Archive for the ‘Politics’ Category

Unite with Guinness Proposition 3-17

Monday, February 16th, 2009

Unite with Guinness Proposition 3-17

The makers of Guinness® Irish Stout are asking President O’bama to amend the calender of official holidays in the United States to include St. Patrick’s Day. To do so, the iconic brand is re-introducing Proposition 3-17, a movement to make Saint Patrick’s Day a national holiday for Americans.

The makers of Guinness first proposed Proposition 3-17 in 2008 and collected more than 352,000 signatures in support of the official holiday status. This year, the brand aims to bolster the movement as Americans need, more so now than ever, to take a break and celebrate the holiday with friends and family.

The period from President’s Day to Memorial Day (98 days) marks the longest stretch in the working calendar without an official holiday break. By contrast there are five official holidays within the 81-day period from Thanksgiving to President’s Day.

Adults 21 and older can support Proposition 3-17 by signing the petition at bars and retail stores where Guinness is sold, by visiting Proposition317.com (www.Proposition317.com) or texting the word “SIGN” to 65579.

St. Patrick’s Day isn’t just celebrated by those with Irish ancestry. According to a 2008 survey of men and women 21 years of age and older, more than half (57%) of those polled think everyone has “a little bit of Irish in them” on St. Patrick’s Day. In fact, while 54% of respondents surveyed with Irish ancestry planned to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day, almost a third of U.S. residents who don’t claim Irish ancestry also planned to celebrate the holiday. This rich celebration has become a part of the American fabric

Source: PR Newswire

Elections lose out to St. Patrick’s Day

Monday, February 16th, 2009

New York State is postponing their village elections for Saint Patrick’s Day. The election is supposed to be held on the third Tuesday in March, but this year that means it’ll be on March 17th, or St. Patrick’s Day! It’s not just a suggestion, it’s actually the law. The law was changed in 1998, which was the last time the election and St. Patrick’s Day fell on the same Tuesday. Before this law villages had the option to move the election, but since 1998 it is mandatory to move it.

From Syracuse.com:

“It changed the ‘may’ to ‘shall’,” Brehm said.

The bill was introduced by then-Assemblyman Joseph Crowley, an Irish-American from Queens who is now a congressman for New York’s 7th District. His co-sponsor was Nicholas Spano, then an assemblyman from the very Irish community of Yonkers in Westchester County.

The fact that two politicians from the New York City area sponsored the bill should come as no surprise: The city was the site of the first St. Patrick’s Day parade held in 1762, and it’s still the largest St. Patrick’s parade in the country.

The official — and brief — reason given for the bill: To honor Irish heritage.

Does that mean donning green wigs and shamrock sunglasses, and drinking in Irish bars?

“To honor Irish heritage,” is as far as Brehm will go.

Through his communications director, Crowley jokingly recalled sponsoring the bill as way of “promoting free and fair elections, so as not to give any Irish candidates a leg up.”

“But obviously it was done to let folks celebrate the holiday,” said Angela Barranco, speaking for Crowley. “And make sure that village elections weren’t overshadowed.”

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, more than 34 million Americans say their ancestors came from Ireland, about 12 percent of the country’s population. It’s the nation’s second most frequently reported ancestry, behind German.

But that may not really matter.

On St. Patrick’s Day, as the saying goes, everyone is Irish.