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Rio de Janeiro Wins 2016 Olympics Vote

JOHN LEICESTER   10/ 3/09 12:43 AM ET   AP

Olympics

COPENHAGEN — Like sweet, sultry samba music, Rio hit all the right notes. Chicago had Barack Obama. Tokyo had $4 billion in the bank. Madrid had powerful friends. But none of that mattered. Rio de Janeiro had the enchanting story – of about 400 million sports-mad people on a giant untapped and vibrant continent yearning, hoping, that the Olympics finally might come to them. And the International Olympic Committee was hooked.

Olympians, we'll see you on Copacabana beach in 2016. Let Carnival begin.

On a chilly Danish evening of high drama, the IOC on Friday sent the games of the 31st Olympiad to Brazil's bustling, fun-loving but crime-ridden city of beaches and mountains, romance and slums.

The IOC closed its eyes to the risks – the huge projected costs of the Rio Games, the concerns about how athletes will get around and where people will sleep – to focus on the reward of lighting the Olympic cauldron in one of the last corners of the globe yet to be bathed by its light.

"It is Brazil's time," said the country's charismatic president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

Chicago was knocked out in the first round – in one of the most shocking defeats ever handed down by the committee of former Olympians, sports administrators, royals and other VIPs.

While blues legend Buddy Guy twanged "Sweet Home Chicago" in a promotional video the city played to the IOC, bad blood between the committee and its U.S. branch – they've had flare-ups over revenue sharing and lucrative broadcasting rights – proved to be a note of discord. IOC members said the slap to Chicago was more directed at the U.S. Olympic Committee than to the Windy City itself.

The win was decisive: Rio beat Madrid by 66 votes to 32.

Chicago got just 18 votes in the first round, with Tokyo squeezing into the second round with 22. Madrid was leading after the first round with 28 votes, while Rio had 26.

In the second round, Tokyo was eliminated with just 20 votes. Madrid got 29, qualifying it for the final round face-off with Rio, which by then already had a strong lead with 46 votes.

The indignity suffered by Chicago – long considered a front-runner – was such that some IOC members squirmed. Obama flew overnight from Washington to sell his adoptive hometown and its plans for Olympic competition on Lake Michigan's windy shores to the IOC. First lady Michelle Obama, with talk show host Oprah Winfrey and sports stars in tow, jetted in first and spent two days buttering up IOC members, an essential part of the secretive and unpredictable selection process.

IOC members seemed wowed, posing for photos with her and taking souvenir shots of the president with their cell phones. But, in the vote, Chicago was shunned.

Obama called Silva to congratulate him, but the nature of the loss still rang as a stinging anti-American rebuke. Close to half of the IOC's 106 members are Europeans.

"To have the president of the United States and his wife personally appear, then this should happen in the first round is awful and totally undeserving," senior Australian IOC member Kevan Gosper said.

French IOC member Guy Drut said "an excess of security" for the Obamas unsettled some of his colleagues. He complained that he'd been barred from crossing the lobby of his hotel for security reasons, and he grumbled that "nothing has been done" to resolve the financial disputes between the IOC and the USOC.

Of Obama's performance, Drut said: "He didn't do too much. Michelle Obama was exceptional."

"This morning the city was closed because of Barack Obama," he added.

In Chicago, there was bewildered silence when IOC president Jacques Rogge announced: "The city of Chicago, having obtained the least number of votes, will not participate in the next round."

On Rio's Copacabana beach, where nearly 50,000 people roared when the winning city was announced, the party headed into the night.

Rio spoke to IOC members' consciences: the city argued that it was simply unfair that South America has never hosted the games, while Europe, Asia and North America have done so repeatedly.

"It is a time to address this imbalance," Silva told the IOC before it delivered its verdict. "It is time to light the Olympic cauldron in a tropical country."

Madrid's surprising success in reaching the final round came after former IOC president Juan Antonio Samaranch made a morbid appeal for the Spanish capital, reminding IOC members as he asked for their vote that, at age 89, "I am very near the end of my time."

Samaranch ran the IOC for 21 years before Rogge took over in 2001.

Beating three rich, more developed nations that had all previously held the games represented a giant, morale-boosting coup for Brazil. The emerging nation is bounding up the ranks of the world's biggest economies but still has millions of people living in poverty.

Like a football team before a big final, Rio's bid leaders and Silva held hands in silent prayer before walking out to deliver a flawless and impassioned presentation. A bid official said Silva's last words of encouragement were "let's stay calm, and stick with our plan."

