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Third-party candidates square off in debate with little fanfare

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Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein, right, and Vice Presidential candidate Cheri Honkala are stopped and arrested for attempting to gain access to the campus of Hofstra University, site of the second of three presidential debates between Mitt Romney and Barack Obama, on Tuesday, October 16, 2012. (Photo by Brian Cahn/Zuma Press/MCT)

(MCT) — CHICAGO — As debates go, it was hardly the Romney vs. Obama beat down in Boca Raton or even the curious sleepwalk in Denver.

But Chicago, where the modern presidential debate began in 1960 with John Kennedy and Richard Nixon, played host to another presidential faceoff Tuesday night, albeit with candidates from the undercard of Election 2012.

Libertarian Gary Johnson, the Green Party’s Jill Stein, Virgil Goode of the Constitution Party and Rocky Anderson of the Justice Party met in a debate moderated by Larry King, formerly of CNN.

The event, hosted by a group with links to a self-styled Chicago-based anti-tax crusader, was held at the Chicago Hilton and Towers, ground zero for so much politically inspired chaos in the 1968 presidential race.

This time, however, it was unlikely the whole world was watching.

As recently as Monday, organizers were offering half-price ticket specials and complaining of being ignored by TV and the big cable news networks.

Such is the conundrum faced most every election season by candidates from off brand parties.

“The whole thing is sort of like a dog chasing his tail,” said Tobe Berkovitz, a veteran political media consultant who now teaches advertising at Boston University. “You need to get attention to break into the media — and to get attention, you need to have broken into the media.”

Despite all the voter frustration with polarization and gridlock, politics in the U.S. remains largely a two-party affair and those outside the mainstream have a hard time selling their relevance beyond a small but passionate core of supporters.

Not that any of Tuesday’s participants has a chance of coming close on Nov. 6. But there might be a spoiler alert, as in they could spoil the election for one of the bigger fish on the ballot.

Just ask supporters of Al Gore, who believed the 2000 candidacy of consumer activist Ralph Nader siphoned off just enough votes in critical Florida to spark a sequence of events that sent the election to the U.S. Supreme Court and ultimately to George W. Bush.

In 2012, Florida is again a swing state and this time its ballot lists 18 presidential contenders, including comedian Roseanne Barr.

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