{"id":10,"date":"2004-06-20T13:37:19","date_gmt":"2004-06-20T18:37:19","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/vinsuprynowicz.com\/2004\/06\/20\/libertarian-campaign-aims-to-cost-bush-the-election\/"},"modified":"2004-06-20T13:37:19","modified_gmt":"2004-06-20T18:37:19","slug":"libertarian-campaign-aims-to-cost-bush-the-election","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/vinsuprynowicz.com\/?p=10","title":{"rendered":"LIBERTARIAN CAMPAIGN AIMS TO &#8216;COST BUSH THE ELECTION&#8217;"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>On June 14, the Seattle Times editorialized that the entrance requirements for the tedious, moribund, rigorously stage-managed turn-offs that today pass for our presidential &#8220;debates&#8221; should be loosened &#8212; but not too much.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;This year, Nader needs an average of 15 percent support in five national polls in order to be included,&#8221; the Times reports. &#8220;He is currently pegged at 7 percent by Gallup poll and 3 percent by Zogby. Who decided the 15 percent cutoff? The Commission on Presidential Debates, which is effectively controlled by the two major parties.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Solution? &#8220;It&#8217;s time to reconsider the current format and the lock on presidential debates by the two major parties,&#8221; the Times recommends.<\/p>\n<p>Right on.<!--more--><\/p>\n<p>But wait. There still has to be &#8220;some cutoff point in voter popularity,&#8221; The Seattlites immediately added. &#8220;Otherwise, George Bush and John Kerry would have to give equal network TV time to Michael Badnarik of the Libertarian Party and Walt Brown of the Socialist Party,&#8221; warn the Seattlites, evidently palpitating from the effect of too much Starbuck&#8217;s. &#8220;If the debates were opened up to such candidates, there might be dozens of them.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The correct level of perceived public support for admission into the debates? Fifteen percent is too high, but 5 percent would be too low, the Times figures. Ten percent would be just right.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;What a bunch of idiots,&#8221; comments Richard Winger of the San Francisco-based Ballot Access News. &#8220;Walt Brown is not gonna be in the ballot in more than three or four states &#8212; South Carolina, New Jersey, Vermont &#8212; the most he can get is six.<\/p>\n<p>Winger is the national expert on this stuff.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;It would be a mistake in my opinion to ever invite Walt Brown,&#8221; Winger agrees, since &#8220;There are four socialist candidates&#8221; from the warring branches of the dying movement &#8220;and they&#8217;ll each be on the ballot in a handful of states.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Which means none has even a theoretical mathematical chance of winning the presidency.<\/p>\n<p>If that were the only standard &#8212; ballot status in enough states to theoretically win the White House &#8212; how many candidates would debate?<\/p>\n<p>Five this year, Mr. Winger replies. The Democrat and Republican, Ralph Nader, Libertarian Michael Badnarik, and the nominee of the Constitution Party. &#8220;It&#8217;s conceivable if the Greens are stupid enough to nominate somebody other than Nader, there could conceivably be six, at the outside.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Mind you, if the presence of Walt Brown and David Cobb of the Greens was the price I had to pay for some lively, interesting debates where George Bush and John Kerry had to confront new and common-sense ideas from someone as principled, personable and articulate as Austin-based computer programmer and freelance lecturer on the Constitution Michael Badnarik, it&#8217;s a price I&#8217;d gladly pay.<\/p>\n<p>But this &#8220;dozens of candidates&#8221; stuff is getting to be an awfully geriatric bogeyman. And that&#8217;s letting slide the above-cited assertion that &#8220;George Bush and John Kerry would have to give equal network TV time&#8221; to a few competitors.<\/p>\n<p>Is the TV time really theirs to &#8220;give&#8221;?<\/p>\n<p>The Libertarian Party will be on the ballot in at least 46 states, and possibly all 50 &#8212; though arcane local election laws may require Michael Badnarik to be listed as an &#8220;Independent&#8221; in places like Ohio and Oklahoma, where the matter is now in court, the Badnarik campaign tells me.<\/p>\n<p>Every presidential cycle, the Libertarian Party spends a cool million dollars petitioning for ballot position in enough states to be in position to conceivably win the presidency &#8212; a gift which is handed every four years as a freebie to the nominees of the two branches of the Incumbent Republicrat Party, giving them a million-dollar head start on actual campaigning.<\/p>\n<p>I had dinner with Michael Badnarik and his campaign manager &#8212; City Councilman Fred Collins of the Detroit suburb of Berkley, Mich. &#8212; last Friday at the historic La Posta restaurant in Mesilla, N.M., just south of Las Cruces.<\/p>\n<p>Fred Collins sets achievable goals for the campaign. He figures if he can raise a few million dollars for TV ads, and place them only in the swing states, he can poll a couple of percentage points for Badnarik and the Libertarians in those states &#8212; and cost George Bush the election.<\/p>\n<p>What&#8217;s that? Michael Badnarik is just some wing nut who hasn&#8217;t been &#8220;proven in the heat of any real political contest?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Actually, Michael Badnarik is a political Cinderella story. A man of modest means, he spent the past year travelling the country, campaigning for the Libertarian nomination, in a &#8217;99 Kia Sephia. He and sidekick Jon Airheart, a former University of Texas student impressed with Badnarik&#8217;s ability to sell the libertarian message, covered 24,000 miles, hitting 36 states. Although Badnarik says there were days when they counted their dollars to see if they could afford a room and a meal and still have enough to gas up and reach the next town, in the process he has gained enormously in poise and confidence as a public speaker.<\/p>\n<p>Badnarik had raised and spent $33,000 as of convention time in Atlanta three weeks ago &#8212; he couldn&#8217;t afford to stay at the party&#8217;s upscale convention hotel and instead had to drive in for the candidate debate from a Days Inn across town.<\/p>\n<p>Entering the Libertarian Party convention, Badnarik was running behind late entry Aaron Russo, the former manager\/paramour of Bette Midler and producer of the film &#8220;Trading Places,&#8221; who promised to bring a lot more money and drama &#8212; and thus, presumably, press coverage &#8212; to the party&#8217;s presidential campaign.<\/p>\n<p>Russo was leading after a close first ballot. But if Badnarik campaign manager Fred Collins could persuade syndicated radio host Gary Nolan &#8212; running third &#8212; into dropping out and throwing his support to Badnarik, a coalition of the &#8220;Anybody But Russo&#8221; forces might just pull off a third-ballot miracle.<\/p>\n<p>Next week: Russo blows the nomination<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>On June 14, the Seattle Times editorialized that the entrance requirements for the tedious, moribund, rigorously stage-managed turn-offs that today pass for our presidential &#8220;debates&#8221; should be loosened &#8212; but not too much. &#8220;This year, Nader needs an average of 15 percent support in five national polls in order to be included,&#8221; the Times reports. 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