Brazil's central bank governor reeled off impressive statistics about an economy predicted to be the world's fifth-largest by 2016. The state governor pledged that taxes would not be raised for the games and played down safety concerns. Computer-generated bird's-eye images of how venues will spread across the city, with sailing in the shadow of Sugar Loaf mountain and volleyball on Copacabana, provided the wow factor.

Then Silva delivered the knockout.

"Among the top 10 economies of the world, Brazil is the only country that has not hosted the Olympic and Paralympic Games," he said. "For the Olympic movement, it will be an opportunity to feel the warmth of our people, the exuberance of our culture, the sun of our joy and it will also be a chance to send a powerful message to the whole world: The Olympic Games belong to all peoples, to all continents and to all humanity."

Silva, a bearded former union leader, disappeared into a huge group hug with the joyous Rio team after Rogge announced that the city had won. Football great Pele had tears in his eyes. Brazil will now hold the world's two biggest sporting events in the space of just two years: in 2014, it is hosting the World Cup.

"There was absolutely no flaw in the bid," Rogge said.

Now, Africa and Antarctica are the only continents never to have been awarded an Olympics.

"We have sent out a message that we want to go global," IOC member Gerhard Heiberg said.

Obama held out the enticing prospect of a Chicago games helping to reconnect the United States with the world after the presidency of George W. Bush. He told the IOC that the "full force of the White House" would be applied so "visitors from all around the world feel welcome and will come away with a sense of the incredible diversity of the American people."

An uncomfortable moment came during Chicago's presentation when an IOC member from Pakistan, Syed Shahid Ali, noted that going through U.S. customs can be harrowing for foreigners. Obama responded that he wanted a Chicago games to offer "a reminder that America at its best is open to the world."

But the IOC's last two experiences in the United States were bad: the 2002 Salt Lake City Winter Olympics were sullied by a bribery scandal and logistical problems and a bombing hit the 1996 Games in Atlanta.

Former IOC member Kai Holm said the brevity of Obama's appearance – he was in and out in five hours – may have hurt Chicago.

"Too businesslike," Holm said. "It can be that some IOC members see it as a lack of respect."

IOC members said Asian voters may have banded together, at Chicago's expense, in the first round in favor of Tokyo, which offered reassurances of financial security, with $4 billion already banked for the games.

"The whole thing doesn't make sense other than there has been a stupid bloc vote," Gosper said.

The last U.S. city to bid for the Summer Games, New York, did scarcely better. It was ousted in the second round in the 2005 vote that gave the 2012 Games to London.

Now, Chicago can only rue what might have been.

And Rio ... well, what an excuse for a party.

___

AP Sports Writer Stephen Wilson in London, AP National Writer Nancy Armour and Associated Press writers Jan Olsen and Graham Dunbar in Copenhagen contributed to this report.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST CHICAGO

COPENHAGEN — Like sweet, sultry samba music, Rio hit all the right notes. Chicago had Barack Obama. Tokyo had $4 billion in the bank. Madrid had powerful friends. But none of that mattered. Rio ...
COPENHAGEN — Like sweet, sultry samba music, Rio hit all the right notes. Chicago had Barack Obama. Tokyo had $4 billion in the bank. Madrid had powerful friends. But none of that mattered. Rio ...
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08:16 AM on 11/29/2009
Message to Americans who come to the Olympics in Rio in 2016:

The authorities in Rio de Janeiro has close links with drug trafficking and organized criminals. This way we can ensure that nothing serious will happen to American tourists.

Just pay the influential people and everything will be okay.

In Brazil it is so. The way of life in Brazil.
11:55 AM on 10/04/2009
The fact that in the United States any luantic can go around carrying a gun and the pictures of some of these righty gun nuts showing up at presidential forums, shown all over the world, certainly did not create any confidence in the rest of the world that people traveling to the United States to see the Olympics would be safe.
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CelticMajic
The answer lies in each of us individually
09:48 AM on 10/05/2009
So Captain, are there any other ammendments in the Bill of Rights that you find objectionable?
08:01 PM on 10/09/2009
Agreed.
11:46 AM on 10/04/2009
While I regret that the United States did not get the Olympics, if one looks at this situation with completely objective and unbiased eyes, like, say, a visitor from another planet, Brazil was the right choice. The United States just recently had the Olympics in Atlanta. Olympic games have repeatedly been held in first world countries and never in South America.

Brazil, along with India and China are third world countries that are rapidly emerging as major world economic powers. Brazil still has a lot of poverty, but its government under DaSilva is working hard to overcome the problem.

The righties who cheered this result should consider that DaSilva's economic policies are far to the left of Obama's.
01:59 AM on 10/04/2009
If only ACORN had registered more IOC voters...
02:08 AM on 10/04/2009
Now you show up with the solution!
11:27 AM on 10/04/2009
There is not a single proven case of Acorn having registered anyone fraudulently. The cases in which some individual Acorn organizers had fraudulently registered voters were reported by Acorn itself.

