InvestorsHub Logo
Followers 52
Posts 10921
Boards Moderated 10
Alias Born 06/25/2009

Re: None

Tuesday, 11/06/2012 10:15:43 PM

Tuesday, November 06, 2012 10:15:43 PM

Post# of 269
Johnson satisfied with presidential run, mum on future bid for elected office

Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson spent Election Day wrangling last-minute votes and staying upbeat in the face of possible defeat.

The long-shot candidate, a former New Mexico governor, knew he had essentially no chance of becoming the next U.S. president, but he argued he had delivered his message to the public and still wanted to get 5 percent of the vote, which would give the Libertarian Party equal access to federal funding in 2016 and easier access to ballots in all 50 states.

Johnson ran first as a Republican candidate in the primaries but appeared in only one primary debate because he was too low in the polls.

Supporters think federal funding would help a Libertarian in the next presidential cycle have enough resources to get to 15 percent in national polls, enough to enter the presidential debates.

"Regardless of the outcome today, ours is a mission accomplished,” Johnson told FoxNews.com. “We put a true small-government, individual-freedom option on the ballot in virtually every state and have assembled an organization that will carry that message forward.”

The 59-year-old Johnson thanked supporters and said the 2012 campaign was “just a step in the movement that we will absolutely carry on."

Still, he was taciturn about the meaning of “we” – specifically whether he plans to run again for elected office.

Johnson said he “fully expects” to remain a messenger for a liberty, small-government agenda.

“But this election is not even in the books yet. It is too soon to be talking about 2016," he added.

Spokeswoman Natalie Dicou said Johnson’s only plans right now are getting ready for the ski season and hiking Aconcagua in Argentina with his family.

Pollsters and other political analysts thought early in the general election race that Johnson might play the spoiler -- taking enough votes away from Romney to help Obama win the race. However, he barely ever climbed as high as 5 percent in most national polls.

In 1992, third-party candidate Ross Perot won roughly 19 percent of the popular vote, which many people think cut into GOP incumbent George H.W. Bush's take and put Democratic candidate Bill Clinton in the Oval Office, even though Clinton won just 43 percent of the vote.


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2012/11/06/johnson-satisfied-with-presidential-run-mum-on-future-bid-for-elected-office/#ixzz2BVFH36LJ

IMHO

Join the InvestorsHub Community

Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.