Pete
Pachentelli is manager of a local Pepe Le Pizza restaurant. He and
two friends, Sam and Curley, are at his house on a day off, watching
football on TV. Political ads break in too often.
“If these
candidates really want to get elected, they should offer a free pizza
to every voter,”
Curley jokes. “Everybody likes pizza, so they'd
have everybody on their side.” Silence, as the game continues.
Then
Pete speaks up. “You might have something there.”
“What?”
“I'm going to look into it,” Pete says. “If I can get the pizza
chain I work for to give me a super discount on a million pizzas, I'm
going to run for president”
“You
can't be serious.”
“I
don't know. Maybe. . . Susan is majoring in political science at
school. I can talk to her about it.”
“You
don't mind if your girlfriend laughs in your face?”
But
poli sci class has never been very interesting, and most of Susan's
classmates take the attitude “what the heck, if free pizza is
involved, I'm in!”
Professor Jones, seeing the enthusiasm the idea
generates, tells the class, “All right, if you can get Sue's
boyfriend's name on our state's ballot in the upcoming election, I'll
give everyone an 'A'. If you fail, everyone gets an 'F' factored into
their semester's grade.”
“Uh,
Mr. Jones, where do we start? What paperwork will we need?”
“This
is your campaign. Do I ever give you the answers to your assignments?
These are things you are going to have find out on your own. The
professor walks out of the room.
Whether
everyone in the country likes pizza or not, every student in the
class wants to
get an “A”. The next day, Susan talks it over with Pete. They
both understand that Pete will never be elected president of the USA,
but Professor Jones's assignment is only to get Pete on the state
ballot.
Pete finally tells her, “You know what? I've never really done anything special my whole life. I would rather tell my kids I once ran for president, than tell them I could have, but chickened out. What do I do to get started?”
Pete finally tells her, “You know what? I've never really done anything special my whole life. I would rather tell my kids I once ran for president, than tell them I could have, but chickened out. What do I do to get started?”
Susan
has done her homework; she gives him the forms to complete. The class
will get all the 10,000 signatures needed.
Pete
gets an unexpected boost by an inspection visit from the pizza
company's central office. The inspector warmly approves Pete's sales
record and methods, and asks what else Pete needs from headquarters.
Pete replies, “I have a potential customer who may want a very large number of pizzas for an event – maybe ten thousand or more. Could the company provide that many?”
The inspector believes someone is pulling Pete's leg, but says he'll find out. “Have your guy call me.”
Pete replies, “I have a potential customer who may want a very large number of pizzas for an event – maybe ten thousand or more. Could the company provide that many?”
The inspector believes someone is pulling Pete's leg, but says he'll find out. “Have your guy call me.”
Pete
knows little about political issues, “but I shouldn't have to look
smart to make the other candidates look dumb. Is free pizza any
dumber than cutting taxes while raising benefits?” With Susan as
campaign manager and one of her classmates as financial chairman, the
project copes with local TV interviews and news reporters. That is,
until national public TV and the Republican leadership get into the
act.
The
Republican party doesn't want Pete on stage as one of its debate
panel, and that situation delights the national Democrats. Pepe Le
Pizza's CEO likes the publicity Pete's campaign gets his company.
Pete sees the debate as an opportunity to present his personal
philosophy: gathering opponents around food – pizza for instance –
creates possibility for settling disputes and promoting harmony
On debate night he brings a supersize pizza to share with the other candidates on stage, but the stage manager whips it out of sight. The moderator asks Pete only one question during the debate. The Democrats accuse the Republicans of plotting to sideline him.
Actually, the audience gives him a more favorable rating than a rookie might expect, though not enough to make him a serious contender for the Republican nomination. And public opinion polls after the debate place him sixth in the field of seven – one point ahead of a senator. His campaign committee, [the college students] propose a public rally.
On debate night he brings a supersize pizza to share with the other candidates on stage, but the stage manager whips it out of sight. The moderator asks Pete only one question during the debate. The Democrats accuse the Republicans of plotting to sideline him.
Actually, the audience gives him a more favorable rating than a rookie might expect, though not enough to make him a serious contender for the Republican nomination. And public opinion polls after the debate place him sixth in the field of seven – one point ahead of a senator. His campaign committee, [the college students] propose a public rally.
What!
Speeches? Even the suggestion terrifies Pete. His staff persuade him
to make no decisions until after the primary elections . . . .
Author
Brian R. Lee has a fertile imagination, producing a thought-provoking
and credible finale to this entertaining tale. He makes his home in
Osburn, Idaho.
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