Less than two weeks after his controversial departure from CNN, Lou Dobbs
affirmed his intentions to run for president in 2012�"Yes is the answer,"
Dobbs he replied on Fred Thompson's radio show�and third-party heavyweights
are right behind him. Currently Dobbs is still without a party, and though
his harsh words for Obama and conservative stance on immigration have led
some to believe he would run as a Republican, third-party political
operatives are already wooing him. Former Sen. Dean Barkley, the Reform
Party member who managed Minnesota Gov. Jesse Ventura's winning third-party
campaign, says he's urged Dobbs to run before and thinks him "a perfect
candidate for us." Bay Buchanan, who ran Pat Buchanan's 2000 presidential
campaign, says the "enormous movement" for third-party candidates is even
stronger now than when Pat ran, adding "I think he can win." Bill Hillsman,
who worked as a message man for famed third-party gubernatorial candidates
Kinky Friedman and Chris Daggett, notes that Dobbs has "an audience" and
national recognition. This leaves him uniquely poised to give the two-party
system a run for its money, particularly in New Jersey, where Dobbs resides
and Daggett ran. Skeptics, however, warn the the electoral college won't be
working in his favor.
Read it at Politico
http://www.thedailybeast.com/partnersfeed/?cid=csi:cheatsheet&f=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.politico.com%2Fnews%2Fstories%2F1109%2F29861.html
Grifters, illiterates, sex perverts and religious nuts - that's all the
right has.
Sounds like National Socialism, 1933. Sieg Heil!