A Third
Choice for Voters Sick of Clinton, Trump
By Matthew
Tully
June 29,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "INDYStar"-
America is peppered with conflicted Republicans —
loyal members of the Grand Old Party who simply
cannot tolerate the notion of voting for Donald
Trump, but who also find the idea of casting a
ballot for Hillary Clinton unimaginable, if not
sacrilegious.
It’s a
quandary for many of you. If you’re among those in
this political black hole, I feel for you.
And, so,
today I am here to help. I’ll do that by introducing
my troubled Republican friends to Gary Johnson, the
Libertarian Party nominee for president. He’s a
former two-term Republican governor of New Mexico
and, thanks to this year’s political discontent, he
notched a head-turning 10 percent in a recent
national poll.
That’s
almost uncharted territory for a Libertarian. It’s
also a sign of how strange this political year has
been, Johnson said when speaking at the U.S.
Conference of Mayors meeting Monday in Downtown
Indianapolis.
“Here’s how
crazy it is,” the candidate said. “I might be the
next president of the United States.”
Well,
probably not. But his campaign looks almost certain
to accomplish two big things. First, he’ll likely
give the Libertarian Party its best showing in quite
some time. Second, he’ll give many tortured
Republicans an easy out on Election Day. “Hey,” they
can say, “I didn’t support my party’s nominee, but
at least I didn’t vote for a Democrat.”
Johnson
showed up in Indianapolis a day after Hillary
Clinton spoke to the group of mayors. His appearance
was marked by two major differences. First, in
contrast to Clinton’s appearance, which featured
heavy security, there was no noticeable security
before Johnson’s speech. I guess 10 percent gets you
only so much respect. Second, the audience of mayors
and media on Monday was only a fraction of what it
had been Sunday.
That’s not
meant to discount Johnson’s message, which also
might appeal to quite a few Democrats of the Bernie
Sanders variety (though it is clearly Trump who is
causing more of a moral quandary for party
regulars). Johnson called himself “a fiscal
conservative and a social liberal” and added that
his party “takes the best” of the Democratic and
Republican parties.
“I want to
keep the government out of my pocketbook,” he said.
“And I want to keep the government out of my
bedroom.”
The first
thing I noticed about Johnson, as he stood without
an entourage to the side of the stage before his
speech, was that he wore black-and-white tennis
shoes under his otherwise formal attire. That’s a
style you don’t see often on a politician, but I
liked it. (It’s a much better look than a
presidential candidate who goes around wearing a
goofy baseball cap over his suit and tie.)
As for the
issues, Johnson rattled off a long list of
proposals. He called for the legalization of
marijuana, term limits for politicians, free
markets, fewer regulations on small businesses, a
less interventionist military philosophy, reform of
Social Security that includes means testing and a
raised retirement age, and a replacement of the
current tax structure with a flat consumption tax.
“If you do
away with the corporate tax,” he said, “you will
issue pink slips to 80 percent of the lobbyists in
Washington.”
The mayors,
all entrenched members of the two-party system,
listened politely, and many even grabbed selfies
with Johnson after his speech. But there wasn’t any
talk of endorsements to come. Across the street from
the JW Marriott, where he delivered his speech, a
couple dozen supporters waved Johnson for president
signs at drivers. Many of those drivers surely
wondered, “Who’s Johnson?” but the candidate was
good-natured as he fielded questions about his long
odds after the speech.
He noted
that he and running mate William Weld, the former
Republican governor of Massachusetts, would be the
only third-party candidates on the ballots of all 50
states. He pointed out that his ticket included a
pair of “two-term governors who had won in heavily
blue states,” and who will be running against
“arguably the two most polarizing figures who have
ever run for president.”
Despite the
turbulent political mood, most voters, even
independents, remain tied to the two-party
tradition. Breaking through that tradition, Johnson
said, would be his greatest challenge. The key, he
added, is getting his poll numbers up to 15 percent
so that he’ll be granted a spot onstage during the
presidential debates this fall.
That, he
said, “is the only chance I have.”
If he wins
that spot onstage, Johnson will dismiss, as he
almost mockingly did Monday, Trump’s call to build a
wall on the border, to expel millions of
undocumented immigrants and to ban people from this
country based on their religion. But he'll also tag
Clinton as the status quo candidate and echo part of
the anti-establishment message that has propelled
Trump and Sanders this election year.
“Government
is for sale,” he said. “Government favor is for
sale. We can level the playing field.”
The
candidate in the black-and-white sneakers may not be
the next president — even this political year is not
that crazy — but he is likely to give many voters
something they desperately want: another choice.
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