Juan Williams: GOP Should Have Done What DNC (Did in 2016 &) Is Doing In 2020

*AGAIN* --- political parties have no restrictions on who they give their own endorsement. NONE. They will engineer anyone they want toward, or away from, that endorsement, at will. What Williams is saying here, and he's hardly the first, is that the Republican Party didn't have the will. They bought the "feelings". But they could have bounced him out. And he's correct. They've done it before.

You are 'projecting'.

The GOP has and continues to demonstrate its voters - the people - get to decide who their candidate is

How'd that Republican primary in South Carolina settle?

How 'bout the caucus in Nevada?

When's the primary in Kansas?

Alaska?

AridZona?

Hawaìi?

Oh wait. They're all cancelled. That's what "the people getting to decide who their candidate is" looks like, is it?

Wait wait, hang on, I'm just being handed a bulletin....

Williams is a lib

so naturally h3 wants to subvert the popular will

USMB News now reports that Juan Williams is the person responsible for running around the country cancelling Republican primaries. Wonder how he pulled that off.
 
I used to think Juan was a lot smarter than how I see him today.
He caught the TDS and is all in on the insanity towards our president.






He is paid to say the stupid things he does. He sold out to the DNC and will do their bidding, no matter what. He is now nothing more than a mindless parrot.
 
I used to think Juan was a lot smarter than how I see him today.
He caught the TDS and is all in on the insanity towards our president.

He is paid to say the stupid things he does. He sold out to the DNC and will do their bidding, no matter what. He is now nothing more than a mindless parrot.

Dude, you've been DUPED if you think Fox Shill/ Token "Lib-rul" Juan has sold out to anything but Faux News. :)
 
*AGAIN* --- political parties have no restrictions on who they give their own endorsement. NONE. They will engineer anyone they want toward, or away from, that endorsement, at will. What Williams is saying here, and he's hardly the first, is that the Republican Party didn't have the will. They bought the "feelings". But they could have bounced him out. And he's correct. They've done it before.

You are 'projecting'.

The GOP has and continues to demonstrate its voters - the people - get to decide who their candidate is

How'd that Republican primary in South Carolina settle?

How 'bout the caucus in Nevada?

When's the primary in Kansas?

Alaska?

AridZona?

Hawaìi?

Oh wait. They're all cancelled. That's what "the people getting to decide who their candidate is" looks like, is it?

Wait wait, hang on, I'm just being handed a bulletin....

Williams is a lib

so naturally h3 wants to subvert the popular will

USMB News now reports that Juan Williams is the person responsible for running around the country cancelling Republican primaries. Wonder how he pulled that off.


Ten states cancelled the Dimsocialist primary in 2012 when Barry Hussein was running for re election.

Pretty standard stuff. Sorry you are so ignorant.
 
*AGAIN* --- political parties have no restrictions on who they give their own endorsement. NONE. They will engineer anyone they want toward, or away from, that endorsement, at will. What Williams is saying here, and he's hardly the first, is that the Republican Party didn't have the will. They bought the "feelings". But they could have bounced him out. And he's correct. They've done it before.

You are 'projecting'.

The GOP has and continues to demonstrate its voters - the people - get to decide who their candidate is

How'd that Republican primary in South Carolina settle?

How 'bout the caucus in Nevada?

When's the primary in Kansas?

Alaska?

AridZona?

Hawaìi?

Oh wait. They're all cancelled. That's what "the people getting to decide who their candidate is" looks like, is it?

Wait wait, hang on, I'm just being handed a bulletin....

Williams is a lib

so naturally h3 wants to subvert the popular will

USMB News now reports that Juan Williams is the person responsible for running around the country cancelling Republican primaries. Wonder how he pulled that off.


Ten states cancelled the Dimsocialist primary in 2012 when Barry Hussein was running for re election.

Pretty standard stuff. Sorry you are so ignorant.

And his opponents were???

No need to look it up, I'll tell you right now. I had the option to vote in that primary. My choices would have been the following:
  1. Barack O'bama
  2. Uncommitted
What would be the point? So I voted in the Republican one where I had what we call a choice of something.

Here in Cackalackee today's Republican ballot offered:
  1. Joe Walsh
  2. William Weld
  3. Rump
Presumably had I been in the other Carolina last weekend, Mark Sanford's name would have been on it as well.

