In latest quirky Swiss poll, voters asked to save cow horns
CHESEAUX-NOREAZ, Switzerland — As a hollow cowbell echoes through a rolling, misty Swiss countryside, cattle herder Armin Capaul smiles and cracks wise about the feat he’s pulled off: Using the country’s system of direct democracy to force a vote on an issue dear to his life and livelihood — whether cows keep their horns.
The small-time cattle raiser in the Bernese regional village of Perrefitte is the unassuming if media-friendly mastermind behind a proposal, years in the making after a painstaking petition drive, that Swiss farmers should receive state compensation for letting cows and goats keep their horns.
Proponents of the measure being voted on in a national referendum ending Sunday say the animals should be left the way nature intended, for their well-being and happiness. Opponents, like a key federation of cattle raisers, say the measure would cost too much and drain funds from other activities.
Polls suggest a neck-and-neck race after parliament expressed its opposition and support has eroded in recent weeks.