Innsbruck bid for 2026 Winter Olympics set for rejection in
referendum
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[October 16, 2017]
VIENNA (Reuters) - Innsbruck's
plan to bid to host the 2026 Winter Olympics is set to be rejected
in a local referendum, with more than 53 percent of voters saying no
and only a small number of postal ballot papers still to be counted.
The province of Tirol said in a statement on Sunday that 53.56
percent of the 312,237 valid votes cast across the region were
against a bid to host the Games and 46.65 percent were in favor.
A total of 33,771 postal voting slips have been distributed and will
be counted on Monday. Austrian media treated the result as
definitive.
Innsbruck previously hosted the Games in 1964 and 1976.
The result, if confirmed, will be a blow to the International
Olympic Committee (IOC) which has seen interest in hosting the
summer and winter Olympics fall away in the last few years, scared
off by the size, cost and complexity of the events.
Beijing and the nearby city of Zhangjiakou beat Kazakhstan's Almaty
for the right to host the 2022 winter Games after the other
competitors dropped out, including St Moritz/Davos and Munich whose
bids were derailed in referendums.
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Snow covered mountains are reflected in the walls of the Olympic ice
hockey stadium of Innsbruck April 15, 2013. REUTERS/Dominic
Ebenbichler
Four of the six bidders pulled out of the race to host the 2024
summer Olympics, leaving just Los Angeles and Paris in the running.
In the end, the IOC voted to award the 2024 Games to Paris while Los
Angeles was given hosting rights for the 2028 Games without a full
bidding contest.
Rejection for the games was strong in Innsbruck itself where 67.41
voted against a bid.
(Writing by Brian Homewood; Editing by Christian Radnedge)
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