The party that advocates the small -- small taxes, small government, small infringements on personal freedom -- is trying to grow up and play with the big boys.
Seemingly better organized, and riding a wave of anti-government sentiment fueled by a poor economy, rising deficits and a national Tea Party movement, Libertarians want to harness the public's dissatisfaction with the two major parties to become a true force in Ohio politics.
Libertarians are running in every nonjudicial statewide race and have filed in a number of congressional and state legislative races where, even if their chances of victory are remote, some think they could play a role in close outcomes that could help determine which party controls both Congress and the Ohio House.
"The discontent with the two parties has stirred a lot of interest in people who want to get involved and are seeking an alternative," said Charlie Earl, the Ohio Libertarian Party's communication director and a candidate for secretary of state.
http://www.dispatchpolitics.com/live/content/local_news/stories/2010/02/20/copy/Libertarians.ART_ART_02-20-10_A1_L0GL6C7.html?sid=101
The LPO has done a fine job growing the party in that state and hopefully that can translate into some electoral victories in the near future.
eersandbeers
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eersandbeers
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Mon, Feb 22, 2010 11:04 PM
Feb 22, 2010 11:04 PM
Feb 22, 2010 11:04pm