The reason that the right hates Acorn is that it registers poor voters. If you are a politician who wants to shaft the poor, you do not want poor peope voting against youl
04:42 AM on 10/07/2009
sooo....the people who work FOR ACORN are not part OF ACORN...interesting...pary, tell me...do you need dramamine when you spin like that?
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evgolightly
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01:33 AM on 10/04/2009
Please. Like the world was going to reward the US after we basically sunk the global banking system.

Look, he tried -- what a sweetie. But we hosted three times recently (and by the way Atlanta, you did a horrible, TACKY job) ...

Brazil is a growing economy. They paid the right people off.
04:48 AM on 10/07/2009
9 months of declaring how awful America is at every foreign stop probably wasn't EXTREMELY helpful-all the IOC had to say was, 'thank you, mr president-you're right, your country HAS sucked for over 200 years-up until you were inaugurated-too little, too late'
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NotMcCain
www.welcomeesl.com
10:58 PM on 10/03/2009
The real question is this:

Why do Republicans CHEER when America loses?

The MSM should be harping on that one for a while.
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evgolightly
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01:24 AM on 10/04/2009
Exactly.
11:29 AM on 10/04/2009
The real question is why are the Democrats not exploiting the righties" cheering that the United States not getting the Olympics to frame the righthies as unpatriotic America haters?

The Democrats, unfortunately, lack the instinct to go after the jugular.
08:59 PM on 10/03/2009
So Kai Holm feels the President of the United States showed a "lack of respect" for only appearing for five hours? What about the travel time back and forth when he's trying to put back together a country that the last adminstration wrecked. A country which the rest of the world depends upon, even as they so often spit in our faces - but please, send your Red Cross, USAID, etc. when we need help?

No U.S. President before Obama took a day out of their schedules to personally lobby for the U.S. bid. In fact, those same IOC folks have CRITICIZED past Presidents for not doing so! What do they want? The President to spend a weeek amongst them, kissing their butts and giving them five times as many "gifts" (IOW bribes of goodies/swag) as everyone else?
11:33 AM on 10/04/2009
The President of the United States has more pressing demands on his time than to waste a lot of time kissing the arses of these prima donnas. To Hades with them!
04:49 AM on 10/07/2009
...which is why he blew a cool million of our tax dollars kissing their arses and failing? what flavor IS that KoolAde?
05:55 PM on 10/03/2009
Brazil has a horrific human rights record, especially as concerns women.
11:59 AM on 10/04/2009
But it does not have a Guantanamo. Or a policy of sending people to abroad to dictatorships in order to be tortured. The Bush administration was one of the worst violators of human rights in the modern world. The Obama adminstration has ended part of it, but has not gone far enough to fully eliminate such abuses.
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03:39 PM on 10/03/2009
Defeats? That's a massive win! Chicagoans should be dancing in the streets celebrating their narrow escape.
06:28 PM on 10/03/2009
I think most Chicagoans realize that we were big winners yesterday. Daley lost, but Chicago won.
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05:05 AM on 10/04/2009
It wasn't a narrow escape, because the vote on Chicago put it dead last.
03:30 PM on 10/03/2009
Look at the Bright Side:

AT LEAST BRAZIL HAS A PUBLIC OPTION!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blueknight41
sometime spanking is the only solution :)
12:32 PM on 10/03/2009
GOP to america you will rule the day you voted for that kenyan
12:50 PM on 10/03/2009
You must mean "rue." It's ok... I know Repubs don't speak English well. Tell us more about EyeRak's "nucular" program.

Obama is American, born in America. You racists are just going to have to deal with that.
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evgolightly
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01:22 AM on 10/04/2009
We should have let you 'succeed' from the union.
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11:44 AM on 10/03/2009
On the bright side we won't have deal with more construction delays and gridlocks for the next decade. Let Rio have it.
10:45 AM on 10/03/2009
i thought chicago would win for sure, i was so suprised that chicago didnt get it. i dont understand why chicago got voted out first. anyway, i am happy for Rio. it helps people know more things about south america.
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TN60
I Hope You'll Dance
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sparkandy
07:21 AM on 10/03/2009
Don't feel bad, Chicago. You're still the jewel of the continent!
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KataVideo
12:16 AM on 10/04/2009
Chicago and Tokyo didn't need the Olympics to be world-class cities.
04:52 AM on 10/07/2009
chicago...'jewel?' my dog musta deposited a diamond in the back yard...glad i didn't step in it; i'd hate to walk around with 'jewel-encrusted' feet