May 05, 2006 NOTE: PLEASE say if you DON'T want your name and/or email address published when sending VDARE email. A Virginia Reader Predicts The Herndon Election Will Set The Tone For NovemberFrom: Vincent Chiarello: [e-mail him] Re: Brenda Walker’s Blog: Heads Up To Politicians In a local election that may have national repercussions, the residents of Herndon, Virginia, elected a new mayor and five new members of the town council. In so doing, they reversed a voting trend that has held fast for at least the past decade in which no incumbent mayor or town council member has lost an election. The
new mayor, Steve DeBenedettis, who held no previous
public office, and the newly elected town council
members campaigned on one issue: the baleful impact of
illegal immigration on this suburban town in
northern Virginia. Over
strong citizen opposition, a new
day labor site was selected, and the problems of
nearby home owners dramatically increased. The town's
residents, clearly disturbed by this "hands off"
attitude, began to coordinate their efforts: in addition
to the
Minutemen, they set up a "Help Save Herndon
Committee" with its
website, held town meetings, and chose a slate of
candidates, all of whom were victorious in the election
on May 2. Clearly, this was a sweeping grass roots
victory for the residents of Herndon. Finally, this: might a similar scenario, tried by coordinated statewide groups, succeed on the federal level, too? VDARE.COM note: Chiarello is a retired Foreign Service Officer, whose tours included U.S. embassies in Latin America and Europe. His last, and most memorable, assignment was to the US Embassy to The Holy See. Currently, he is on the Board of the American National Council for Immigration Reform of northern Virginia, (ANCIR) whose members offered assistance and advice for the people of Herndon during the recent town elections. Had candidate for Governor Jerry Kilgore also followed ANCIR's advice last November, Chiarello believes that Virginia would have a Republican, not a Democrat, in Richmond. Born and raised in Brooklyn, Chiarello’s real claim to fame is that he still vividly remembers the numbers of post World War II Dodgers. Read the May 4th Washington Times editorial confirming Chiarello’s views on the Herndon election here. |