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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Background  





2 Results of the mayoral campaign  





3 Thompson's campaign for sheriff  





4 Related media  





5 References  














The Battle of Aspen







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


"The Battle of Aspen" is an article published in Rolling Stone No. 67, dated October 1, 1970, and written by Hunter S. Thompson. The cover of the magazine ran the teaser "Freak Power in the Rockies," and the article was later reprinted with that title in The Great Shark Hunt.

The article's subject is the 1969 mayoral election in Aspen, Colorado, in particular the candidacy of Joe Edwards, a lawyer, "biker" and non-conformist resident of Aspen. It also details the Freak Power platform Thompson himself was to adopt while running for SheriffofPitkin County, Colorado, the subsequent year.

Background[edit]

Though unsuccessful, the Edwards campaign was notable for its attempt to garner nearly all of its support from "freaks," "heads," and "dropouts" from the surrounding areas—Freak Power, as it was dubbed. Thompson, who became de facto campaign manager for Edwards during the race, devotes much of the article to the local politics of Aspen and the entrenched politicians it supports. Simultaneously a screed against politicians who sacrifice the quality of life of their constituents for short term gain or notoriety, and an outline of optimism regarding the possibility of the marginalized to take power, the article details the campaign from its inception through the run-up to election and ends with a consideration of the results and the impact they may have had.

Results of the mayoral campaign[edit]

In both the 1969 Mayor's election and the 1970 Sheriff election, Edwards and Thompson narrowly lost to more conservative candidates. A coalition of the Democratic and Republican candidates during the Mayor's election (along with mail votes and alleged vote-fixing) managed to defeat Edwards by 6 votes (although there were 5 absentee ballots for Edwards, but they did not arrive in time to count), which Thompson said had confirmed his suspicion that both Aspen and America at large could be more radical than he had imagined, and thus that a "Freak Power" campaign on a local or national scale could work.

Thompson's campaign for sheriff[edit]

Thompson campaign poster illustrated by Tom Benton

The next year, therefore, Thompson put together a campaign to elect himself as Sheriff. It combined aggressive radicalism, a higher level of organization than the previous Freak Power campaign, more controversy and danger as well as some frivolous moments. His tentative platform set forth six points, including:

Thompson promised to fire the majority of the conservative county officials and bureaucrats, and shaved his head bald, thereby referring to the crew-cut, ex-army, Republican incumbent as "My long-haired opponent."[3]

Threats received by Thompson during the campaign included one sent to City Hall following a dynamite theft in the County, insisting that the explosives would only be used if Thompson was elected. This led to Thompson's house and campaign HQ at Woody Creek, Colorado, taking on the aspect of an armed camp on election night, with guards patrolling the grounds with guns and flashlights.

Ultimately, the "Thompson for Sheriff" campaign was also unsuccessful, partly due to a Republican–Democratic agreement not to stand against each other in certain key elections in order to allow all 'Non-Thompson' votes to count towards one candidate and partly due to an article Thompson wrote for Rolling Stone shortly before the election, revealing his strategy. [citation needed] Thompson lost the election with 173 votes to his opponent's 204.[4]

In a November 1970 letter to the editor of The Nation, which had run an editorial supporting Aspen's Freak Power Uprising, Thompson stated: "What neither The Times nor The National Observer said, incidentally, is that we ran straight at the bastards with an out-front Mescaline platform."[5] Thompson ultimately took a resigned view of his defeat, telling The New York Times, "If we can't win in Aspen, we can't win anywhere."[6]

Related media[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Thompson did make a concession on the drugs issue – he promised that if elected, he would not eat mescaline while on duty.
  • ^ Thompson, Hunter (1979). The Great Shark Hunt. Simon & Schuster. pp. 151–175. ISBN 978-0-7432-5045-0.
  • ^ Wood, David (Nov 29, 2011). "Hunter S. Thompson Shrine One of Two Documented". The Aspen Times. Retrieved 23 August 2014.
  • ^ "When Hunter S. Thompson Ran for Sheriff of Aspen - The Atlantic". The Atlantic. 26 June 2014.
  • ^ Hunter S. Thompson (2011). Fear and Loathing in America: The Brutal Odyssey of an Outlaw Journalis t. Simon & Schuster. p. 560. ISBN 978-1-4391-2636-3.
  • ^ William McKeen (2008). Outlaw Journalist: The Life and Times of Hunter S. Thompson. W.W. Norton. pp. 156. ISBN 978-0-393-06192-5.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Battle_of_Aspen&oldid=1226638010"

    Categories: 
    Magazine articles by Hunter S. Thompson
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    1969 United States mayoral elections
    1969 Colorado elections
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    This page was last edited on 31 May 2024, at 23:02 (UTC).

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