Soldier4Christ
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« on: March 25, 2008, 12:23:32 AM » |
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Voting 'no' on Hillary, Obama and McCain Is this the year for 3rd party candidate?
Many conservatives are feeling left out of the 2008 presidential race, with the likes of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama battling for the Democratic nomination and the GOP endorsement likely going to U.S. Sen. John McCain, who has worked with Democrats on campaign limits as well as amnesty for illegal aliens, and in 2004 actually was thought of as a possible running mate for Democratic candidate John Kerry.
Some prominent leaders, including Focus on the Family founder James Dobson, even have said they will not vote rather than vote for the liberal leanings of McCain.
So is 2008 the year when a third-party candidate would find some traction among those disaffected by the abortion, marriage and national security stances found in the records of the three front-runners left in the race?
Charles Lewis, national outreach director for Christian Exodus, is one of those behind the launch of the new Save America Summit website, and believes it's not only time, it's overdue.
"Even the national conservative pundits who have drunk the Koolaid have to say 'hold your nose and vote for McCain,'" Lewis told WND. "Not one of them recommended voting for McCain in a primary."
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Among those joining in the effort are presidential candidate Alan Keyes, American Minute founder Bill Federer, Council for National Policy member Bob Fischer, Minuteman national executive Director Al Garza, Constitution Party founder Howard Phillips, Gun Owners of American executive director Larry Pratt, Minuteman Civil Defense Corps founder Chris Simcox, Operation Save America founder Flip Benham and dozens of others.
Lewis told WND the 2008 election cycle is too critical to wait through, with plans for the future. Given that supporters of traditional U.S. values – allegiance to country, love of family and reliance on faith – would not support the Democratic candidates, he said the establishment now is offering only McCain as an alternative.
And his support of McCain-Feingold campaign limits, his repeated "reaching" across the aisle to work with Democrats, and other issues, scare a lot of people.
That leaves, he said, only a third party candidate to meet the needs of conservatives, Republicans, Ron Paul Democrats, independents, Reagan Democrats and others. Lewis says it's just that the word needs to get out.
"We have lots of radio talk show hosts, and we aim to recruit more. There are thousands and thousands of Christian radio talk shows," he said. "As momentum grows, the pundits that have so reluctantly fallen into line behind McCain will feel the movement. Our goal is to reach a certain critical mass where they're going to have to stop telling people to stay home or vote for Hillary."
Keyes, one of the leading names being supported by those who are "thinking outside the box," confirmed to WND that he is in the process of evaluating his connection to the Republican Party.
His campaign has focused on the traditional values of America, protecting marriage, life and the nation, and he said it isn't an issue of his leaving the GOP, but of the GOP moving away from its traditional moorings, where he remains.
"A lot of people are disenfranchised," he said. "The system has been hijacked. There no longer is a commitment to the U.S. Constitution. I think Americans deserve an alternative. Elections ought to be about choices."
Among the two major parties, and candidates Clinton, Obama and McCain, there isn't a "choice," Keyes contended, with two publicly committed to a liberal bent he cannot support and "McCain trying to leave his conservative roots."
"The system now has all kinds of obstacles that have been erected to destroy the choice of the people," he said, and instead support the maintenance of power of those who are already in those positions.
That, he told WND, is what communism does: limit the choices but then call it a free election. Allegiance to a party is what is being emphasized, when it should be allegiance to a freedom-loving country.
"It's crazy," he said. "I don't think there's been a time in my lifetime when the two parties are so out of touch with the grass roots."
On the border issue alone, he said, "the elites have seemed to have lost their mind as well as their allegiance to our physical integrity as a country."
He noted the contributions of Phillips to the new effort and the possibility of working through the Constitution Party for a true change in America, a "revival."
"There is a real desire, a belief that some alternative must be developed," he said. "We can no longer be enslaved by the existing party structure. On the contrary, if things aren't representing you, there needs to be something else."
"My experience [is] a period of serious reflection with what I can do," he said.
The Constitution Party has acknowledged the possibility of having Keyes, former Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Roy Moore, Chuck Baldwin or someone else on its ballot in 2008.
"This is not a closed list, and it is possible that there may still be others who are considering the possibility of seeking the 2008 Constitution Party nomination," the organization tells website visitors.
The party already is on the ballot in 15 states and is working on the petition process for others. The website says, "That puts it well ahead of where we were this time in 2004! We are nearly finished with petition drives in Ohio and South Dakota and are making excellent progress in West Virginia, Hawaii and New Mexico as well. Petitioning has now commenced in a number of other states."
cont'd
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