Morris the cat runs for mayor of Mexican city
OLGA R. RODRIGUEZ, AP
MEXICO
CITY (AP) — This mayoral hopeful in Mexico promises to eat, sleep most
of the day and donate his leftover litter to fill potholes.
Morris,
a black-and-white kitten with orange eyes, is running for mayor of
Xalapa in eastern Mexico with the campaign slogan "Tired of Voting for
Rats? Vote for a Cat." And he is attracting
tens of thousands of politician-weary, two-legged supporters on social
media.
"He
sleeps almost all day and does nothing, and that fits the profile of a
politician," said 35-year-old office worker Sergio Chamorro, who adopted
the 10-month-old feline last year.
Put
forth as a candidate by Chamorro and a group of friends after they
became disillusioned with the empty promises of politicians, Morris'
candidacy has resonated across Mexico, where
citizens frustrated with human candidates are nominating their pets and
farm animals to run in July 7 elections being held in 14 states.
Also
running for mayor are "Chon the Donkey" in the border city of Ciudad
Juarez, "Tina the Chicken" in Tepic, the capital of the Pacific coast
state of Nayarit, "Maya the Cat" in the
city of Puebla and "Tintan the Dog" in Oaxaca City, though their
campaigns are not as well organized as that of Morris.
Politicians
repeatedly rank at the bottom of polls about citizens' trust in
institutions. A survey last year by Mitofsky polling agency ranking
Mexicans' trust in 15 institutions put
politicians and government officials among the bottom five.
Universities and the Catholic Church were the top two, respectively.
Morris'
cuteness, the clever campaign and promises to donate money collected
from the sales of campaign stickers and T-shirts to an animal shelter
has attracted cat lovers, but Chamorro
said most of his supporters are citizens tired of corrupt politicians
and fraudulent elections.
"Morris
has been a catalyst to show the discontent that exists in our society,"
Chamorro said. "Our message from the beginning has been 'if none of the
candidates represent you, vote
for the cat' and it seems people are responding to that."
Xalapa,
a university city of 450,000 people, is the capital of the Gulf coast
state of Veracruz, where residents have in last two years been
beleaguered by drug violence, corruption scandals
and the killings of at least nine reporters and photojournalists.
During
last year's presidential election, a video posted on social networks
showed a massive warehouse in Veracruz stuffed with election give-away
groceries. Authorities also seized $1.9
million in wads of cash found when police decided to search passengers
of a private plane arriving from Veracruz to Toluca, the capital of the
home state of now-President Enrique Pena Nieto. Officials later said
they had found no wrongdoing and the money was
returned.
Giovanna
Mazzotti, a 48-year-old university professor from the city of bright
colonial buildings and steep streets, said she supports Morris' campaign
and plans to go to a party for him
being held Friday. The candidate is not expected to attend.
"In
this state there is no rule of law, there is no respect for human
rights, there are no institutions," Mazzotti said. "It's great that this
campaign is showing the fiction in our elections.
Every three years politicians laugh at us, it's good to laugh at them a
bit, too."
Morris
has a website, a Twitter account and a Facebook page with more than
115,000 'likes,' that makes him more popular in social networks than the
five human mayoral contenders. Americo
Zuniga, the candidate for the ruling party who is leading in election
polls, had 33,000 Facebook 'likes' as of Friday.
His
website has a collection of memes that picture Morris yawning while
describing his "ample legislative experience," an image that mirrors
photographs of lawmakers sleeping during congressional
sessions.
Morris'
campaign managers are asking supporters to write-in 'Morris' or draw a
cat's face on the ballot to send a message to authorities, who are not
taking the cat's growing popularity
lightly.
Members of the Electoral Institute of Veracruz this week called on voters not to waste their vote on a cat.
"We
are asking for people to participate by voting for those citizens
registered on the ballots," electoral institute president Carolina
Viveros told local media this week. "Everything
else is part of expressions happening in social media and I respect
that, but you have to vote for the registered candidates, please."
Morris also has international supporters.
On
Friday, the animal-welfare group People for the Ethical Treatment of
Animals wrote Morris congratulating him for his campaign.
Stubbs,
a cat that has been the honorary mayor for more than 15 years of the
sleepy Alaska town of Talkeetna, has shown support for Morris by posting
his fellow feline candidate's spot
campaign on its Facebook page.
(
I think this sets a fine example, if we traded in our fat cats for
actual cats imagine the money we could save, instead of six figure
incomes, endless campaigning, and lies, we could
instead have honest uselessness and affordable bipartisan apathy! )
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