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Australia is a nation of Obama supporters. Like virtually every other country in the world, Australia was strongly pro-Obama in The Economist’s global electoral college. At 905 support for Obama, Australian support was even higher than that in South Africa, where Obama scored 89%.

Interest in the US election was very high indeed in Australia, with wall-to-wall coverage for weeks on end. For months, my colleagues and I had been sharing anti-Sarah Palin links and Tina Fey videos. Whether we were born in Australia, the UK or South Africa, we shared strong support for Obama and what he represented. Yesterday evening after the Melbourne Cup, a creative director, originally from the UK, told me how he was so excited about the possibility of a win for Obama that he could not sleep. This was epoch-defining, he said; the most important historical event in all of our lives for decades.

As it turned out, I was in a meeting with a client when the results came through. We were discussing how to market a message around unified communications and collaboration to IT and business decision-makers when the marketing manager interrupted and announced that the result had come through on her iPhone.

So much for the political views of those who work in Sydney. Opinions in the media were more diverse, with concerns cited about the fact that while John McCain had written an article for the Australian media, Obama had not. Clearly, Obama did not list the Antipodes as top of mind, a worrying thing for a nation that had followed the US dutifully into war in Iraq. (And a likely explanation for McCain’s lack of appeal here.)

The traditionally more liberal (in the American sense, though not necessarily the Australian sense) Sydney Morning Herald was pro-Obama, as were its readers. Political editor Peter Hartcher wrote about how an Obama victory would demonstrate that no nation could stop a race.

In the same paper, however, conservative commentator Gerard Henderson criticised the Australian media for their pro-Obama bias. “It is difficult to recall any other election in a democratic society,” he wrote, “where the media has been so obviously supporting one side in a two-sided contest.” Henderson cited many examples of journalists in the Australian media who support the Democrats and dismissed this as “fashion”.

The Australian, the conservative broadsheet owned by Rupert Murdoch, primly refused to endorse either candidate on the grounds that to do so was inappropriate — somewhat ironic given that those two Bibles of free market capitalism, the Financial Times and The Economist, both endorsed Obama.

If the market is the mechanism that ultimately determines the value of all things, then the Obama victory was a positive move; both Asian and Australian stocks surged on the announcement. Kevin Rudd, who was also elected by voters wanting change — but lacks a smidgen of the charisma radiated by Obama — stated that Obama’s victory was the culmination of Martin Luther King’s dream.

I noticed, when checking Facebook, how many of my Facebook friends expressed hope for an Obama victory. It was comforting; a reassurance that I moved in the right sort of crowd. (Will anyone admit to being a Republican now?) So, in the same way, I am glad that Australians have done the right thing by throwing their collective weight, even symbolically, behind Obama. We are together in a coalition of the hopeful. Let us enjoy the glow.




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9 Responses to “Australia’s response to the US election”

“Enjoy the glow?” The same glow after 1994 in SA that resulted in you leaving the country? Oh, wake up liberals!!!!

BTW, speak for yourself. I’ll happily admit to being a Republican. I’d be embarrassed to be a Dem or Obummer supporter.

(Report abuse)

MB on November 5th, 2008 at 1:31 pm

MB, may you and your ghastly redneck fellow-travellers spend many, many years in the political wilderness you so richly deserve.

(Report abuse)

Sarah britten on November 5th, 2008 at 11:20 pm

What MB does not understand is that everybody is fully aware that after the honeymoon comes the real work, the real politicking where many frustrations come in.

What 94 and Obama victory emphsises is a new era of thought and atttitude, not a lack of a willingness to act. Many of the revellers are well aware that setbacks is due and it is going to take hard work and determination to achieve certain ideals. They know that when difficult times come upon the course which they have taken they have press on, re organise and even change strategies which is characteristic of the SA post apartheid landscape. I will be very surprised if Obama does not hit major challenges and obstacles in what he has set out to do.

It is only the weak and the negative that throw their hands up in despair. But then again success is not for the weak and the negative. SA is still on-course with what it initially set out to do.

GO RAINBOW NATION !
GO OBAMA !

(Report abuse)

Oosthuizen on November 6th, 2008 at 3:10 am

I imagine that a lot of Republicans are deeply depressed right now and acting out. To which I can only say: nyah nyah.

(Report abuse)

Sarah Britten on November 6th, 2008 at 4:26 am

Just to think the Australians were taking black kids away from their families only 40 years ago and racially taunting both the Proteas and the Indian cricket teams just a year ago, wow how they have matured the perfect example of A Not in my Backyard sort of nation.

(Report abuse)

me on November 6th, 2008 at 7:59 am

The greatest event i decades?
comparable to south africa circa 1994 really?
i dont think so, the best candidate won as it should be now i wish that in south africas next ellection that people would vote for the best candidate instead of for the black or white candidate

(Report abuse)

mark on November 6th, 2008 at 9:36 am

@ me: the likelihood is that the people I have encountered (urban, educated, relatively high income) and the people who read The Economist are relatively liberal anyway. Interestingly, the media has been broadly very pro the Obama victory (with the exception of The Australian, which bemoaned the departure of Bush, who was suuuch a good friend of australia).

(Report abuse)

Sarah Britten on November 6th, 2008 at 10:26 am

Greg Sheridan, foreign editor of The Australian, bemoans the departure of a “great friend of Australia”, Bush, a man who prompted the involvement of Australians in a war in which they had no strategic interest:
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24608680-7583,00.html

Some friend.

(Report abuse)

Sarah Britten on November 7th, 2008 at 1:57 am

Mark, it’s an incomparably bigger event than SA 1994.

But it is of course not by any stretch the most important event in decades. The collapse of the Soviet Union was, for instance, much bigger.

(Report abuse)

OneFlew on November 8th, 2008 at 11:52 pm

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Sarah Britten has written three books on South African insults. The latest has a yellow cover and would make a perfect Christmas present. And yes, Julius Malema gets a chapter to himself.
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