David Weigel | April 28, 2006
As reported earlier by Jacob Sullum and Brian Doherty, former Massachusetts Gov. William Weld is the favorite to win the Libertarian nod for governor of New York. (The state allows candidates to run with the nominations of multiple parties.) No question: This could be the best thing that's ever happened to the 800-member party.
If Mr. Weld in the November election receives at least 50,000 votes on the Libertarian line, then the party would be awarded with an automatic position on the ballot for at least the next four years.
...
"The expectation is that we could replace the Conservatives in a kingmaker situation," the party's chairman, John Clifton, a social worker in Queens, said. He said he would like the party to use that leverage to "influence Republicans on Rockefeller and legalizing marijuana." New York's Rockefeller drug laws, which were adopted while Nelson Rockefeller was governor in 1973, mandate long prison sentences for those convicted of drug crimes. He said he hoped his party would follow the trajectory of the Green Party, which grew exponentially between 1998 and 2002, to about 30,000 members.
More than that, the Greens have actually elected at least one headline-making mayor in the city of New Paltz.
It's more likely than Weld winning the election, at any rate.
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We can't have an actual serious candidate filling the Libertarian slot in a political contest. That would be like electing a social worker to the party's state chair. Surely Weld has some insufficiently pure political stances.
has anyone ever been governor of more than one state
before?
seems a bit odd to me.
has anyone ever been governor of more than one state
before?
I thought Sam Houston, but wasn't quite sure. So I googled. Whadya
know?
Courtesy of wikipedia:
"As of 2006, Houston was the only person in U.S. history to have
been the governor of two different states - Tennessee and
Texas."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam_Houston
Finally the Libertarian Party might take advantage of New York's
cross-endorsement system.
They probably won't replace the Conservative Party as a factor, but
they might eclipse the Independence Party which has suffered
internal division over the power of the Fulani faction (the New
Alliance Party).
After it became clear the Conservative Party would not back him,
Weld said he would seek the Independence Party nomination. However
the IP backed Spitzer for Attorney-General, and has a PR problem
because of Fulani, so the LP looks like the best bet for Weld's
second ballot line.
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