[NewPacifica] [Fulcrumsofchange] Libertarians pick Bob Barr to run for president



http://www.ajc.com/r/content/news/stories/2008/05/25/libertarians_0526.html


ajc.com > nation/world
Libertarians pick Bob Barr to run for president
Candidate from Georgia says he's not trying to be GOP 'spoiler'

By AARON GOULD SHEININ
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 05/25/08
Denver — Georgia's Bob Barr won a long and tense battle Sunday for the
2008 Libertarian Party's presidential nomination and now faces the
daunting task of doing what no third-party candidate has done: Win in
November.

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It took six ballots and nearly five hours of voting at the Libertarian
National Convention before the former four-term congressman defeated
Texas business consultant Mary Ruwart for the party's bid.

Barr, who until 2006 was a Republican, took 54 percent of the vote
after Las Vegas odds-maker Wayne Allyn Root dropped out following the
fifth ballot and endorsed Barr. Delegates subsequently selected Root
to be Barr's running mate.

"Y'all party today," Barr told the more than 600 delegates at the
Sheraton Hotel. "I hope we celebrate, because I'm sure we'll all leave
here with the strongest ticket in the history of the Libertarian
Party."

Barr emphasized that only 163 days remain until the Nov. 4 general election.

"Do not waste one single day," Barr said.

In a news conference following the nominating vote, Barr's campaign
manager, Russell Verney, said the candidate's headquarters would be
Atlanta and that the campaign hopes to raise $30 million to battle
Republican nominee-in-waiting John McCain and whichever Democrat
emerges with that party's nomination.

Barr, 59, said the Libertarian Party anticipates being on the ballot
in at least 48 states, but work remains to be done in 20 of those to
ensure access. Oklahoma and West Virginia remain obstacles, he said.

Neither Barr nor Verney would say which states they believe they can
be most competitive in, but Barr said his home state should be
considered in play.

"If by 'in play' you mean winning Georgia, yes, we will certainly work
toward that end," Barr said. "There are already some areas in some
states we are looking at prioritizing our efforts."

Both men agreed that the first steps of the campaign will be to
establish the Atlanta campaign headquarters, fill out the campaign
team and begin working with the national party to secure ballot access
in as many states as possible.

Barr said he anticipates qualifying for the national presidential
debates this fall.

Barr had to overcome the objections of many Libertarians who viewed
him as an interloper and who questioned his commitment to Libertarian
ideals.

Ruwart said Barr had not embraced fully the Libertarian message on key
party issues, such as the legalization of all drugs or the ending of
all federal taxation.

Georgia had 35 delegates at the convention, and 33 voted for Barr on
all six ballots. Two went for Root.

Georgia delegate James Bell, who supported Barr, said the outcome was
never certain.

"I don't take anything for granted in the Libertarian Party
convention, because there's no preconceived notion of what could
happen, unlike the Democrats and Republicans. It's a genuine process,"
Bell said.

In the end, enough delegates saw a chance with Barr to take the party
to new heights.

Having someone with Barr's relatively high profile "means great things
for the Libertarian Party," national party spokesman Andrew Davis
said. "It means the best year the Libertarian Party has ever had in
its 35-year history."

A former federal prosecutor, Barr represented the northwest suburbs of
Atlanta for four terms in Congress after his election in 1994. He
gained national attention for his role in President Clinton's
impeachment proceedings.

In 2002, Barr left his district, moving to the district of a popular
Republican colleague, Rep. John Linder. Barr challenged Linder in that
year's primary and lost.

Barr announced his candidacy for the Libertarian presidential
nomination just three weeks ago. On Sunday, he reiterated that he
would campaign to win, not just to affect the outcome by siphoning
votes from the other parties' nominees.

"I am a competitor, and I am in this to win," Barr said. "I do not
view the role of the Libertarian Party as spoiler, and I have no
intention of being a spoiler."

Several pollsters included Barr in recent surveys about November's
general election.

Barr got 7 percent against Democrat Barack Obama and Republican John
McCain, according to a poll Barr's exploratory committee commissioned
from Pulse Opinion Strategies in early April. A poll by Rasmussen
Reports from earlier this month showed Barr getting 6 percent
nationally.

No Libertarian candidate for president has ever done that well. In
1980, Libertarian Edward Clark won 1.06 percent of the vote, and his
921,128 votes were the most ever for a Libertarian.

------------------------------------

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