I agree with this idea. I can see him winning that but not a Presidential race unfortunately.
Besides, Ron Paul can run in 2012 and has enough name recognition.
I can see him winning in 2016 just fine after Paul's term ends.
Until then, he should be in the senate where we need him right now at the moment.
After 2016 and 2020, Rand can win 2024 and 2028!
One way to do this would be to start in the presidential primary through the debates, then do a high-profile manouver to drop out and switch to the Senate race while endorsing Paul for President. That would give the political establishment one hell of a migraine...
Yes it is.its not a foregone conclusion Ron will run.
An old friend and former member of his Wash. staff tells me he is not going to run.
He is the son of Stewart Udall, who was Secretary of the Interior from 1961 to 1969, nephew of Arizona Congressman Morris Udall, and 1st cousin of Colorado Senator Mark Udall and double second cousin of former Oregon Senator Gordon Smith.
bump...now that Ron Paul is "50/50" in running maybe this is a good option?
There's also a Senate seat in 2014 versus Tom Udall who is quite an establishment hack:
If Johnson was the only liberty candidate in 2012 that would be the best option i.e. run for POTUS in 2012, get a fundraising base and then use that to run in 2014 for New Mexico US Senator. But since Ron is running as well I don't know if that's as good as an approach.
Even if he runs in 2012 for Senate against Jeff Bingaman that means the dollars will need be given to both Ron Paul for President and Johnson for Senate. There might be some cushion since the General Election for Senators doesn't really get started until March 2012 but that means Johnson will need to clear the GOP primary field.
Heck he could run in 2012 AND 2014 for Senate if he doesn't make it the first time. See John Ensign: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Ensign#U.S._Senate
We already saw Steve Pearce run in two statewide bids before, once losing in the primary and once getting smashed by Udall.
Domenici Jr. showed he faltered pretty badly in the Republican primary this year for Governor, which was his to lose. Allen Weh might be able to make a bid, but he lacks huge name recognition and has some bad dirt from the one attorney that was fired after a conversation with a White House aide.
I just watched him on Stossel and are not a fan at all of this guy. He wants to raise the social security age, possibly even to 84. So I am paying into it my entire life and possible will never see the benefit. Fuck him.
There are so many better solutions. For one, they could end the wars and close overseas bases to fund social security and stop robbing the fund for other things. They could also give me the money I paid into it back and abolish it. Instead of stealing money from me my entire life where I may never get to see the benefit in return.
http://video.foxbusiness.com/v/4510886/do-politicians-ever-actually-cut-spending/
http://publicpolicypolling.blogspot.com/2011/02/bingaman-would-be-safe-open-seat.htmlWe tested former Governor Gary Johnson, Congressman Steve Pearce, and former Congresswoman Heather Wilson against Bingaman. He easily dispatches all of them, leading Johnson by 11 points at 51-40, Wilson by 19 points at 56-37, and Pearce by 23 points at 57-34.
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Johnson is by far the most intriguing potential entrant on the Republican side. He's popular with 44% of voters holding a positive view of him to just 32% with a negative one. What's unique about his numbers is that there's almost no variation across party lines- 46% of independents, 44% of Democrats, and 43% of Republicans see him favorably. His unusual views on some issues have had the effect of making him unusually popular for a Republican with Democrats, but also unusually unpopular for a Republican with Republicans. If he could get through a Republican primary his crossover support might make him a pretty formidable candidate but doing that could be an uphill battle.
If Republicans want to win the state in an open seat situation Johnson might be the way to go though- he leads both Democratic House members in hypothetical contests, 44-43 over Martin Heinrich and 45-40 over Ben Ray Lujan. The more traditional potential candidates of Pearce and Wilson meanwhile would start out well behind the Democratic duo. Heinrich leads Pearce 53-38 and Wilson 50-39 in head to head match ups and Lujan leads Pearce 49-37 and Wilson 48-40.