http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2008/06/will_bob_barr_and_the_libertar.html

Will Bob Barr and the Libertarians Be a Factor in the Presidential Race?
By Stuart Rothenberg

It was sometime toward the end of Saturday afternoon, May 24, that I
concluded that the Libertarian Party is about as politically tone-deaf
as anyone or any organization that I have ever observed.

I had just watched a few hours of the party's presidential nominating
convention on C-SPAN and listened to party leaders falling all over
themselves about how former Republican turned Libertarian Bob Barr
would carry the party to new heights.

And I had heard Barr's running mate, professional sports
handicapper/gambler Wayne Allyn Root, say that he couldn't have a
better teacher than Barr to learn from and then mumble to those around
him that he would be the party's nominee for president in 2012. (Root
finished third in the presidential balloting and threw his support to
Barr after the former Georgia Congressman agreed to pick Root as his
vice president.)

You'd think that, at the very least, Libertarians would look
coldbloodedly at their own status and avoid the usual delusional
propaganda that we all are force-fed by Democrats and Republicans.
After all, they are a mere asterisk on the American political
landscape, and some of the convention participants were funny and
self-deprecating. But no, even the Libertarians are glued to the
ridiculous rhetoric that they are "in this to win."

The Libertarian Party nominated Barr on the sixth ballot, concluding,
apparently, that his political experience and name recognition would
give the party the visibility and credibility that supporters crave.
Talk about a total misread of Barr and of politics.

Barr, who has logged plenty of airtime on TV since he first was
elected to Congress in 1994, certainly will get some media attention
between now and November. But no matter what some people say, not all
media coverage is good media coverage.

The Almanac of American Politics 2000, authored by conservative
Michael Barone, called Barr "humorless," "pessimistic" and
"sarcastic." "He says that he has no close friends on Capitol Hill and
usually sleeps in his office," Barone wrote of Barr.

The three-times-married, four-term conservative Republican Congressman
has plenty of baggage (including speaking to a white supremacist
group), a long record of contradictions -- he introduced the Defense
of Marriage Act in 1996 but now opposes it and says he will work to
repeal it -- and a reputation for being arrogant and polarizing.

So with Americans apparently unhappy with the direction of the country
and disapproving of the job the Republican president and a Democratic
Congress is doing, the Libertarian Party has nominated a ticket that
includes a prickly, cold, personally unappealing former Republican
Congressman and a fast-talking, self-promoting bookmaker who describes
himself as the "King of Vegas."

Root's own Web site includes a quote from comedian Bill Maher about
the political hopeful: "He is loud, colorful, opinionated, often
outrageous and controversial." Oh great.

Root, by the way, is the author of "Betting to Win on Sports" and "The
King of Vegas' Guide to Gambling: How to Win Big at Poker, Casino
Gambling & Life!" Publishers Weekly said his 2005 book, "Millionaire
Republican: Why Rich Republicans Get Rich -- and How You Can Too," "is
rarely coherent" and "feels like an infomercial harangue interspersed
with the sort of off-the-wall rant that you would expect if you asked
your bookie for his political philosophy."

Now that's just what most Americans want in a vice president of the
United States and what the Libertarian Party needs.

Four days after Barr was nominated, I was reading through the
Libertarian Party's Web site and came across this gem under 2002 in
"Our History": "The 'Incumbent Killer' strategy was used to control
elections the LP could not yet win. It led to the defeat of Republican
Congressman Bob Barr and Democratic Senator Max Cleland."

Leaving aside the party's dubious and delusional suggestion that it
defeated those two Members of Congress, as well as three gubernatorial
candidates and another U.S. Senator, isn't there something strange
about the party nominating for president the same person that its Web
site is bragging about defeating just six years earlier?

No, Barr, who announced in December that he was leaving the GOP for
the Libertarians and had no plans to run for office, won't be a factor
in November.

People who will vote for Barr won't vote for either Sen. John McCain
(R-Ariz.) or Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) under any circumstance, so the
Libertarians aren't taking votes away from either man. This is a big
country, and the Libertarians may well get half a million votes. But
out of 120 million or so cast, that's a drop in the bucket. In
presidential politics, the Libertarian Party has established itself as
nothing more than a party of protest.

Some voters have always thrown away their votes, casting them for
parties and candidates who have no chance of winning. That's fine, of
course. It's a free country, and if some voters want to make a
statement about Iraq, drug legalization, taxes, the two-party system
or whatever, that's their right. But the Libertarians deserve no more
attention than any other largely irrelevant third party -- which isn't
much at all.
Stuart Rothenberg is the editor of the The Rothenberg Political
Report, and a regular columnist for Roll Call Newspaper.

-- 
andré

www.andrekenji.com.br
www.andrekenji.com.br/weblog

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