DO THE FRICKIN' MATH Dumbass.

You see Sprinkles, there's a lot more oppo to Rump in the R party than there was to O'bama in the D party. But if you cancel primaries that oppo isn't going to show up, IS IT.
 
Last edited:
*AGAIN* --- political parties have no restrictions on who they give their own endorsement. NONE. They will engineer anyone they want toward, or away from, that endorsement, at will. What Williams is saying here, and he's hardly the first, is that the Republican Party didn't have the will. They bought the "feelings". But they could have bounced him out. And he's correct. They've done it before.

You are 'projecting'.

The GOP has and continues to demonstrate its voters - the people - get to decide who their candidate is

How'd that Republican primary in South Carolina settle?

How 'bout the caucus in Nevada?

When's the primary in Kansas?

Alaska?

AridZona?

Hawaìi?

Oh wait. They're all cancelled. That's what "the people getting to decide who their candidate is" looks like, is it?

Wait wait, hang on, I'm just being handed a bulletin....

Williams is a lib

so naturally h3 wants to subvert the popular will

USMB News now reports that Juan Williams is the person responsible for running around the country cancelling Republican primaries. Wonder how he pulled that off.


Ten states cancelled the Dimsocialist primary in 2012 when Barry Hussein was running for re election.

Pretty standard stuff. Sorry you are so ignorant.

And his opponents were???

No need to look it up, I'll tell you right now. I had the option to vote in that primary. My choices would have been the following:
  1. Barack O'bama
  2. Uncommitted
What would be the point? So I voted in the Republican one where I had what we call a choice of something.

Here in Cackalackee today's Republican ballot offered:
  1. Joe Walsh
  2. William Weld
  3. Rump
Presumably had I been in the other Carolina last weekend, Mark Sanford's name would have been on it as well.

DO THE FRICKIN' MATH Dumbass.

You see Sprinkles, there's a lot more oppo to Rump in the R party than there was to O'bama in the D party. But if you cancel primaries that oppo isn't going to show up, IS IT.

Do you ever get tired of having your moronic lies exposed?:iyfyus.jpg:


Challengers[edit]
On multiple primary ballots[edit]
The following candidates appeared on more than one primary ballot.

Candidate Background Campaign notes Ballot access & vote total

John Wolfe Jr.
(Website)
(FEC filing)
(Wikinews)

  • Declared his candidacy in late 2011.[7]
  • Participated in the lesser-known candidates forum.[8]
  • Paid at least $1,000 for ballot access.[7][9][10]
  • Won 12 percent of the vote in Louisiana, and qualified for three delegates,[11] which the Louisiana Democratic Party stripped due to his lack of a delegate slate.[12]
  • Had the strongest showing for an Obama challenger with 42 percent of the vote in Arkansas,[6][13] qualifying for 19 delegates,[14] which the Arkansas Democratic Party stripped due to his lack of a delegate slate.
  • Unsuccessfully sued the Democratic Party to regain the stripped delegates.

NH, MO, LA, AR, TX
116,639 (1.43 percent overall)[6]

Darcy Richardson
(Website)
(FEC filing)
(Wikinews)

  • Announced his candidacy October 26, 2011.[15]
  • Paid $8,125 for ballot access.[16]
  • Had his strongest showing in the Oklahoma primary, where he won 6.36 percent of the total.
  • Suspended his campaign in April 2012 prior to the Texas primary.[17]

NH,[18] MO, OK, LA, TX
41,730 (0.51 percent overall)[6]
Bob Ely
(Website)
(FEC filing)
(Wikinews)

  • Born 1958
  • Entrepreneur from Illinois
  • Interim CEO of PayDQ Services, 2001
  • Owner of The Canton Press-News Journal, 2010–present
  • Created his campaign website and filed with FEC on November 28, 2011.[19]
  • Paid at least $4,500 for ballot access.[20]
  • Had his strongest showing in Louisiana, where he won 6.57 percent of the vote.[21]

NH, LA, OK, TX
29,947 (0.37 percent overall)[6]

Randall Terry
(Website)
(FEC filing)

  • Announced his candidacy in January 2011.[23][24]
  • Paid at least $3,500 for ballot access.[25][26]
  • Participated in the lesser-known candidates forum.[8]
  • Unsuccessfully attempted to run a campaign advertisement depicting photos of aborted fetuses during Super Bowl XLVI.[23]
  • Had his strongest showing in Oklahoma, where he received 18 percent of the vote, and qualified for seven delegates,[27] which the Oklahoma Democratic Party stripped due to his lack of a delegate slate.[28]
  • Continued his campaign as an Independent and appeared on the general election ballots in Kentucky, Nebraska, and West Virginia, receiving 13,112 votes.[29]

NH, MO, OK
22,734 (0.28 percent overall)[6]
On one primary ballot[edit]
The following candidates appeared on only one primary ballot.

Candidate Background Campaign notes Ballot access & vote total
Keith Russell Judd

(FEC filing)

  • Born 1958
  • Prison inmate serving a 210-month sentence at the Beaumont Federal Correctional Institution in Texas.[30][31]
  • Democratic Party and Green Party presidential candidate, 2008[32]
  • Paid $2,500 to appear on the West Virginia ballot.[33]
  • Won 41 percent of the vote in West Virginia for second place,[6][34][35][36] qualifying him for several delegates, which the West Virginia Democratic Party stripped due to his lack of a delegate slate.[37]
  • Filed with the FEC to run as an Independent candidate on October 10, 2012.[38]

WV
73,138 (0.89 percent overall)[6]
Jim Rogers
(FEC filing)

  • Born 1935
  • Perennial political candidate from Oklahoma[39][40]
  • Democratic Party presidential candidate, 2008
  • U.S. Senate nominee for the Democratic Party in Oklahoma, 2010
  • Filed with the FEC to run for president on December 12, 2011.[41]
  • Paid $2,500 to appear on the Oklahoma ballot.[42]
  • Finished third with 13.79 percent in Oklahoma,[6][27] qualifying him for three delegates, which the Oklahoma Democratic Party stripped due to his lack of a delegate slate.[28]

OK
15,535 (0.19 percent overall)[6]

Ed Cowan
(Website)

  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Participated in the lesser-known candidates forum[8]
  • Finished second among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 1.56 percent.[44]

NH
945 (0.01 percent overall)[6]

Vermin Supreme
(Website)

  • Born 1961
  • Performance artist and perennial candidate from Massachusetts[45][46]
  • Democratic Party presidential candidate, 2004
  • Republican Party presidential candidate, 2008[32]
  • Ran as a satirical candidate.
  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Glitter bombed Randall Terry during the lesser-known candidates forum.[47]
  • Finished third among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 1.37 percent

NH
833 (0.01 percent overall)[6]

John D. Haywood
(FEC filing[permanent dead link]), (Website)

  • Filed with the FEC to run for president on October 27, 2011.[49]
  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Participated in the lesser-known candidates forum[8]
  • Finished fifth among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.7 percent.[44]

NH
423 (0.01 percent overall)[6]
Craig Tax Freeze Freis

  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Successfully lobbied the New Hampshire Ballot Law Commission to have his legal middle name of "Tax Freeze" listed on the ballot.[51]
  • Finished sixth among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.66 percent.[44]

NH
400 (0.00 percent overall)[6]
Cornelius O'Connor

  • From Florida
  • Republican Party presidential candidate, 2008[32]
  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Finished eighth among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.44 percent.[44]

NH
266 (0.00 percent overall)[6]

Ed O'Donnell

  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Participated in the lesser-known candidates forum.[8]
  • Finished eleventh among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.37 percent.[44]

NH
222 (0.00 percent overall)[6]

Bob Greene
(FEC filing[permanent dead link]), (Website)

  • Filed with the FEC to run for president on December 13, 2011[53]
  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Participated in the lesser-known candidates forum.[8]
  • Finished twelfth among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.35 percent.[44]

NH
213 (0.00 percent overall)[6]
Robert B. Jordan
(FEC filing[permanent dead link]), (Website)

  • From California
  • Filed with the FEC to run for president on August 22, 2011.[54]
  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Finished thirteenth among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.26 percent.[44]

NH
155 (0.00 percent overall)[6]
Aldous Tyler
(FEC filing[permanent dead link]), (Website)

  • Radio host from Wisconsin[55]
  • Host of the WSUM radio show TMI with Aldous Tyler, 2010–present
  • Filed with the FEC to run for president on September 20, 2011.[56]
  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Endorsed Darcy Richardson before the New Hampshire primary.[57]
  • Finished fourteenth among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.17 percent.[44]

NH
106 (0.00 percent overall)[6]
FEC-filed candidates[edit]
The following presidential candidates filed with the FEC, but either did not appear on any primary ballots or withdrew before the primary elections.

Candidate Background Campaign notes

Jeff Boss
(Website)
(FEC filing[permanent dead link])

  • Born 1963[58]
  • Conspiracy theorist from New Jersey
  • "Vote Here" presidential nominee, 2008
  • Declared his candidacy with the FEC in July 2009.[59]
  • Based his campaign on the claim that he witnessed the National Security Agency (NSA) orchestrate the September 11 attacks.[60]
  • Amended his FEC filing in March 2012 to change his party affiliation to Independent.[61]
  • Appeared on the general ballot in New Jersey as the "NSA did 9/11" candidate and received 1,024 votes.[62]

Warren Mosler
(Website)
(FEC filing)

  • Declared his candidacy with the FEC in February 2009.[63]
  • Ran as a Tea Party Democrat[64]
  • Withdrew his candidacy in April 2010[65] to run for U.S. Senate in Connecticut.[64]
2012 Democratic Party presidential candidates - Wikipedia
 
*AGAIN* --- political parties have no restrictions on who they give their own endorsement. NONE. They will engineer anyone they want toward, or away from, that endorsement, at will. What Williams is saying here, and he's hardly the first, is that the Republican Party didn't have the will. They bought the "feelings". But they could have bounced him out. And he's correct. They've done it before.

You are 'projecting'.

The GOP has and continues to demonstrate its voters - the people - get to decide who their candidate is

How'd that Republican primary in South Carolina settle?

How 'bout the caucus in Nevada?

When's the primary in Kansas?

Alaska?

AridZona?

Hawaìi?

Oh wait. They're all cancelled. That's what "the people getting to decide who their candidate is" looks like, is it?

Wait wait, hang on, I'm just being handed a bulletin....

Williams is a lib

so naturally h3 wants to subvert the popular will

USMB News now reports that Juan Williams is the person responsible for running around the country cancelling Republican primaries. Wonder how he pulled that off.


Ten states cancelled the Dimsocialist primary in 2012 when Barry Hussein was running for re election.

Pretty standard stuff. Sorry you are so ignorant.

And his opponents were???

No need to look it up, I'll tell you right now. I had the option to vote in that primary. My choices would have been the following:
  1. Barack O'bama
  2. Uncommitted
What would be the point? So I voted in the Republican one where I had what we call a choice of something.

Here in Cackalackee today's Republican ballot offered:
  1. Joe Walsh
  2. William Weld
  3. Rump
Presumably had I been in the other Carolina last weekend, Mark Sanford's name would have been on it as well.

DO THE FRICKIN' MATH Dumbass.

You see Sprinkles, there's a lot more oppo to Rump in the R party than there was to O'bama in the D party. But if you cancel primaries that oppo isn't going to show up, IS IT.

Do you ever get tired of having your moronic lies exposed?:iyfyus.jpg:


Challengers[edit]
On multiple primary ballots[edit]
The following candidates appeared on more than one primary ballot.

Candidate Background Campaign notes Ballot access & vote total

John Wolfe Jr.
(Website)
(FEC filing)
(Wikinews)

  • Declared his candidacy in late 2011.[7]
  • Participated in the lesser-known candidates forum.[8]
  • Paid at least $1,000 for ballot access.[7][9][10]
  • Won 12 percent of the vote in Louisiana, and qualified for three delegates,[11] which the Louisiana Democratic Party stripped due to his lack of a delegate slate.[12]
  • Had the strongest showing for an Obama challenger with 42 percent of the vote in Arkansas,[6][13] qualifying for 19 delegates,[14] which the Arkansas Democratic Party stripped due to his lack of a delegate slate.
  • Unsuccessfully sued the Democratic Party to regain the stripped delegates.

NH, MO, LA, AR, TX
116,639 (1.43 percent overall)[6]

Darcy Richardson
(Website)
(FEC filing)
(Wikinews)

  • Announced his candidacy October 26, 2011.[15]
  • Paid $8,125 for ballot access.[16]
  • Had his strongest showing in the Oklahoma primary, where he won 6.36 percent of the total.
  • Suspended his campaign in April 2012 prior to the Texas primary.[17]

NH,[18] MO, OK, LA, TX
41,730 (0.51 percent overall)[6]
Bob Ely
(Website)
(FEC filing)
(Wikinews)

  • Born 1958
  • Entrepreneur from Illinois
  • Interim CEO of PayDQ Services, 2001
  • Owner of The Canton Press-News Journal, 2010–present
  • Created his campaign website and filed with FEC on November 28, 2011.[19]
  • Paid at least $4,500 for ballot access.[20]
  • Had his strongest showing in Louisiana, where he won 6.57 percent of the vote.[21]

NH, LA, OK, TX
29,947 (0.37 percent overall)[6]

Randall Terry
(Website)
(FEC filing)

  • Announced his candidacy in January 2011.[23][24]
  • Paid at least $3,500 for ballot access.[25][26]
  • Participated in the lesser-known candidates forum.[8]
  • Unsuccessfully attempted to run a campaign advertisement depicting photos of aborted fetuses during Super Bowl XLVI.[23]
  • Had his strongest showing in Oklahoma, where he received 18 percent of the vote, and qualified for seven delegates,[27] which the Oklahoma Democratic Party stripped due to his lack of a delegate slate.[28]
  • Continued his campaign as an Independent and appeared on the general election ballots in Kentucky, Nebraska, and West Virginia, receiving 13,112 votes.[29]

NH, MO, OK
22,734 (0.28 percent overall)[6]
On one primary ballot[edit]
The following candidates appeared on only one primary ballot.

Candidate Background Campaign notes Ballot access & vote total
Keith Russell Judd

(FEC filing)

  • Born 1958
  • Prison inmate serving a 210-month sentence at the Beaumont Federal Correctional Institution in Texas.[30][31]
  • Democratic Party and Green Party presidential candidate, 2008[32]
  • Paid $2,500 to appear on the West Virginia ballot.[33]
  • Won 41 percent of the vote in West Virginia for second place,[6][34][35][36] qualifying him for several delegates, which the West Virginia Democratic Party stripped due to his lack of a delegate slate.[37]
  • Filed with the FEC to run as an Independent candidate on October 10, 2012.[38]

WV
73,138 (0.89 percent overall)[6]
Jim Rogers
(FEC filing)

  • Born 1935
  • Perennial political candidate from Oklahoma[39][40]
  • Democratic Party presidential candidate, 2008
  • U.S. Senate nominee for the Democratic Party in Oklahoma, 2010
  • Filed with the FEC to run for president on December 12, 2011.[41]
  • Paid $2,500 to appear on the Oklahoma ballot.[42]
  • Finished third with 13.79 percent in Oklahoma,[6][27] qualifying him for three delegates, which the Oklahoma Democratic Party stripped due to his lack of a delegate slate.[28]

OK
15,535 (0.19 percent overall)[6]

Ed Cowan
(Website)

  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Participated in the lesser-known candidates forum[8]
  • Finished second among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 1.56 percent.[44]

NH
945 (0.01 percent overall)[6]

Vermin Supreme
(Website)

  • Born 1961
  • Performance artist and perennial candidate from Massachusetts[45][46]
  • Democratic Party presidential candidate, 2004
  • Republican Party presidential candidate, 2008[32]
  • Ran as a satirical candidate.
  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Glitter bombed Randall Terry during the lesser-known candidates forum.[47]
  • Finished third among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 1.37 percent

NH
833 (0.01 percent overall)[6]

John D. Haywood
(FEC filing[permanent dead link]), (Website)

  • Filed with the FEC to run for president on October 27, 2011.[49]
  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Participated in the lesser-known candidates forum[8]
  • Finished fifth among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.7 percent.[44]

NH
423 (0.01 percent overall)[6]
Craig Tax Freeze Freis

  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Successfully lobbied the New Hampshire Ballot Law Commission to have his legal middle name of "Tax Freeze" listed on the ballot.[51]
  • Finished sixth among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.66 percent.[44]

NH
400 (0.00 percent overall)[6]
Cornelius O'Connor

  • From Florida
  • Republican Party presidential candidate, 2008[32]
  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Finished eighth among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.44 percent.[44]

