Posted on 11/05/2013 12:56:21 PM PST by RKBA Democrat
A major Democratic Party benefactor and Obama campaign bundler helped pay for professional petition circulators responsible for getting Virginia Libertarian gubernatorial candidate Robert C. Sarvis on the ballot a move that could split conservative votes in a tight race.
Campaign finance records show the Libertarian Booster PAC has made the largest independent contribution to Sarvis campaign, helping to pay for professional petition circulators who collected signatures necessary to get Sarvis name on Tuesdays statewide ballot.
Austin, Texas, software billionaire Joe Liemandt is the Libertarian Booster PACs major benefactor. Hes also a top bundler for President Barack Obama. This revelation comes as Virginia voters head to the polls Tuesday in an election where some observers say the third-party gubernatorial candidate could be a spoiler for Republican Ken Cuccinelli.
Obama bundler Joe Liemandt helping fund Libertarian candidate in governors race
A spokesman for Sarvis provided no direct answers late Monday when TheBlaze asked about Liemandts Democrat ties and whether Sarvis had been recruited to split conservative votes as a way to aid Democrat Terry McAuliffe.
Were coordinating Sarvis interviews with Richmond, Norfolk and Charlottesville TV news teams to reach Virginia voters our first priority on Election Eve, John Vaught LaBeaume, Sarvis communications director and strategist, responded in an email to TheBlaze.
According to Virginia election filings posted by the Virginia Public Access Project, Liemandt contributed $150,000 of the Texas-based Libertarian Booster PACs $229,000 revenue. The Libertarian Booster PAC reported providing $11,454 to pay for signature collection, yard signs and campaign materials for Sarvis and another $4,690 for four Libertarian candidates running for the Virginia state legislature.
$10,000 of the Libertarian Booster PACs $11,454 in-kind donations to Sarvis went to secure a spot on the ballot.
Liemandts Democratic Ties
In March 2012, ABC News reported Liemandt was among three dozen of the Obama campaigns largest bundlers invited to a state dinner honoring British Prime Minister David Cameron. ABC News reported the invited bundlers, who also included Vogue editor Anna Wintour and Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein, were responsible for at least $10.7 million of the $250 million the campaign had collected to that point.
Liemandt and his wife Andra have also been contributors to the Libertarian National Committee, but their largess has been mostly focused on the Democratic Party.
In March 12, ABC News says Liemandt was among 3 dozen Obama bundlers invited to a state dinner.
Donations linked to Liemandts company, Trilogy, also has split its political giving between libertarian third-party efforts and liberal Democrats. During the 2012 election cycle, Trilogy poured $100,000 into another libertarian group Libertarian Action Super PAC while simultaneously making generous contributions to the Democratic National Committee ($92,400), the Democratic Party of Ohio ($12,453) and Barack Obama ($10,000), as well as more than $25,000 for Democrat Party organizations in Florida, Wisconsin, Iowa, Nevada and New Hampshire.
The Liemandts have some other friends in common with the Obamas. The couple and some friends flew to New York to have dinner with Berkshire Hathaway billionaire Warren Buffet in October 2011.
On Sunday, the Danville Register & Bee, a Virginia newspaper owned by Berkshire Hathaway, announced that, for the first time in its history, it would back a Libertarian for public office. It endorsed Sarvis, a political neophyte, saying he offers a real alternative this year, a break from the two-party paradigm that has not served us well. Signature Fight
According to campaign finance reports, the Libertarian Booster PAC focused the vast majority of its spending on getting Sarvis on the ballot, paying for people to circulate the petitions to collect nominating petitions for Sarvis.
News reports indicate the Sarvis campaign turned in 18,000 signatures, well above the 10,000 necessary to get his name on the statewide ballot.
But that didnt come without a court fight. Virginia election law says people circulating nominating petitions for a third-party candidate must be legal state residents. Court records show Darryl Bonner, a Pennsylvania resident who has been hired to circulate petitions in other states elections, joined with the Libertarian Party of Virginia to argue that rule violated the First Amendment right to petition.
The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals struck down the Virginia residency requirement last spring in an action where the American Civil Liberties Union of Virginia represented the Libertarian Party and Bonner. The State of Virginia indicated in October it would appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Sarvis Positions Questioned
Some political observers have questioned Sarvis libertarian chops, pointing to some decidedly un-libertarian views on issues ranging from the economy and tax cuts to climate change. Conservative radio host Glenn Beck touched on Sarvis policy positions during his broadcast Monday morning, urging Virginia voters to educate themselves before heading the polls Tuesday.
