

Bush
vs. Kerry? They're distant cousins
Genealogy buffs claim political rivals are
linked
AP
| Feb 17, 2004
By Matt Sedensky
HONOLULU -
Democratic presidential candidates are constantly being compared to the
current commander in chief. Now, two genealogy buffs say they have proof
President Bush and the current Democratic front-runner share similarities
thicker than water.
Bruce and
Kristine Harrison, Hawaii-based publishers of historical databases, traced
back the family histories of Bush and Democratic Sen. John Kerry.
The
result? They're cousins.
Well, 16th
cousins, three times removed, to be exact. But cousins, nonetheless.
Truth be
told, one might find such distant family ties between Bush and any of the
four other major Democratic candidates.
The link
between the president and the Rev. Al Sharpton might date back a bit
further, Bruce Harrison said, but tracing ancestries helps illuminate a
greater message on human interconnectedness.
"I
believe everybody on the planet is related if you go back far
enough," said Harrison, 51, whose Millisecond Publishing in Kamuela
puts out a line of ancestral history CDs. He and his wife have spent the
last eight years compiling information from hundreds of genealogical books
and periodicals. "We're setting the stage for others to explore their
curiosity," he said.
Other
big-name ancestors
Harrison says the search through family trees also turned up
other big-name ancestors of Kerry and Bush. Playboy founder Hugh Hefner is
the president's ninth cousin, twice removed, while Kerry can count Johnny
Appleseed as his sixth cousin, six times removed. Both the president and
the Massachusetts senator can claim ties to figures ranging from
Charlemagne to Walt Disney to Marilyn Monroe, Harrison said.
For an
average user of the Family Forest software,
it could be more difficult to find such well-known links, but Harrison
says he believes everyone can find some ancestral information in the
database.
As for the
political adversaries' kinship, the only reunion in store seems to be a
debate, should Kerry win his party's nomination. A Bush campaign
spokeswoman said she had no comment on the issue. A message left with
Kerry's spokesman was not returned.
'Just
bragging rights'
The Honolulu County Genealogical Society's Mary Ann Bolton said
she wasn't too impressed with those who troll family trees looking for
star-studded connections.
"I
don't really put too much into that," she said. "That's just
bragging rights."
Harrison
said his motivation in finding the link wasn't political, nor was it
purely curiosity. Since publicizing the Bush-Kerry relation, the number of
daily visits to his Web site has more than tripled.
