Will you primary your Congressman/woman?

Will you run? Primary?

  • Yes

    Votes: 3 10.7%
  • No

    Votes: 20 71.4%
  • Possibly... (ride that fence!)

    Votes: 5 17.9%

  • Total voters
    28
  • Poll closed .
I live in Randy "I've never seen a war I don't like" Forbes district, but he is entirely too well connected to money and we have a TON of military contractors in our district along with at least 4 military bases that I can think of right off the top of my head. My district lives off the military industrial complex. With that said, if I could raise enough money to make a stink I would primary him in a heart beat. I'm clean cut and don't have any skeletons in my closet, but I think Chris Stearns lives in the same congressional district (VA-4). If he does, he'd be the perfect person to draft.
 
I'd like to see more libertarians and libertarian-republicans run. Even if they lose by a landslide, they're still helping by increasing publicity and (possibly) getting more people to rethink their current positions or entire political ideology.

Personally, I can't because I'm only 20. Even if I were of age, I highly doubt I'd be electable because all of the congressmen/women in PA are like middle-aged, have lots of experience, and they just have that electable look. I'm 5'4", petite, and have a really high-pitched voice. No one would take me seriously.
 
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I am running in Texas. Join me in this fight for liberty!

Facebook page is good to go, working on website and other.

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Texans-For-Kory-Watkins/1429953260562406


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Radical hillbillies like me can't get elected. This topic does help us realize what a large segment of the liberty movement is; a bunch of outlaws with skeletons in their closet. Damn society for shunning us even though we are peaceful. :D
 
I'm more interested in state rep. For US rep I'd have to deal with New Haven where Democrats outnumber Republicans literally by 10 to 1. As a whole, my US rep district is 41.2% registered Democrats and 15.8% registered Republican. And the welfare addicts are not going to give up the gravy train on account of a little bombing, so a primary from the Democratic side is pointless.

On the other hand, some of the Republicans who have run for this US rep district in the past did not raise a single dime and neither did they spend any of their own money. So they demonstrated that a complete lack of funding is no bar to the Republican nomination.
 
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If you are just entering politics, it makes sense to run for a local office,or at mst, the state legislature, unless you have millions or very powerful connections. I enjoy wasting my time but even I have my limits. Fun thread, though :D
 
I don't own a suit and don't like dressing in that uptight manner but I would be willing to put my name in there if someone was running unopposed. Currently I have no rep in the house :( but there seems to be more than a few vying for the spot in the upcoming election.

I am curious what the minimum cost would be and how much effort it takes just to become a viable option.
 
On the other hand, some of the Republicans who have run for this US rep district in the past did not raise a single dime and neither did they spend any of their own money. So they demonstrated that a complete lack of funding is no bar to the Republican nomination.

You should switch to Democrat. Work with some liberal causes you agree with (ACLU, don't know your stance on abortion, park clean up groups, school volunteer groups, anti-war stuff, legalize weed). And oh yeah, do this in a strong Democratic district in NH ;) After a few years, Democrats will literally be asking you to run for office because no one else will. :toady:
 
I have nothing in my background that could harm me other than my posts made here and at other forums.

I'm also of age, know the issues, and have always been a great public speaker.

At the end of the day I don't have the extra money, although I have given it serious thought. You couldn't compete against a collection of well-connected wealthy individuals going for an open seat but going up against someone no one wants to waste their money on could work, at the very least you could open up some people's minds and that's ultimately just as important.

Don't forget the name recognition it would give you as well.
 
I don't own a suit and don't like dressing in that uptight manner but I would be willing to put my name in there if someone was running unopposed. Currently I have no rep in the house :( but there seems to be more than a few vying for the spot in the upcoming election.

I am curious what the minimum cost would be and how much effort it takes just to become a viable option.

In Iowa, if you raise $20,000 you'd be "competitive" for a state house race. A state senate seat would be twice that.

Each house district has approx. 30,000 residents and twice that for state senate.
 
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I am curious what the minimum cost would be and how much effort it takes just to become a viable option.

Varies greatly by district. In my district, which is New Haven County, no amount of money will make the Republican candidate competitive, and that's about what they raise (literally $0 in 2006 and 2008, about $60,000 in 2012.)

In the two Connecticut districts which are somewhat competitive, the winner will raise $3 - $4 million and the loser $1 - $2 million

Allan West, of Florida, raised more than $19 million in 2012 and lost. That's the most I have ever seen for a US House race, by far.

Justin Amash raised $1.3 million in a winning campaign while his opponent raised $2 million.

In the same state, Kerry Bentivolio raised $485,000 in a winning campaign while his opponent raised $684,000.

An easy way to check your district: http://www.opensecrets.org/races/index.php
 
In Iowa, if you raise $20,000 you'd be "competitive" for a state house race. A state senate seat would be twice that.

Each house district has approx. 30,000 residents and twice that for state senate.

That is a favourable district. It would almost be a waste for a liberty candidate to not run there, especially if it was a scenario where someone was running unopposed.


Varies greatly by district. In my district, which is New Haven County, no amount of money will make the Republican candidate competitive, and that's about what they raise (literally $0 in 2006 and 2008, about $60,000 in 2012.)

In the two Connecticut districts which are somewhat competitive, the winner will raise $3 - $4 million and the loser $1 - $2 million

Allan West, of Florida, raised more than $19 million in 2012 and lost. That's the most I have ever seen for a US House race, by far.

Justin Amash raised $1.3 million in a winning campaign while his opponent raised $2 million.

In the same state, Kerry Bentivolio raised $485,000 in a winning campaign while his opponent raised $684,000.

An easy way to check your district: http://www.opensecrets.org/races/index.php

Thanks. 1.1 million for my district and I think it was his sixth term, so his name was already out there, big time. I will be curious to see what the next winner of the seat will be spending out of the bundle of people who want it.
 
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People should do what they want in this fight for liberty no matter if it's big or small no matter if you have experience or not. Encourage people, stop the discourage.
 
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