Pubdate: Dec 1999 Source: Liberty Magazine (US) Copyright: 1999 Liberty Foundation Contact: Box 1118, Port Townsend, WA 98368 Website: http://www.libertysoft.com/liberty/index.html Author: R. W. Bradford, Editor and Publisher AN OPPORTUNITY FOR THE LIBERTARIAN PARTY [...snip...] For the last 15 or 20 years, the Republicans and Democrats have used what they call "wedge issues," issues on which people's opinions are strong and that can therefore be used to induce them to abandon their traditional political behavior. The first wedge issue that we know about in American political history was slavery, an issue that, beginning in the mid-1840s, caused people to abandon their traditional political behavior and established the Republican Party as the nation's majority party by the end of the Civil War. It seems to me that there really is a wedge issue that would allow Libertarians to be victorious, provided we redefine what "victory" means. I think the Libertarian Party would enjoy a great victory if it could get 4 or 5 percent of the presidential vote. Of course, that is not a victory in the sense of electing people to office. But right now we are not even on the landscape. We are not a factor in the national political dialog. Getting 4 or 5 percent would put us in league with really credible third party efforts. Perot got 6 percent. And there's a wedge issue that can get us our 5 percent. I am talking about drug legalization. I'm not talking about medical marijuana; I don't think that impassions enough people. That's a good issue to use at the state level, because you can actually get a majority vote for it. But the surveys seem to show that most people who vote for medical marijuana don't feel very strongly about the issue. We didn't have revolution in Arizona when the state legislature undid the results of the medical marijuana initiative there. But marijuana legalization can get us our 4 or 5 percent of the vote. Depending on which survey you read, which I suppose depends on how much people are lying to the pollsters on any given day, somewhere between 5 and 15 percent of Americans claim to have smoked marijuana fairly recently. These people are not all deranged loners sitting in their garret apartments smoking marijuana; very often they have families. And most of their families don't want to see them put in jail. Very often parents who know that their teenagers are smoking marijuana have another strong reason to favor legalization; under current practice they are liable to have their homes taken away because someone in their home possesses marijuana. Even parents who aren't sympathetic, who are ready to go out and hire a deprogrammer to kidnap the kid and force him into a drug program, want to keep their home. I suspect that some of those people would vote for a legalization candidate because they don't want to lose the family house or family car. I think that the constituency for legalization is there, and I think that if enough noise is made it is possible for an LP nominee to get 5% of the vote by running on that issue. I'm not saying I'm sure that this would work, I'm saying that the strategy is plausible. And I don't know any other strategy that is. Ordinarily, I'm an advocate of testing strategies before rolling them out -- and testing them on a very low scale. But I don't think this is an issue that can be tested except at the presidential level. I don't think that getting a congressional candidate to run aggressively would work: most people are going to realize that it isn't going to make a big statement if the LP candidate gets 5 percent of the vote in the 17th congressional district. A good presidential campaign could easily run ahead of a congressional campaign. I have discussed this with Peter McWilliams, a person I thought might be a good presidential candidate. Peter has AIDS and cancer and is using marijuana to alleviate the nausea that is a side effect of the anti-cancer, anti-AIDS drugs he is taking. Peter has two problems about running for president. First, he can't leave California because, as a person who publicly admitted to using marijuana for medical reasons, he has been arrested and charged with a felony. Second, he thinks it would be a better idea to have a celebrity candidate. Well, I'm all for a celebrity, but if we can't get one I don't think it makes a great deal of difference. I think, for example, that if Harry Browne, the LP's most recent presidential nominee, would follow the strategy I've outlined, Harry would be a wonderful spokesman. So would Ron Paul. Both are highly respectable people who present themselves very well. If either of them were running for president and talked about legalizing marijuana, I don't think that people would be snickering behind his back and saying that he's probably running to his hotel room at night to smoke a few joints. The important thing, however, is to give this new strategy a try. We have invented the wheel and we have run it six or seven times, and except in 1980, when we had a very large amount of money, our method has resulted in less than half of one percent, no matter how good our candidate has been, no matter how hard he worked, no matter how hard all of us worked. As they say, "If you always do what you've always done, you'll always get what you've always got." In our case, that means spending millions of dollars and doing tens or hundreds of thousands of hours of campaigning and getting so few votes that we remain irrelevant, even invisible. Making drug legalization the central theme of the Libertarian Party's 2000 campaign is not a magic bullet. It won't allow the LP to elect a president or even a member of Congress. But it just might help us leap over the hurdle of irrelevancy, that invisible barrier that keeps the Libertarian vote well under one percent, that keeps our candidates out of debates, that leaves us off the political landscape. - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst