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US midterm elections 2022
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Chase Oliver, US Libertarian Senate candidate, who pushed Georgia into another run-off election. Photo: Bloomberg

Georgia Senate run-off: Chase Oliver, the obscure candidate who could impact US national politics

  • Georgia’s election run-off on December 6 could determine control of the US Senate after Tuesday’s midterms failed to produced a winner
  • Libertarian candidate Chase Oliver drew some 2 per cent votes, leaving the two top contenders with less than 50 per cent of the vote

Few voted for him, but he has plunged American politics into uncertainty: Libertarian Party candidate Chase Oliver won just enough votes in his Senate election race to force a run-off that could shape the rest of Joe Biden’s presidency.

Oliver grabbed some two per cent or 81,000 votes in Georgia’s Senate poll at Tuesday’s midterm elections – enough to prevent his more powerful rivals, Democrat Raphael Warnock and Republican Herschel Walker, from taking the seat outright.

Now that sliver of support for Oliver, a 37-year-old Star Trek fan who ran his campaign from his basement, could determine the winner of Warnock and Walker’s December 6 run-off – and therefore, potentially, control of the upper house of the US legislature.

Despite the frustration levelled at Oliver for the costly run-off and keeping US politics on a knife-edge for weeks, he’s not upset.

“You can’t blame a candidate for just being an option on the ballot,” he told Vice News this week.

He told The New York Times: “I don’t think you can spoil something that’s already rotten … And I think that’s what the two-party system in Washington, DC, currently is – it’s rotten”.

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Oliver, who describes himself on Twitter as “armed and gay”, is not your typical political candidate.

He is categorically pro-gun, fiscally conservative, but also pro-reproductive rights, pro-legalisation of cannabis and against the death penalty.

In Fayetteville, a small town of 19,000 inhabitants in the suburbs of Atlanta, most of the people who spoke to Agence France-Presse knew little about him – save that he had caused the run-off.

“If it hadn’t been for him, one of the two other candidates would have won,” said Joe, a retiree who would not give his last name. “It’s a waste of money.”

Others have reproached him similarily on Twitter. “Why do you hate democracy?” he replied to one.

Oliver has insisted his candidacy is about giving voters more choice than simply the bipartisan divide of Republicans or Democrats.

Georgia Democratic Senator Raphael Warnock (right) and Republican challenger, Herschel Walker. Photo: AFP

As for the money – he told Vice he spent “like $10,000” on his campaign while working two jobs.

“So right now my ‘cost per vote’ is about 14 cents. That’s compared to a billion dollars spent by my opponents, much if it on negative attack ads,” he tweeted on Wednesday.

Democrats and Republicans have spent a combined total of more than US$241 million on the race so far, according to the Wall Street Journal – around US$30 for each of Georgia’s 7.8 million voters.

The midterm elections count is ongoing, but Republicans appear on track to win the lower House of Representatives – and if they take the Senate too, it will leave Biden a lame duck.

One Senate seat could make all the difference. Barring a Democratic victory in both Nevada and Arizona – which is still possible – it is in Georgia that Senate control will be decided.

Warnock and Walker are separated by just 35,000 votes, but he says he has no interest in endorsing either of them.

“They ignored the people who voted for me and they ignored the issues I support,” he told Vice.

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