NH
266 (0.00 percent overall)[6]

Ed O'Donnell

  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Participated in the lesser-known candidates forum.[8]
  • Finished eleventh among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.37 percent.[44]

NH
222 (0.00 percent overall)[6]

Bob Greene
(FEC filing[permanent dead link]), (Website)

  • Filed with the FEC to run for president on December 13, 2011[53]
  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Participated in the lesser-known candidates forum.[8]
  • Finished twelfth among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.35 percent.[44]

NH
213 (0.00 percent overall)[6]
Robert B. Jordan
(FEC filing[permanent dead link]), (Website)

  • From California
  • Filed with the FEC to run for president on August 22, 2011.[54]
  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Finished thirteenth among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.26 percent.[44]

NH
155 (0.00 percent overall)[6]
Aldous Tyler
(FEC filing[permanent dead link]), (Website)

  • Radio host from Wisconsin[55]
  • Host of the WSUM radio show TMI with Aldous Tyler, 2010–present
  • Filed with the FEC to run for president on September 20, 2011.[56]
  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Endorsed Darcy Richardson before the New Hampshire primary.[57]
  • Finished fourteenth among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.17 percent.[44]

NH
106 (0.00 percent overall)[6]
FEC-filed candidates[edit]
The following presidential candidates filed with the FEC, but either did not appear on any primary ballots or withdrew before the primary elections.

Candidate Background Campaign notes

Jeff Boss
(Website)
(FEC filing[permanent dead link])

  • Born 1963[58]
  • Conspiracy theorist from New Jersey
  • "Vote Here" presidential nominee, 2008
  • Declared his candidacy with the FEC in July 2009.[59]
  • Based his campaign on the claim that he witnessed the National Security Agency (NSA) orchestrate the September 11 attacks.[60]
  • Amended his FEC filing in March 2012 to change his party affiliation to Independent.[61]
  • Appeared on the general ballot in New Jersey as the "NSA did 9/11" candidate and received 1,024 votes.[62]

Warren Mosler
(Website)
(FEC filing)

  • Declared his candidacy with the FEC in February 2009.[63]
  • Ran as a Tea Party Democrat[64]
  • Withdrew his candidacy in April 2010[65] to run for U.S. Senate in Connecticut.[64]
2012 Democratic Party presidential candidates - Wikipedia

READ YOUR OWN POST, DUMBASS. ***NONE*** of those, BY YOUR OWN MAPS, ran in North Carolina (your last couple didn't run anywhere). Do you need someone to buy you a map? I personally believe that some US Americans out there don't have maps. And uh, I belive that like such as South Arfrica and the Iraq, everywhere like such as, they should our education over here should help the US, or should help South Africa and the Asian countries, so that we can have maps for .... OUR CHILDREN! :eusa_dance:

Good GOD what a moron.
 
You are 'projecting'.

The GOP has and continues to demonstrate its voters - the people - get to decide who their candidate is

How'd that Republican primary in South Carolina settle?

How 'bout the caucus in Nevada?

When's the primary in Kansas?

Alaska?

AridZona?

Hawaìi?

Oh wait. They're all cancelled. That's what "the people getting to decide who their candidate is" looks like, is it?

Wait wait, hang on, I'm just being handed a bulletin....

Williams is a lib

so naturally h3 wants to subvert the popular will

USMB News now reports that Juan Williams is the person responsible for running around the country cancelling Republican primaries. Wonder how he pulled that off.


Ten states cancelled the Dimsocialist primary in 2012 when Barry Hussein was running for re election.

Pretty standard stuff. Sorry you are so ignorant.

And his opponents were???

No need to look it up, I'll tell you right now. I had the option to vote in that primary. My choices would have been the following:
  1. Barack O'bama
  2. Uncommitted
What would be the point? So I voted in the Republican one where I had what we call a choice of something.

Here in Cackalackee today's Republican ballot offered:
  1. Joe Walsh
  2. William Weld
  3. Rump
Presumably had I been in the other Carolina last weekend, Mark Sanford's name would have been on it as well.

DO THE FRICKIN' MATH Dumbass.

You see Sprinkles, there's a lot more oppo to Rump in the R party than there was to O'bama in the D party. But if you cancel primaries that oppo isn't going to show up, IS IT.

