Pubdate: Fri, 12 Nov 1999 Source: Saint Paul Pioneer Press (MN) Copyright: 1999 St. Paul Pioneer Press Contact: 345 Cedar St., St. Paul, MN 55101 Website: http://www.pioneerplanet.com/ Forum: http://www.pioneerplanet.com/watercooler/ BIG QUESTIONS GREET REFORMERS Minnesota Party Will Vote On Splinter Action Members of Minnesota's Reform Party will meet Saturday to vote on a dramatic series of internal policy changes aimed partly at protecting the party from a takeover by supporters of conservative presidential candidate Pat Buchanan. At the convention in Bloomington, party delegates will consider setting new, tougher standards for who can be a delegate to the national Reform Party's nominating convention next summer. Another proposed rule change would give the state party's 20-member executive committee authority to divorce the Minnesota party from the national organization. Other controversial issues facing delegates Saturday include: Endorsing the legalization of marijuana. Changing the state party's name from the Reform Party of Minnesota to the Independent Reform Party of Minnesota. Stripping veteran state party activist Cedric Scofield of his leadership positions because he voted for California, rather than Minnesota, as the site for the national convention. The convention, which will feature a keynote address by Gov. Jesse Ventura at 9 a.m. and a straw poll on potential presidential nominees, has been planned for months as a platform-setting exercise. But the convention assumed new importance because of a split in the national party last summer between people attracted to Ventura and those loyal to Ross Perot, the Texas billionaire who was the party's 1992 and 1996 presidential candidate. Then, on Oct. 25, presidential candidate Buchanan announced he was leaving the Republican party and would seek the Reform Party nomination. Many Minnesota Reform Party leaders see Buchanan's effort as a grab for the nearly $13 million in public campaign money the party will get in 2000. The state convention will begin at 8:30 a.m. at Normandale Community College, 9700 France Ave. S. Party Chairman Rick McCluhan said he expected about 175 voting delegates will attend. "You are going to have the Ventura faction," McCluhan said. "I think you're going to have the Buchanan faction. Then there is a faction there that I think is still staunchly allied with Ross Perot." One proposed rule would set new qualifications to serve as a national delegate for people who have not been active in the state party for at least a year. It is aimed at preventing Buchanan supporters from flooding Reform Party precinct caucuses next March and electing pro-Buchanan delegates. Another rule change, also aimed at Buchanan, would allow the state executive committee to separate the party from the national organization. McCluhan does not now advocate separation, but he said top Reform Party leaders in several other states have asked him to lead a break-away from the national party if Buchanan wins the presidential nomination. "I don't think it's smart for a political party to open itself up to being taken over by any special-interest group that comes down the pike," McCluhan said. "I think that's stupid." Moonyeen Bongaards, a former deputy chairwoman of the state Republican Party who is leading Buchanan's Minnesota campaign, said she and a handful of Buchanan supporters plan to attend the Saturday convention. She called the effort to set an experience requirement for national delegate ridiculous and undemocratic. "If you want to keep your party small and elite, by all means put something like this in your platform," she said. But Iver Matz, convention coordinator, defended the anti-Buchanan rule changes. "When somebody comes in and says `I'm going to take it over and move it to the right,' that's really a slap in the face of a lot of people who have been active Reformers since 1992," he said. One rule change likely to be rejected by delegates is the proposal to change the party's name, McCluhan's idea for attracting independent voters. "Other than Rick McCluhan, I don't think I've met anyone that likes it," said Alan Shilepsky, who was the party's candidate for Secretary of State last year and is co-chairman of the platform committee. While much of debate Saturday will be over the proposed changes in the party's constitution, most of the delegates' time will likely be spent discussing more than 100 points of a proposed platform. The most controversial of those by far is the recommendation the party endorse the legalization of marijuana. "I smoked a lot of pot in my youth, but this is not something I think is going to resonate well with people," said McCluhan, who said he expects the plank may be amended or defeated. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea