Animals as electoral candidates

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Animals as electoral candidates have been found in a number of countries. Often, the candidacies are a means of casting a protest vote or satirizing the political system — voting for an animal above "real" politicians often embarrasses those politicians. Other times, it is simply done for the entertainment value.

There are often obstacles to animals being nominated as candidates — electoral regulations may explicitly require candidates to be human (or equivalent wording), or may require candidates to do things which animals cannot reasonably do (such as sign their name legibly on a legal form). On some occasions, however, animals have been accepted as candidates, and have even won office, although this usually happens only in small towns where the result is not considered important.

[edit] Examples

  • Pigasus the Immortal, a boar hog that the Yippies nominated as a candidate in the U.S. presidential election, 1968.
  • Cacareco, a rhinoceros at the São Paulo zoo, was a candidate for the 1958 city council elections with the intention of protesting against political corruption[[1]]. Electoral officials, of course, did not accept Cacareco's candidacy, but he eventually won 100,000 votes, more than any other party in that same election (which was also marked by rampant absenteeism).

Today, the term "Voto Cacareco" (Cacareco vote) is commonly used to describe protest votes in Brazil. In 2002, the eccentric candidate Eneas Carneiro, known for shouting and cursing adversaries on TV, was elected for the Chamber of Deputies of Brazil with the largest number of votes in history.[[2]] The people, tired and disgruntled of the "serious" candidates, gave him 1.5 million "cacareco votes".

Several animals in the US have been elected mayors of small towns such as Rabbit Hash, KY who's mayor is a black lab named Junior Cohcran.

[edit] See also