Candidates of interest for libertarians were far and few between at the beginning of the presidential primary – now there are none. I asked the president of the College Libertarians who he was thinking about voting for. He said he was going to do one of two things: abstain from voting in the general election altogether or vote for the Libertarian Party candidate. Realistically whoever the Libertarian Party nominates at the convention in May has no possibility of winning and any vote cast to the candidate falls under the category of ‘disgruntled voter.’ Not even a pretty redhead has a chance against beating the party machinery of the ‘good ole boys’ (ahem, or girl).
Other libertarians have approached me and asked what I was going to do. To be honest, I have not decided yet. I will not abstain from voting but in no way will I cast a vote in favor of keeping the two party regime in power so I have two choices. First, I might write in Ron Paul to add to the disgruntled voter and show my continued support for his ideals. This might be considered a ‘wasted vote’ but the larger goal of getting the libertarian message (peace, fiscal conservatism, small government, liberty) to the people is more important than voting for inexperience, big government or more-of-the-same.
My second choice is to vote for whoever the Libertarian Party nominates which will show support for the party as well as the ideals. This is quite possibly the more rational choice of the two (and if Christine Smith gets the nod I might vote for her just because she is a smoking hot redhead). Mike Gravel, however, may punch a hole in the rationality as he appears to be ready to pursue the nomination after recently joining the party. While Gravel may be a decent guy, he still has no chance at winning the presidency and I just don’t appreciate him considering to run after just joining.
Of the three candidates it seems the only one gaining any libertarian support is Obama because of his stance on the Iraq War and creating more transparency within congress. Voting for Obama because of two issues is the like putting a Band-Aid on a wound from a shotgun blast. While it appears to be true that he has a classically liberal stance on some issues he is just as much of a statist as Clinton and believes government to be a force of good instead of a necessary evil.
Regardless of who gets the nod it looks like we are all in for another four years of big government and more spending.
-Ted Hamilton
Posted by Remi
Posted by Liz Laubscher
Posted by mclause14