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US election: Trump v Clinton
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Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson listens as his running mate, Bill Weld, speaks at a campaign rally in Boston, Massachusetts, on Saturday. Photo: Reuters

This US presidential election is so nuts I might win, Libertarian candidate Johnson says

Libertarian Gary Johnson’s plan for capturing the White House hinges on voters following through on polls suggesting they dislike the Republican and Democratic presidential nominees more than in any election year in history.

“You know how crazy this election cycle is?” Johnson told Chris Wallace on Fox News Sunday. “I might be the next president.”

First, Johnson, the former Republican governor of New Mexico, has to be allowed into the nationally televised debates that for now are set to feature only Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump.  Johnson conceded it’s “game over” if he doesn’t secure a place on the podium.

To get there, the Commission on Presidential Debates requires candidates to secure 15 per cent support in five national polls. According to Real Clear Politics’ average of recent polls, Johnson is at 8.1 per cent, though he noted he has climbed to 10 per cent in five polls identified by the commission and is hitting 16 per cent in five states.
Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson and supporters at a campaign rally in Boston on Saturday. Photo: Reuters

The debates begin September 26 at Hofstra University in New York.

Americans want to see Johnson get the chance to take on Clinton and Trump, in far greater numbers than those who say they’d vote for him. In the latest Quinnipiac University poll, 62 per cent of respondents said Johnson should be included in the debates.

Johnson says his goal is to win the presidency outright, but there’s another path to the presidency for a third-party candidate. If neither of the mainstream candidates secure a majority - 270 - of electoral votes, the decision would be punted to the House of Representatives.

Johnson and his running mate, former Massachusetts Governor Bill Weld, depart from libertarian principles in some respects to the dismay of party purists. They have tried to marry the party’s philosophies of limited government and individual freedom with the fiscal conservatism espoused by Republicans and social views embraced by Democrats. 

Johnson wants to replace the corporate and income taxes with a national sales tax, arguing that such a levy with a “prebate” sent to households on a monthly basis would “create tens of millions of jobs”

He proposes removing marijuana from the Drug Enforcement Agency’s list of controlled substances, arguing that it is safer than other illegal drugs and even alcohol. Johnson previously was the chief executive officer of Cannabis Sativa Inc, a medical marijuana company. Ultimately, he said, the issue would be left to the states.

Polarization in Congress is sure to be even worse if either Trump or Clinton is elected, Johnson says. “Our pitch is the third alternative, which is a couple of Libertarians in the middle hiring a bipartisan administration, everybody Libertarian-leaning,” he said. “I think you can make a case that that third scenario might work.”

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: vote ‘crazy’ enough for johnson win
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