Terry McAuliffe looks like he may win in Virginia, if conservatives dont come out in droves. If you dont do everything you need to do, Beck said. McAuliffes Republican opponent, Cuccinelli, gained favorability with Virginia conservatives as attorney general after leading the states legal charge against Obamacare, but a victory in Tuesdays election is anything but certain. Obama bundler Joe Liemandt helping fund Libertarian candidate in governors race
This guy is not a Libertarian, Beck said of Sarvis on Monday. (Image: TheBlaze TV)
And so the first litigator against it you would think would be a shoo-in but, no, not necessarily, Beck added. And heres why: Because you got this libertarian who has taken nine points off, but hes not really a libertarian Do not be fooled Libertarians, if you indeed are voting for this guy, you need to know who he is, at least what hes saying because he doesnt sound like any libertarian I have ever met.
In addition, it was Cuccinelli and not Sarvis who won the endorsement of former congressman and noted libertarian Ron Paul and his son, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul two conservatives who share Becks concerns. Democratic Ploy?
So why should a Texan with such extensive ties to big-government Democrats pour money into a Virginia libertarian gubernatorial campaign that has virtually no chance to win?
The Center for Public Integrity offers insight on the power and strategy of PACs: Super PACs are allowed to collect unlimited contributions from individuals, unions and corporations to produce political advertisements that are not coordinated with any candidate, it says. They were made possible in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Courts Citizens United decision.
CPI illustrated the potential impact of strategic third-party candidates in the 2012 presidential race. Republican-turned-Libertarian Gary Johnson could potentially peel away some Republican votes in a tight Obama-Romney race. And Virgil Goode, nominated by the conservative Constitution Party in Virginia could have been a key to hurting Romney enough in that swing state to give its electoral votes to Obama.
With a divide between the Republican Establishment in Washington and its conservative grassroots base widening, could strategically leveraging a third-party be Democrats ace in the hole?
It’s surprising that this game still works...
But there is no doubt that it does.
I vote for the best candidate.
I once voted for a Green Party candidate for State Treasurer because the Republicans didn't run anybody and the Democrat was a felon, convicted of securities fraud (yes, you can run for office in NM even though you can't vote).
Democrats don't have to have an election-winning strategy and Republicans refuse to adopt one.
A Libertarian doesn't have to support drugs anymore than a Conservative has to support pro-life or a democrat has to support pro-choice. The vast majority of people in this country aren't single issue voters.
Sounds to me like you're one of those guys who complains "if everyone would have voted for MY choice in candidates, we would have won the election....." Well, true dat! LOL!
in conversing with “libertarians” all roads lead back to legalizing dope and hard drugs. Eliminate that from the equation and they sound similar to Republicans, the only difference is that they ruin elections by taking money from people that support the polar opposite of what they say they stand for.
If you are happy with being just election spoilers for the democrats, I don’t know what to tell you.
Nice gravy train it is these political parties.
Imagine Georgie Soros...funding a libertarian to quash a republican opponent to one of his own....
Thomas Jefferson and the rest of the founding fathers of this country were libertarians.
I don't know what to tell you.
Everyone who is shocked please contact me for a wonderful deal on a bridge.
/johnny
/johnny
Actually Libertarians and Democrats agree on many issues:
Open Borders
Unlimited Immigration and Illegal Aliens
Free Trade and Globalism
Relaxed Drug Laws
>> they sound similar to Republicans
Republicans like McConnell, Boehner, and McCain?
A lot of jobs and bennies all thanks to the WOD and the taxpayers footing the costs.
>> Actually Libertarians and Democrats agree on many issues:
And also disagree on many issues.
The LP platform doesn’t speak for all libertarians.
ping
Democrats have been funding Libertarians to split the R vote for a decade now.
Yup. And they've been pretty successful in derailing many of our candidates - particularly the more conservative ones.
WHEN will someone on our side start bankrolling Green Party candidates??
Thanks
The people derailing the "conservative" candidates are the establishment republicans.
They view the "conservatives" as an embarrassment.
I wonder how much of a payoff the Libertarian got for running.
That's my question as well, FRiend...
Check out the updated Wikipedia info on "Libertarian" Robert Sarvis:
According to campaign finance reporting Robert Sarvis received $137,380 in donations. Robert Scarvis was the largest single financial contributor to his campaign at $20,557. [60]
On election day, November 5, 2013, the Libertarian online magazine The Blaze reported that Sarvis' campaign was primarily financed by Austin, Texas software billionaire Joe Liemandt, a major Democratic donor also known as President Barack Obama's Bundler.[61] Liemandt, founder of the software company Trilogy, provided Sarvis significant support through Liemandt's "Libertarian Booster PAC. [62]
Sarvis took around 6.6% of the vote, a number nearly three times the size of McAuliffe's victory margin over Cuccinelli.[63] Sarvis' performance was among the top three strongest among any Libertarian candidate running in a state gubernatorial election.[64][65][66][67]
Sarvis was labeled as a Libertarian In Name Only (LINO) due to his alleged belief of climate change and support for GPS tracking and higher taxes.
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