Non-human electoral candidates

Non-human 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. Other times, it is simply done for the entertainment value.

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.

Notable examples

A statue of Bosco the dog, former mayor of Sunol, California
A statue of Macaco Tião, a candidate for mayor of Rio de Janeiro
Dustin the Turkey, a puppet, received thousands of votes in Ireland's 1997 presidential election.

Folklore and pop culture

The notion of animals being elected to office has often been the subject of parody and folklore.

In 1817 Thomas Love Peacock's novel Melincourt featured an orangutan as a parliamentary candidate.

In 1951 cartoon Ballot Box Bunny, Bugs Bunny ran for the office of mayor against Yosemite Sam. Both lost to a "dark horse candidate": a mare.

In 1972, American singer Tom T. Hall had a hit with a recording entitled "The Monkey That Became President" which considered a scenario in which said animal was elected to office.

In 1976, Marvel Comics announced that their character Howard the Duck would run in that year's election for the U.S. presidency.[49]

The Black Mirror episode "The Waldo Moment" explores the concept of a cartoon character electoral candidate. Several news reports, including one by Chris Cillizza, political reporter for The Washington Post, compared the 2016 Donald Trump political campaign to the episode;[50][51] later, in September 2016, episode writer Charlie Brooker also compared the Trump campaign to The Waldo Moment and predicted Trump would win the 2016 election.[52][53]

The nerd-folk song "President Snakes" from the 2015 album of the same name by the music duo The Doubleclicks explores how five snakes run as one electoral candidate.[54][55][56][57][58][59]

See also

References

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  10. Tião's home page
  11. Tião's 31st birthday, O Estado de S. Paulo, 1994-01-16
  12. Rio Zoo completes 60 years, O Estado de S. Paulo, 2005-03-18
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  45. "Joe Arnold Asks Presidential Candidate Limberbutt McCubbins the Hard Hitting Questions". WHAS-TV. July 20, 2015.
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  48. Danny the Hamster campaign site
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  52. Yamato, Jen (13 September 2016). "'Black Mirror' Creator Predicts Trump Will Be President: 'I Find It F*cking Terrifying'". The Daily Beast. Retrieved 8 October 2016.
  53. Wampler, Scott (13 September 2016). "Black Mirror's Charlie Brooker Predicts Trump Will Win The Election". BirthMoviesDeath.com. Retrieved 8 October 2016.
  54. Granshaw, Lisa (May 13, 2015). "Geek girl band The Doubleclicks have funded their next album on Kickstarter". The Daily Dot. dailydot.com. Retrieved April 22, 2016.
  55. Greenwald, David (May 13, 2015). "Boldly Go". OregonLive.com. Advance Digital. Retrieved April 22, 2016.
  56. Jusino, Teresa (May 7, 2015). "Things We Saw Today: Gillian Anderson Keeping Hannibal VERY Close to Her Heart". The Mary Sue. Abrams Media. Retrieved April 22, 2016.
  57. Kohlruss, Craig (October 17, 2015). "Superheroes, monsters and regular citizens mingle at downtown Fresno's Zappcon". The Fresno Bee. The McClatchy Company. Retrieved April 22, 2016.
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