Do you ever get tired of having your moronic lies exposed?:iyfyus.jpg:


Challengers[edit]
On multiple primary ballots[edit]
The following candidates appeared on more than one primary ballot.

Candidate Background Campaign notes Ballot access & vote total

John Wolfe Jr.
(Website)
(FEC filing)
(Wikinews)

  • Declared his candidacy in late 2011.[7]
  • Participated in the lesser-known candidates forum.[8]
  • Paid at least $1,000 for ballot access.[7][9][10]
  • Won 12 percent of the vote in Louisiana, and qualified for three delegates,[11] which the Louisiana Democratic Party stripped due to his lack of a delegate slate.[12]
  • Had the strongest showing for an Obama challenger with 42 percent of the vote in Arkansas,[6][13] qualifying for 19 delegates,[14] which the Arkansas Democratic Party stripped due to his lack of a delegate slate.
  • Unsuccessfully sued the Democratic Party to regain the stripped delegates.

NH, MO, LA, AR, TX
116,639 (1.43 percent overall)[6]

Darcy Richardson
(Website)
(FEC filing)
(Wikinews)

  • Announced his candidacy October 26, 2011.[15]
  • Paid $8,125 for ballot access.[16]
  • Had his strongest showing in the Oklahoma primary, where he won 6.36 percent of the total.
  • Suspended his campaign in April 2012 prior to the Texas primary.[17]

NH,[18] MO, OK, LA, TX
41,730 (0.51 percent overall)[6]
Bob Ely
(Website)
(FEC filing)
(Wikinews)

  • Born 1958
  • Entrepreneur from Illinois
  • Interim CEO of PayDQ Services, 2001
  • Owner of The Canton Press-News Journal, 2010–present
  • Created his campaign website and filed with FEC on November 28, 2011.[19]
  • Paid at least $4,500 for ballot access.[20]
  • Had his strongest showing in Louisiana, where he won 6.57 percent of the vote.[21]

NH, LA, OK, TX
29,947 (0.37 percent overall)[6]

Randall Terry
(Website)
(FEC filing)

  • Announced his candidacy in January 2011.[23][24]
  • Paid at least $3,500 for ballot access.[25][26]
  • Participated in the lesser-known candidates forum.[8]
  • Unsuccessfully attempted to run a campaign advertisement depicting photos of aborted fetuses during Super Bowl XLVI.[23]
  • Had his strongest showing in Oklahoma, where he received 18 percent of the vote, and qualified for seven delegates,[27] which the Oklahoma Democratic Party stripped due to his lack of a delegate slate.[28]
  • Continued his campaign as an Independent and appeared on the general election ballots in Kentucky, Nebraska, and West Virginia, receiving 13,112 votes.[29]

NH, MO, OK
22,734 (0.28 percent overall)[6]
On one primary ballot[edit]
The following candidates appeared on only one primary ballot.

Candidate Background Campaign notes Ballot access & vote total
Keith Russell Judd

(FEC filing)

  • Born 1958
  • Prison inmate serving a 210-month sentence at the Beaumont Federal Correctional Institution in Texas.[30][31]
  • Democratic Party and Green Party presidential candidate, 2008[32]
  • Paid $2,500 to appear on the West Virginia ballot.[33]
  • Won 41 percent of the vote in West Virginia for second place,[6][34][35][36] qualifying him for several delegates, which the West Virginia Democratic Party stripped due to his lack of a delegate slate.[37]
  • Filed with the FEC to run as an Independent candidate on October 10, 2012.[38]

WV
73,138 (0.89 percent overall)[6]
Jim Rogers
(FEC filing)

  • Born 1935
  • Perennial political candidate from Oklahoma[39][40]
  • Democratic Party presidential candidate, 2008
  • U.S. Senate nominee for the Democratic Party in Oklahoma, 2010
  • Filed with the FEC to run for president on December 12, 2011.[41]
  • Paid $2,500 to appear on the Oklahoma ballot.[42]
  • Finished third with 13.79 percent in Oklahoma,[6][27] qualifying him for three delegates, which the Oklahoma Democratic Party stripped due to his lack of a delegate slate.[28]

OK
15,535 (0.19 percent overall)[6]

Ed Cowan
(Website)

