The American Spectator

home
ADVERTISEMENT
Print Email
Text Size

Special Report

Barr Set High

The Georgian has his work cut out for him to win over Libertarians.

BURLINGTON, N.C. — No casual visitor to the La Quinta Inn on Maple Avenue would have suspected that anything politically significant was happening inside Saturday. Only the bumper stickers on the cars in the parking lot hinted that the hotel was hosting the state convention of the Libertarian Party of North Carolina (LPNC).

“Ask not what you can do for your country, ask what you can do for yourself,” declared a sticker on a green sedan. “Government: Causing more violence than it prevents since 10,000 B.C.,” said one sticker on a silver hatchback that also bore another sticker with four letters: “RKBA” — an acronym for the Second Amendment phrase “right to keep and bear arms.”

These are not merely bumper-sticker sentiments for Libertarians. At least one delegate was packing heat inside the hotel conference room where the convention met. Richard Evey’s Ruger .357 Magnum was safely holstered on his belt, but it was fully loaded with hollow-point bullets. Evey joked that he is the party’s own one-man Department of Homeland Security.

Such a gathering would seem a friendly environment for former Rep. Bob Barr, a board member of the National Rifle Association who served for more than a year as a regional representative to the Libertarian National Committee. He came to address the North Carolina convention and pitch his “exploratory” campaign for the party’s presidential nomination.

Invoking the name of Ayn Rand, emphasizing “the importance of the individual,” and denouncing government’s tendency toward “one-size-fits-all” policies, Barr told the three dozen attendees, “The Libertarian Party is certainly not a one-size-fits all party, because freedom itself is not one-size-fits-all.”

Barr said that “in the heart of every American beats the heart of a Libertarian” and outlined a strategy for party growth by appealing to mainstream interests.

“Every American is libertarian about something,” he said. “There is something in their lives — whether it’s in their own personal preferences at home, whether it is in the way they educate their children, whether it is in the way they express their religious and political ideas, whether it is how they run their business — every American is libertarian about something….One of the things we need to remind ourselves to do is to tap into that libertarian streak…that resides in the heart and the mind of every single American, and bring it out.”

The delegates applauded at the end of Barr’s speech, but afterwards it was clear that many of those attending the two-day state convention still viewed the Republican-turned-Libertarian with a good deal of skepticism. When a presidential preference straw poll was taken the next day, Barr got only one vote, compared to 17 for longtime LP activist Mary Ruwart, three for Massachusetts physicist George Phillies and two for Las Vegas oddsmaker Wayne Allen Root. (Ruwart is something of a “favorite daughter” among Libertarians in North Carolina, where she lived for four years before moving to Texas last year.)

Like Barr, ex-Democrat Mike Gravel got just one vote in the straw poll. The former Alaska senator also addressed the LPNC convention Saturday, delivering a speech in which he repudiated the Constitution, saying the Framers “cut a deal with the Devil for slavery.” Gravel told the Libertarians he had “lost faith in representative government” and called for direct democracy by ballot initiative — too much for one college student in attendance.

“I was sort of apprehensive about Bob Barr,” the 23-year-old said later, “but I left the room when Mike Gravel started talking about losing faith in representative government.”

SINCE BARR ANNOUNCED the formation of his exploratory committee April 5 at a Libertarian conference in Kansas City, his potential impact on the presidential race has been widely discussed as if his LP nomination were a certainty. “Come November, Barr conceivably could be to John McCain what Ralph Nader was to Al Gore in 2000 — ruinous,” George F. Will wrote in his latest Newsweek column.

However, the fact that Barr could finish in a straw-poll tie with Gravel — who only announced his conversion to the LP two weeks ago — is one indication that Barr’s nomination is by no means a fait accompli.

Barr’s status as a former member of Congress and his high profile in the media — he even had a cameo role in the comedy film Borat — might normally be considered decisive advantages against lesser-known candidates who, except for Gravel, have never held elective office. But when Libertarians convene their national convention Memorial Day weekend in Denver, the selection of their presidential nominee will be up to more than 900 delegates who may disregard those advantages. The LP doesn’t have a presidential primary system like the major parties do, and the nomination will be decided on the convention floor.

The Ron Paul stickers adorning the bumpers of several cars in the La Quinta Inn parking lot Saturday were one reminder of the quirky history of LP conventions. Like Barr, Paul was a former Republican congressman in 1988 when he ran for president as a Libertarian, but he got the party’s nomination only after waging a tough battle to edge Native American activist Russell Means at the convention.

Although one online poll of Libertarians showed Barr as a narrow favorite (with 30 percent, compared to 22 percent for Root and 17 percent for Ruwart), it is impossible to predict who will emerge May 26 as the LP’s nominee. Barr acknowledges that he would face a tough fight for the nomination, and notes that he’s still not an official candidate.

Page: 1 2  

topics:
Education, John McCain, Business, Environment, Constitution, NATO, Alaska

About the Author

Robert Stacy McCain is co-author (with Lynn Vincent) of Donkey Cons: Sex, Crime, and Corruption in the Democratic Party (Nelson Current). He blogs at The Other McCain.

Letter to the Editor

Related Articles

More Articles by Robert Stacy McCain

More Articles From Special Report

http://spectator.org/archives/2008/04/14/barr-set-high

ADVERTISEMENT

Most Popular Articles

Obama and the IRS: The Smoking Gun?

Jeffrey Lord | 5.20.13

The Liberal Union Behind the IRS

Jeffrey Lord | 5.16.13

My Generation’s Disease

Benjamin Brophy | 5.17.13

It's.The.Law

Ross Kaminsky | 5.20.13

Not Ready for Primetime Players

Daniel J. Flynn | 5.17.13

How Long Is This War?

Jed Babbin | 5.20.13

Downton's Class System -- and Ours

Tom Bethell | 5.20.13

ADVERTISEMENT