Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Thoughts on candidate "leadership"

I don't want you to follow me or anyone else. I would not lead you into the promised land if I could, because if I could lead you in, somebody else would lead you out. -- Eugene Debs


As a candidate for Vice-President of the United States, I don't see myself as a "leader" per se. I'm not asking anyone to follow me. Rather, I'm pointing the way to a better place and asking voters to come with me to that place -- even, in effect, to carry me to that place on their shoulders by casting their vote for me (and, of course, for the candidate whose running mate I am). The nature of any "better place" in electoral politics is such that either we all get there together, or none of us gets there at all. Yes, this raises important questions about the value of electoral politics -- but that's the game we're playing, so let's understand the rules.

So ... why bother? As a candidate of a new, small "third party" I probably have a better chance of propelling myself to the moon by sticking my head between my knees and exhaling than of moving into a new residence at the Naval Observatory next January. I have no expectation that Charles Jay and I shall ride on your shoulders down Pennsylvania Avenue to an inauguration ceremony after November's election.

The simple answer is: Everything starts somewhere, and sometimes it has to start again and again and again before it really gets going.

My purpose as a vice-presidential candidate is to help find more shoulders for the next ticket to ride on. It's to help define the battle lines, to persuade as many of you as possible to the right side of those lines, and to arm you with a weapon: Your vote -- your check mark next to the names of candidates who stand for freedom, who stand with the productive class versus the political class, who are on your side, not just on a checklist of policy issues (although that's important, too) but on the fundamental question of who is entitled to run your life.

Voting for the Boston Tea Party's ticket this November constitutes a powerful moral statement that only you can make, and only for yourself. It is an announcement that you -- not the state, not the state's agents, not the state's cronies, not the parasitic "power elites," but you alone -- own your mind, your body and the product of your labor, and that you intend to exercise and defend that ownership.

That statement's value is not dependent upon how many people make it. Its value subsists in the act of you standing up to make it. Candidates and parties are mere lightning bugs -- your declaration of self-ownership is the lightning bolt.

Yes, the numbers are important in making that statement stick -- but that's where "leadership" comes in. Charles Jay is not the "leader." I'm not the "leader," either. YOU are your own leader, if you need one. Charles Jay, myself and the party we represent, are nothing more or less than convenient labels which we invite YOU to offer those around you as a tool for making the same statement, and taking the same leadership role, for themselves. The entire value of a libertarian political party or candidacy lies in its function as a metaphorical flag for people of like mind to gather round. The flag is not the parade. You, and those who march with you, are.

Remember this well: If the day comes when a BTP (or other allegedly libertarian) presidential slate rides down Pennsylvania Avenue toward the inauguration stage, that party and those candidates will not have set you free -- you and your fellows will have set yourselves free, or at least taken a giant step toward doing so. The candidates and the party will remain nothing more than labels representing YOUR decision to seize the day and seize your freedom. And if for any reason you are ever forced to choose between the label and the substance, I hope the correct choice is obvious.

Release: Boston Tea Party presents presidential slate for Colorado ballot

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
06/18/08
POC Thomas L. Knapp
media@bostontea.us
314-750-6993

BOSTON TEA PARTY PRESENTS PRESIDENTIAL SLATE FOR COLORADO BALLOT

DENVER -- America's new libertarian political party submitted its 2008 slate of electors to Colorado's Secretary of State Tuesday in anticipation of contesting this November's presidential election.

Wes Pinchot , chair of the state's Boston Tea Party, turned in the name of Charles Jay as that party's 2008 presidential candidate. Because of logistical problems in securing paperwork for national BTP vice-presidential nominee Thomas L. Knapp, the party's veep candidate here will be Colorado's own Dan Sallis, Jr.

Also submitted were the names of nine constitutionally mandated electors, who will cast votes in the Electoral College if the Jay/Sallis ticket carries the state in November.

The Boston Tea Party was founded in 2006 around a one-sentence platform: "The Boston Tea Party supports reducing the size, scope and power of government at all levels and on all issues, and opposes increasing the size, scope and power of government at any level, for any purpose."

The party's 2008 presidential slate was nominated Sunday and Monday in online voting, the culmination of a process which began in May with a Denver meeting of the party's national leadership. Colorado is the first state in which the party's ticket has qualified for the ballot. Party leaders say they also expect to seek ballot access in Florida, Louisiana, New Jersey, Tennessee and Utah.

The party's web site is located at http://www.bostontea.us.

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about 220 words

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Release: Boston Tea Party nominates 2008 presidential ticket

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
06/16/08
POC Thomas L. Knapp
media@bostontea.us
314-750-6993


BOSTON TEA PARTY NOMINATES 2008 PRESIDENTIAL TICKET


CYBERSPACE -- The first American political party to hold its national convention online has now nominated a presidential ticket online as well. In a 24-hour polling process on June 15-16, the Boston Tea Party's members chose media consultant and content developer Charles Jay as their 2008 standard-bearer.

"I look forward to the challenge of spreading a message that directly relates to increasing freedom and liberty," said Jay, 47, of Hollywood, Florida. "The Boston Tea Party's platform and program represent the true fulfillment of what the Founding Fathers envisioned."

Jay received the support of 76% of voting Boston Tea Party members in a nomination poll conducted using "approval voting," in which voters may support more than one candidate. Second-place finisher Robert Milnes polled 14%, while "None Of The Above," a required polling option in all party selection votes, received 24%.

"As someone who is not a professional politician, I see this as the continuation of an amazing journey," said Jay, who appeared on Utah's ballot as the 2004 nominee of that state's Personal Choice Party. "A tremendous learning experience and a great collaboration between people who are committed to decreasing the size, scope and power of an all-too powerful government."

