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Last week, about 50 American citizens
gathered in the lobby of an upscale Beijing apartment
building. Munching chili dogs and brownies and sipping Diet
Coke, beer and wine, the group, which included investment
bankers, lawyers and analysts, crowded around a speakerphone
to listen to a speech by Michelle Obama, the wife of
Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama. Another 150
or 200 people were listening in from Shanghai, Tokyo,
Nagoya, Singapore, Hong Kong and Jakarta.
The call was the work of Americans in China
for Obama, a group started last year to raise money for and
awareness about the candidate. The organizers also hope to
advise the candidate about China issues. Last June, at a
similar event, Sen. Obama addressed groups in Beijing and
Shanghai over the phone, accenting his own experience
growing up abroad and answering questions. No other major
campaign seems to boast a similarly well-organized
grassroots group in China. However, candidates including
Mitt Romney, Hillary Clinton and Rudy Guiliani have made
significant fundraising and outreach overtures to Americans
living in London, Hong Kong and elsewhere.
Democrats Abroad and Republicans Abroad
each have chapters around the world, dedicated to helping
American expats remain politically engaged. Both groups have
active chapters in Hong Kong but not in mainland China,
where they fear antagonizing the Chinese government --
though there doesn't seem to be any law prohibiting their
presence and my own sense is that it wouldn't cause a
ripple. Interested American citizens here can and do join
the Hong Kong chapters.
I have always been a bit of a political
junkie, and I still track the ups and downs of Washington
through online news resources. I have voted in every
election since I turned 18, including off years and off-off
years, where only things like school boards and town
councils were on the ballot. Because I moved a lot and
always wanted to have a local vote, in my first 12 years of
eligibility I registered and cast ballots in Pennsylvania,
Michigan (twice), California, Florida, New York and New
Jersey. When I moved to China it never occurred to me that
it would be more than a blip in my voting record.
But when I finally tried to swing into
action before last year's midterm Congressional elections, I
realized that my New Jersey registration had been canceled
because I had had my mail forwarded to my parents' house in
Pittsburgh. For the first time in over 20 years, I was no
longer a registered voter. Rectifying that proved more
difficult than I anticipated.
Americans living abroad have had the right
to vote by casting an absentee ballot in the congressional
district where they last resided since 1975, when Congress
passed the Overseas Citizens Voting Rights Act. I had the
vague idea that I could now vote electronically, but in fact
no expat can do so.
China can present some unique problems; for
the last two weeks I have not been able to log onto the
government site,
www.fvap.gov, because it is banned behind the Great
Firewall of China. I don't know why, nor will I ever find
out. It is equally likely to reappear at any moment or
remain locked down indefinitely.
Luckily, voters can also register at the
Web sites for
Democrats or
Republicans Abroad, or the non-partisan
www.overseasvotefoundation.org, an essential resource.
But even though I registered and downloaded a New Jersey
registration at the latter the other day, I still have to
mail it back to Essex County, N.J., and wait hopefully for
an absentee ballot to arrive the same way -- so I can again
use snail mail to cast my ballot. I urge any American living
outside the country to get an early start checking his/her
registration and receiving an absentee ballot, because it
can take a while. It's no surprise that some expats have
taken a missionary zeal to helping others cast a ballot.
"I see helping Americans living abroad
register and vote as a part of the long tradition of
fighting for the process and right to vote," says Carolyn
Sauvage-Mar, Chair of Democrats Abroad-India. "Your chances
of meeting all the rules and deadlines as John Q. Public are
50/50 at best, so we're trying to improve the odds."
Democrats who don't manage to update their
registration, or simply prefer to vote as an international
community member, can also cast a ballot in the Democrats
Abroad Global Primary, to be held on their site from Feb. 5
to Feb. 12. The victorious candidate will receive the votes
from the Democrats Abroad delegates who will be at the party
convention next August. Republicans Abroad are not running a
similar election, nor will they have delegates at the
convention.
Recent elections have emphasized the value
of each vote. Ms. Sauvage-Mar says there is anecdotal
evidence that overseas ballots helped turn the 2006 Virginia
Senate race between George Allen and Jim Webb, where less
than 10,000 votes helped shift the body to Democratic from
Republican control. The 2000 Gore/Bush election was also a
reminder of the power of a single vote, a fact often sited
by politically active expats.
A feeling that the Bush administration has
damaged America's international standing has prompted many
Democrats living abroad to look for ways to assist their
party. "I never did that much here politically until after
President Bush was elected and I became very concerned about
the state of our country," says Anne Stevenson-Yang, who has
lived in Beijing for 17 years and is active with the Obama
group. "It felt like my country changed while I was away,
almost as if your parents moved house while you were away at
college and didn't tell you."
Similarly, animosity towards Bill Clinton spurred some expat
Republicans to get involved, including Christopher Fussner,
an American in Singapore who has lived outside the U.S. for
25 years and is now Global Chairman of Republicans Abroad.
"I never even voted the first 12 or 13 years I was abroad,"
says Mr. Fussner. "Then I became really disgusted with
President Clinton's policies and said, 'Whoa, I better
figure out a way to do something.'"
Some people who live abroad feel that the
experience actually fuels their desire to be involved and
changes their perspective on politics. "People getting
politically involved overseas seem a bit more genuine and
dedicated to what they're doing than many back in the
States," says Alan Seigrist, Vice Chair for Republican
Abroad's Hong Kong chapter. "I find the same thing in
Democrats Abroad, and the mere fact that we are all friends
and colleagues shows that it can be a friendlier political
environment here -- until Election Day that is."
Living abroad offers a different
perspective on America and its place in the world. Many feel
that by living and working with people from many
nationalities, they have gained a keener appreciation of the
challenges and opportunities presented by an increasingly
globalized society.
"I actually think we see the future coming
a little bit more than most Americans are able to," says
Mike Dardzinski, an American who has lived in Beijing for
four and a half years and was one of the founders of
Americans in China for Obama. "Living in most places in
America, you just don't deal with people from all over the
world every day like we do here, and that's the future."
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