  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Participated in the lesser-known candidates forum[8]
  • Finished second among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 1.56 percent.[44]

NH
945 (0.01 percent overall)[6]

Vermin Supreme
(Website)

  • Born 1961
  • Performance artist and perennial candidate from Massachusetts[45][46]
  • Democratic Party presidential candidate, 2004
  • Republican Party presidential candidate, 2008[32]
  • Ran as a satirical candidate.
  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Glitter bombed Randall Terry during the lesser-known candidates forum.[47]
  • Finished third among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 1.37 percent

NH
833 (0.01 percent overall)[6]

John D. Haywood
(FEC filing[permanent dead link]), (Website)

  • Filed with the FEC to run for president on October 27, 2011.[49]
  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Participated in the lesser-known candidates forum[8]
  • Finished fifth among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.7 percent.[44]

NH
423 (0.01 percent overall)[6]
Craig Tax Freeze Freis

  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Successfully lobbied the New Hampshire Ballot Law Commission to have his legal middle name of "Tax Freeze" listed on the ballot.[51]
  • Finished sixth among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.66 percent.[44]

NH
400 (0.00 percent overall)[6]
Cornelius O'Connor

  • From Florida
  • Republican Party presidential candidate, 2008[32]
  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Finished eighth among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.44 percent.[44]

NH
266 (0.00 percent overall)[6]

Ed O'Donnell

  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Participated in the lesser-known candidates forum.[8]
  • Finished eleventh among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.37 percent.[44]

NH
222 (0.00 percent overall)[6]

Bob Greene
(FEC filing[permanent dead link]), (Website)

  • Filed with the FEC to run for president on December 13, 2011[53]
  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Participated in the lesser-known candidates forum.[8]
  • Finished twelfth among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.35 percent.[44]

NH
213 (0.00 percent overall)[6]
Robert B. Jordan
(FEC filing[permanent dead link]), (Website)

  • From California
  • Filed with the FEC to run for president on August 22, 2011.[54]
  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Finished thirteenth among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.26 percent.[44]

NH
155 (0.00 percent overall)[6]
Aldous Tyler
(FEC filing[permanent dead link]), (Website)

  • Radio host from Wisconsin[55]
  • Host of the WSUM radio show TMI with Aldous Tyler, 2010–present
  • Filed with the FEC to run for president on September 20, 2011.[56]
  • Paid $1,000 to appear on the New Hampshire ballot.[7]
  • Endorsed Darcy Richardson before the New Hampshire primary.[57]
  • Finished fourteenth among ballot candidates in New Hampshire with 0.17 percent.[44]

NH
106 (0.00 percent overall)[6]
FEC-filed candidates[edit]
The following presidential candidates filed with the FEC, but either did not appear on any primary ballots or withdrew before the primary elections.

Candidate Background Campaign notes

Jeff Boss
(Website)
(FEC filing[permanent dead link])

  • Born 1963[58]
  • Conspiracy theorist from New Jersey
  • "Vote Here" presidential nominee, 2008
  • Declared his candidacy with the FEC in July 2009.[59]
  • Based his campaign on the claim that he witnessed the National Security Agency (NSA) orchestrate the September 11 attacks.[60]
  • Amended his FEC filing in March 2012 to change his party affiliation to Independent.[61]
  • Appeared on the general ballot in New Jersey as the "NSA did 9/11" candidate and received 1,024 votes.[62]

Warren Mosler
(Website)
(FEC filing)

  • Declared his candidacy with the FEC in February 2009.[63]
  • Ran as a Tea Party Democrat[64]
  • Withdrew his candidacy in April 2010[65] to run for U.S. Senate in Connecticut.[64]
2012 Democratic Party presidential candidates - Wikipedia

READ YOUR OWN POST, DUMBASS. ***NONE*** of those, BY YOUR OWN MAPS, ran in North Carolina (your last couple didn't run anywhere). Do you need someone to buy you a map? I personally believe that some US Americans out there don't have maps. And uh, I belive that like such as South Arfrica and the Iraq, everywhere like such as, they should our education over here should help the US, or should help South Africa and the Asian countries, so that we can have maps for .... OUR CHILDREN! :eusa_dance:

Good GOD what a moron.

Your incoherent post doesn't change the fact I exposed your lie that Barry ran unopposed.

Oops!
 

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