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Third-party candidates square off in debate with little fanfare

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Perhaps even more significant might be Virginia, where polls show the race a tie between Obama and Romney. But the right leaning Johnson and Goode are the only other two candidates on the ballot, and Goode as a former Virginia congressman holds a real potential to draw votes from Romney’s conservative flank.

Tuesday’s debate was organized by the little known Free and Equal Elections Foundation. It is a non-profit founded by 31-year-old Christina Tobin, CEO of Free and Equal Inc., a firm that specializes in circulating political nominating petitions. She also is vice-president of the Chicago-based Taxpayers United of America, run by her father, Jim Tobin.

That group, under various names, has served for decades as a vehicle to oppose tax hikes for any reason as well as disseminate the elder Tobin’s revisionist take on history. That includes essays attacking the integrity and motives of Abraham Lincoln and Franklin Roosevelt, the former for leading the nation into Civil War and the latter for getting America into World War II.

Christina Tobin’s foundation said Tuesday’s debate was aimed at giving voice to a broader range of candidates. Debate hosts such as the Commission on Presidential Debates typically set strict ground rules to set a high bar for third party candidates to qualify for a seat at the table or place at the podium.

That’s in part because Lincoln-Douglas quality these events are not, and it’s hard enough keeping them on track and substantive. A crowd on the stage just makes it all the harder.

Think back to the onslaught of Republican presidential primary debates in this campaign, which sometimes descended into shout fests and in the early going included as many as nine candidates.

One of those was Johnson, a former New Mexico governor, who gained no traction, was excluded from later Republican debates and eventually became the Libertarian Party nominee. As its presidential candidate, Johnson was shut out of the Obama/Romney debates, leading to his consolation appearance in Chicago.

Among his debate opponents were the left-leaning Stein, a Massachusetts physician, arrested last week trying to crash the town hall style presidential debate at Long Island’s Hofstra University.

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