big talk but fail to deliver on their promises. It's much like their politics, so it shouldn't surprise anyone.
 
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