By Steve Brawner, © 2018 by Steve Brawner Communications, Inc.
Many voters say they want an outsider alternative to Republicans and Democrats, but at the ballot box they reliably select one of the two insiders. Such was again the case this election cycle.
Take, for example, Arkansas’ Libertarians. The party contested all four congressional races and all statewide races, but the governor’s race was the big one. Libertarians hoped their candidate, Mark West, could win 3 percent so they could avoid the legal requirement of collecting 10,000 signatures to qualify for the ballot in 2020.
They didn’t make it. West won 2.9 percent. His 25,753 votes fell 859 short.
West is a pretty good candidate who effectively articulates the Libertarians’ anti-government platform. He ran to the right of Gov. Asa Hutchinson on guns and government health care, which meant there was a population of unhappy conservatives receptive to his views. Hutchinson was certain to win re-election, so they should have felt free to cast their ballots for West.
Some undoubtedly did. He collected 9,434 more votes than the party’s candidate did in 2014. Still, it wasn’t enough. Continue reading Outsiders again can’t overcome political obstacles