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Irish eyes are smiling in Biden’s ancestral home over election victory

Brendan Blewitt, a cousin of Joe Biden, and his sister Breege Bourke celebrate Saturday in Ballina, Ireland.
Brendan Blewitt, a cousin of Joe Biden, and his sister Breege Bourke celebrate in Ballina, Ireland, on Saturday in anticipation of the results of the U.S. election.
(Peter Morrison / Associated Press)
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Joe Biden is somewhat removed from the Irish town that his great-great-great-grandfather left almost 200 years ago, but that is not stopping Ballina from celebrating his presidential victory.

The town in County Mayo, about 145 miles northwest of Dublin, has for days been draped in the Stars and Stripes and Biden-Harris banners in anticipation, even though many businesses have had to close because of lockdown restrictions.

Joe Blewitt, a heating and plumbing engineer and a cousin of Biden’s, said the town of about 10,000 is ecstatic at the prospect of a President Biden.

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“Now he’ll be the president of the United States, they’re delighted, they’re absolutely delighted,” Blewitt said. “To think one of their own is one of the most powerful men in the world.”

Blewitt, who was invited to the White House in 2017 when then-Vice President Biden was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Obama, said he hopes to be able to make it over again for the inauguration in January.

Blewitt says the pair are in regular contact, too: “He’s a really nice fella. He’s good to talk to.”

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As world leaders hastened to congratulate Joe Biden, Mexican president Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador waited more than seven hours before commenting, then said he was waiting it out. President Trump, he noted, had been “respectful” of Mexico. Critics said he was de facto endorsing Trump’s refusal to acknowledge defeat.

Ireland has a tradition of celebrating U.S. presidential election winners with Irish ancestry, however distant. The tiny town of Moneygall went wild for Obama (whom some dubbed O’Bama) when it was discovered that a great-great-great-grandfather on his mother’s side was a local cobbler. Other parts of the Emerald Isle touted their connections to John F. Kennedy and Ronald Reagan.

Biden, who visited Ballina in June 2016 when he was in his final few months as vice president, pledged to visit again if he prevailed over Trump.

Biden’s great-great-great-grandfather Edward Blewitt emigrated from the town, having worked as a brick-maker and as a civil engineer helping to map Ireland. Ten of Biden’s 16 great-great grandparents were also born in Ireland.

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Biden’s victory was especially sweet for Beryl McCrainey Slevin, a California native who has lived in Ballina for more than 15 years.

The swift unveiling of the coronavirus advisory board signals the urgency of the issue and its importance in propelling Biden to the White House.

Her hope is that Biden will be able to reunite her homeland after a divisive four years under Trump.

“I’m hoping that after this election we can really work on building alliances with everyone in the country,” she said. “We are all American, and the ideals of America are so important globally that I think it’s really important that we come together once again as a nation and continue the work of building the American dream for everyone.”

She also laid out her hope that Biden will “bring back dignity” to the White House and help heal the racial problems afflicting the U.S.

“I also feel very strongly that Joe Biden is in a place now that he’s ready to do serious justice reform, police reform nationally,” she said.

A 40-year career trained Biden as a consensus seeker. As president in a divided era, that will be put to an extreme test.

Blewitt is not ruling out the possibility of a Joe Biden plaza in Ballina, akin to the one built in Moneygall to honor Obama.

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Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin was one of the first leaders to congratulate Biden on his victory, a clear sign of how much Biden’s victory means to the country.

“Joe Biden has been a true friend of this nation throughout his life, and I look forward to working with him in the years ahead,” he said in a tweet. “I also look forward to welcoming him back home when the circumstances allow.”

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