anaconda
Member
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2007
- Messages
- 19,403
Wait, lets go back to this again. Why would the dummy candidate need to be on the KY primary ballot for President to be on the general election ballot? If Rand won the GOP nomination, why couldn't he just choose not to file for the Presidential ballot in Kentucky and have Kelly file instead? Does the law require that the person who actually wins the GOP nomination has to be the one on the ballot in the Presidential race? Even if that were the case, that would mean that it also wouldn't work for Rand to have Kelly on the ballot in the primary election either.
I'm assuming that the reason for "dummy" candidates is so that Rand can stay off the ballot for that particular race but collect the delegates at the convention(s). If Rand doesn't have a stand-in for the primary he can't collect primary delegates. If he doesn't have a stand-in for the general election he can't collect general election delegates. Kelley might have to run for POTUS in both the primary and the general. I'm assuming you are correct about your inference that Rand would need to stay off of the presidential general election ballot in Kentucky since he would have presumably not filed in that state (but I'm talking over my pay grade here..I don't recall that primary winners need to file a second time - I think they file just once before the primaries begin, no?..). I think the best approach is for Rand to get on the ballot in KY for Senate and mount an aggressive write-in campaign for POTUS in KY. Then it will look like he's fully committed and serious. Everyone will try to attack him as being not committed but he should be able to spin that away quite easily. Rand could say his attackers are inferring that Kentuckians are too stupid to write his name in the ballot booth and object to their condescending indignity. Might be a great approach.
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