Thomas L. Knapp of Missouri, the party's founder, received the vice-presidential nomination in a four-cornered race with Todd Andrew Barnett of Michigan, Chris Bennett of Illinois and NOTA.

The Boston Tea Party was founded in 2006. This is its first electoral outing, and its ticket is expected to appear on the ballot in several states.

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about 250 words


Party Web Site: http://www.bostontea.us
Presidential Campaign Web Site: http://www.cj08.com
Vice-Presidential Campaign Blog: http://www.myfrontporchcampaign.com

Vice-presidential acceptance "speech"

[Note: Cross-posted from the Boston Tea Party web site - TLK]

Good morning, Boston Tea Partiers!

I wanted to sleep on it before addressing my sincere thanks to all of you for honoring me with our party's 2008 vice-presidential nomination. The matter seems to me to be a bit more solemn than would allow for pre-written or "canned" material. So, let me open with that thank you. Thank you!

Thanks also to all of the other candidates who stood for nomination to this ticket: Robert Milnes, Todd Andrew Barnett and Chris Bennett and of course our presidential nominee, Charles Jay.

In the days leading up to our nominating convention I spoke with our nominee, Charles Jay, a number of times. We discussed the opportunities this election represents for the party and how best to exploit them. As the vice-presidential nominee, I intend to assist Charles as best possible and to follow his lead in bringing the Boston Tea Party's message of freedom to America.

Discussing those things with Charles and having an in-depth, detailed action plan are of course two different things. Planning for the post-nomination and planning as the nominees are also two different things. So, what I'm bringing to you this morning is at least partly speculation on my part. But here's how I see this campaign proceeding:

- Even as we speak, the party's Colorado affiliate is doing the last-minute work to put our ticket on the ballot in that state. The deadline is today. Because I was unable to get a notarized declaration of intent to our Colorado stalwarts in time, the vice-presidential slot will be filled with a stand-in candidate (possibly Todd Andrew Barnett, or Colorado's own Wes Pinchot).

- Other likely or possible states on which the BTP's ticket may appear include Utah, New Jersey, Louisiana, Tennessee and most especially Florida. Because our presidential nominee lives in Florida and is working with others to build a robust affiliate party, I expect that the campaign's main "personal" focus to be in that state. To the extent that my personal finances allow, I will make myself available to personally campaign in any or all of these states.

- The presidential campaign web site is under development and should be unveiled shortly. As a sort of side project / campaign diary, I'll be blogging at My Front Porch Campaign.

- Our Internet strategy is developing, but I consider its three main elements to be: a) The extensive publication of policy articles by the candidates, naturally linking back to campaign and/or party web sites; b) Developing a relationship with the "net roots" through frequent candidate conference calls for political bloggers and other journalists; and c) As much online advertising as we can procure (purchased and donated in-kind by party members and supporters).

Of course, the above simply covers how and where we'll be saying what we have to say. Just as important is the what. As the vice-presidential candidate, I consider the party's platform and program to be the appropriate lodestars.

Since the party's current program is two years old, I anticipate that Charles may develop a presidential campaign program which is slightly different (but no less, and possibly more, radically "smaller-government"). If so, I'll naturally conduct my own campaign activities with promoting that program in mind.

In my opinion, the purpose of this year's campaign is primarily to grow the Boston Tea Party by positioning it as the most reliably pro-freedom party in America. This kind of promotion must occur not only in states where we manage 2008 ballot access, but in states where we intend to secure ballot access two or four years from now (which is ALL of them).

Two years from now, I want to see local, state-level and congressional candidates running on the Boston Tea Party line in 20 or more states. Four years from now, I want to see our presidential ticket and candidates at all other levels on the ballot in 50 states, in the District of Columbia, and in the US territories. I know that you want to see those things as well.

Those goals are not easily achieved -- especially for a party which is unwilling to sacrifice its principles to achieve them.

This process is going to take a lot of effort on the part of a lot of people. Our 2008 presidential campaign is the first major step in bringing aboard those people and inspiring them to that effort. Thank you for entrusting to me a major role in that task.

Yours in liberty,
Tom Knapp
Boston Tea Partier for Vice-President

Friday, June 13, 2008

The Front Porch Campaign: An Introduction

Sez Wikipedia:

In American political parlance, a front porch campaign is one in which the candidate remains at home and makes speeches to supporters who come to visit but does not travel around or otherwise actively campaign.


I write this on the cautiously optimistic assumption that the members of the Boston Tea Party will select me as their 2008 vice-presidential nominee this coming Sunday.

If so, I suspect that my campaign will be, for the most part, "front porch" -- and that the porch in question will be a virtual Internet porch, namely this blog. I don't want all of you milling around in my front yard. My real front porch isn't big enough to harangue a crowd from anyway, and the little town I live in has more ordinances than it does people, many of which could, and probably would, be brought to bear on such gatherings (no word on whether my own proposed ordinance, which would change the city's name from "Greendale" to "Pyongyang-on-Mississippi," has been adopted yet).

I don't plan to stay home -- one nice thing about a virtual front porch is that it will pack comfortably into a laptop when I'm out on the hustings agitating for freedom -- and you don't have to pony up $4 per gallon to come see me, either. Just point your browser this way and BAM! ... here we are socializing on the steps with cold drinks and a lot to talk about.

So, that's that ... my "front porch campaign" really isn't, but let's just keep that between you and me and the fencepost. Yes, I have a virtual fencepost around here somewhere, too.

More later.