President Barack Obama is leading against challenger Mitt Romney in a straw poll at Harry's Bar.
PARIS - President Barack Obama is leading against challenger Mitt
Romney in a straw poll at Harry's Bar, an iconic Paris watering hole
which has held a vote ahead of US elections since 1924 and only got the
results wrong
twice.
The birthplace of the Bloody Mary and
the haunt of the likes of Ernest Hemingway and Francis Scott Fitzgerald,
Harry's New York Bar -- a small corner of Manhattan in the heart of
Paris -- is the best election
soothsayer, its owner said.
"We
are the most dependable opinion poll," said Isabelle MacElhone with a
wink, speaking of the more that 100-year-old institution.
The only two failed results were the 1976 election won by Jimmy Carter and George W. Bush's 2004 victory.
The
venerable establishment started the daily straw votes for this election
in October, with only Americans allowed to take part.
A weekly
count is conducted and on election day next Tuesday, before the votes in
America are tallied, Harry's releases its own results.
The latest count based on 165 votes cast so far has Obama leading against Romney by 32 votes. MacElhone has strict rules.
"We ask Americans to show us their passports," she said. "Then they are given voting papers."
Their names and details are listed in a notebook and checked to see there is no multiple vote, just like in a real election.
The
ballots are cast in a locked box and then counted on the aged mahogany
bar, where white-aproned barmen expertly mix the driest of Martinis or
pour out tumblers of single-malt Scotch.
The MacElhones have been at the heart of Harry's Bar since its opening on Thanksgiving Day 1911.
Harry
MacElhone, a Scot from Dundee, was hired as bartender by original owner
Tod Sloane, an American jockey living in Paris who opened "The New York
Bar" after complaining he could not find a proper cocktail in the
French capital.
Keen to recreate the atmosphere of a
pre-Prohibition stand-up saloon in Paris, Sloane had the interior of a
Manhattan bar completely dismantled and shipped across the Atlantic to
Paris.
MacElhone, speaking in French, stressed that the management was "strictly impartial.
"We are the place where both Democrats and Republicans come for a drink. Everybody speaks to one another."
Patrick Runte had no confusion about the outcome on D-Day.
"Obama is going to make it," said the 43-year-old from Madison, Wisconsin.
"I don't even think it is going to be close.
"Let's give him four more years, because that is what it takes."
A barkeeper added jocularly: "If you don't vote for Obama, you won't get another drink!"
The barmen have even concocted special drinks for the candidates.
The "Romney" is absinthe-based. "It's a bit ironic for a Mormon," MacElhone said.
The
"Obama" is built around cherry and peach liqueur and beer -- the latter
a wink at his beer recipes. The "Biden" "has vanilla and aged whiskey
as the "vanilla is a tribute to his softer side and the whiskey his
age," according to the irrepressible owner.
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