Updated: Friday, 02 Oct 2009, 7:18 PM EDT
Published : Friday, 02 Oct 2009, 5:48 PM EDT
CHICAGO (AP) - Thousands of people stood in bewildered silence in downtown
Chicago on Friday after the International Olympic Committee
surprised everyone by dumping the city from the race for 2016
Summer Olympics in the first round of voting.
The vote in Copenhagen was carried on huge television screens
set up in the Daley Center to carry what many had hoped would be
approval of Chicago as host. It had seemed so likely to many in a
city still basking in the blow of hometown Sen. Barack Obama's
election as president.
Instead, Chicago was bounced in the first round, bringing an
audible gasp from the crowd. The elimination came so quickly that
some would-be revelers weren't sure what had happened and they
asked bystanders if they had heard what they thought they heard.
Many stood for a few minutes, staring at the screens, and at
least one flung his hands into the air in a crude gesture toward
the TVs. Within seconds, people began filing out of the plaza.
"I've never really had a disappointment like this," said Ken
Rudd, a 33-year-old salesman from Evergreen Park. "This is one of
the saddest things I've ever seen."
Chicago was in a race with Rio de Janeiro and Tokyo and
Madrid for the 2016 games.
The Chicago bid had plenty of homegrown firepower, from Oprah
Winfrey right on up to Obama and the first lady, South Side native
Michelle Obama. All were in Copenhagen ahead of the vote and the
first couple gave presentations to the IOC earlier Friday.
Randy Wood, 49, of San Diego said the IOC clearly wasn't
swayed by Obama's influence.
"Maybe his clout stopped at the Pacific and the Atlantic,"
said Wood, who said the early elimination reflects poorly on the
president.
With Chicago well-known for public corruption and problems
with public services, opponents had serious concerns about
Olympics-sized hassles and bills, despite assurances by city
officials that taxpayers wouldn't owe a dime.
A recent poll by the Chicago Tribune showed residents almost
evenly split, with 47 percent in favor of the bid and 45 percent
against; that's a drop from the 2-1 support the newspaper found in
a February poll.
The 2016 bid committee said its own poll last week found support from 72 percent of Chicagoans, and that was evident at Daley Plaza on Friday.
Tokyo was knocked out in the second round.
That left just Rio and Madrid still in the mix. The IOC voted
again to separate the two and elected a winner, which will be
announced by IOC president Jacques Rogge later Friday.
Madrid's surprising success in reaching the final round came
after former IOC president Juan Antonio Samaranch made an unusual
appeal for the Spanish capital, reminding the IOC members as he
asked for their vote that, at age 89, "I am very near the end of my
time."
Chicago's elimination was one of the most shocking defeats in
IOC voting history. It had long been seen as a front-runner and got
the highest possible level of support -- from President Barack
Obama himself.
But the emotional appeals from Obama and his wife Michelle --
they both flew to Copenhagen to fight in Chicago's corner -- fell
on deaf ears in the European-dominated IOC. The IOC's last two
experiences in the United States were marred by controversy: 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.