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How Does the Reform Party Choose Its Candidate?
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Pat Buchanan, Donald Trump, Cybill Shepherd, and former Connecticut Gov.
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Lowell Weicker are all reportedly considering running for the Reform Party
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presidential nomination. How does the Reform Party choose its candidate?
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Reform Party presidential candidates must prove their viability by
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conducting ballot drives as independents in some or all of the 29 states where
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the party nominee is not guaranteed a slot. (The party has ballot status in 21
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states where local party representatives have been active since 1996.) Reform
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Party leaders will validate candidates based on their progress toward getting
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on the state ballots. Since there are no objective standards for approving or
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rejecting candidates, the process can be somewhat arbitrary. And because the
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party lacks nationally recognized politicians--excepting Minnesota Gov. Jesse
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Ventura, who has declined to run, and party founder Ross Perot, who remains a
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wildcard--a celebrity, tycoon, or a commentator is likely to be chosen for his
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high name recognition.
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Next July, the qualified candidates will appear on a national primary
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ballot, which will be distributed to any registered voter who requests one.
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Votes will be cast by e-mail, phone, and conventional mail. Voters will rank
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their top three choices, and the candidate who receives a majority of No. 1
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votes will be declared the winner. If nobody wins a majority, an "instant
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run-off" will be conducted: The candidate with the fewest No. 1 votes will be
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eliminated, and all the No. 2 votes cast on his ballots be elevated to No. 1
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votes. This process of eliminating the last place finisher and elevating all
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No. 2 votes on his ballots will continue until a majority winner is declared.
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(If the No. 2 choice has been eliminated from the run-off, the No. 3 votes will
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be elevated to No. 1 votes.) The nomination will be ratified at the August 2000
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convention in California.
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Only 50,000 people voted in the 1996 Reform primary. If well-known
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candidates run in 2000, that number could explode, and the costs of
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distributing, auditing, and counting millions of ballots could bankrupt the
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party. Party leaders are also anxious about a takeover by a well-known
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candidate such as Buchanan, whose supporters could cast enough ballots in the
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primary to wrestle the party away from current members. Even a single-issue
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candidate, such as a staunch abortion opponent, might outperform an indigenous
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Reform hopeful. And Democratic or Republican voters could cast ballots for a
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nominee they hope will hurt the other party.
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In light of these concerns, incoming Reform Party Chairman Jack Gargan has
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said he would like to alter the rules before the primary next year. But current
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party leaders support the present process, saying the openness is crucial if
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the Reform Party is to grow.
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Next question?
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Explainer thanks Micah L. Sifry, who is writing a book on the prospects
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for America's third parties.
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