CORNWALLY, NY – On November 4, 2008, Cornwall, along with the rest of nation, will vote for a new president.
But how much do the residents of Cornwall know about the election at this point in time? Who do they support? And what do they think the results of the election will be?
When it comes to the 2008 presidential election, Cornwall’s residents seem to make up a big melting pot. Some are Republicans, while some are Democrats. Some are very well-informed on the issues, and others seem to fall short.
“For the Republicans you have Giuliani, McCain, and Thompson,” said Charles Butehorn, 20, Cornwall resident and a junior with a history major at SUNY Plattsburgh. “McCain’s not gonna win because he doesn’t have enough campaign money, um, Giuliani’s too liberal for Republicans, and Thompson is just like Bush: really conservative, anti-abortion, and pro-military.”
Butehorn feels that the Democrats need to step up. “Our parents, they had JFK,” he said excitedly. “And [Barack] Obama could be that for us.”
He also thinks Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton has a chance. “The Democrats are for the middle class, which is why they could use Hillary,” said Butehorn as he pushed up his glasses to stop them from sliding down his nose. “Hillary is for the middle class.”
Butehorn said he plans on voting for either Obama or Clinton. He also mentioned that he is disappointed because he cannot vote in the primaries. Because of this, he said, he won’t know who he’s going to support until the general election takes place.
Although Butehorn was very knowledgeable on the subject, others in Cornwall were not as much.
“I don’t know a thing,” said Evelyn Kelly, 17, senior at Cornwall Central High School, while laughing. “Seriously.”
Kelly said she considers herself a Republican, but that she knows nothing about the nominees. Her boyfriend sitting beside her then began to laugh, and Kelly playfully hit him. “He’s laughing at me because I’m stupid,” she said.
When asked how she’s planning on voting in 2008, Kelly shook her head. “I’m not voting. I don’t really know anything and I’m too stupid too vote.”
While he is a Democrat, Chris Engan, 19, a Cornwall resident, is on similar page as Kelly.
When asked how he was planning on voting in 2008, Engan needed a long moment to think. “My decision wouldn’t be based on all that much research,” he said while playing with his lip piercing. “[I would vote for] I don’t even know his name. Some black dude. I really liked how he talked.”
Still, others, such as Shanna Friedman, 20, Cornwall resident and junior with a communications and media major at Marist College, fell in between these two extremes.
“I like Barack Obama, said Friedman. “I just think he’s different, and like, I read an article about him once and thought what he had to say, I don’t know, I just liked him. I agreed with what he had to say. And this is stupid, but I think it’s cool that he’s black. I think we need a president who isn’t a white male.”
Rae Quinn, 18, senior at Cornwall Central High School agrees. “So far I would vote for Obama,” she said. “Unless Al Gore ran.”
Although both Friedman and Quinn say Obama has their support, they didn’t necessarily think he could win the election.
Friedman feels Obama’s involvement in the political process is more of a symbolic gesture. “I think it’s possible that he’s gonna win,” said Friedman. “But I think more than anything he’s just going to set an example for other minorities.”
Butehorn feels the election will either go to Obama or Clinton. However, he feels that the Democrats are too divided.
And while he thinks Giuliani has a chance because “everyone likes him after Sept. 11,” Butehorn says a lot of people are also criticizing him for that. “That’s what he’s running on,” he said. “Just Sept. 11.”
Cornwall, on the whole, seems to be made up of many different faces and opinions. While the 2008 presidential election may seem far off in the distance, it’s really just around the corner.
And although the residents of Cornwall may not completely agree on who they support or what the end result of the election will be, one thing is clear. In the words of Butehorn, “America needs a new image.”