Reform Party hopeful tries to calm the waters
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Greg Risling
NEWPORT BEACH -- What a week it has been for the Reform Party.
First, billionaire developer Donald Trump bowed out of the presidential
race. Then, Jesse Ventura -- the flamboyant wrestler-turned-governor of
Minnesota -- said the party wasn’t worthy of his support and labeled it
hopelessly dysfunctional.
The day after Ventura’s announcement, party leaders shouted and argued
with each other at a meeting in Nashville, Tenn., proving to the nation
it must make great political strides before one of their candidates can
win the presidential ticket.
The party’s nomination is still up for grabs and candidate Robert Bowman
believes he can garner enough support between now and the March 7 primary
for an executive bid.
“We have a long road before the party nomination,” said Bowman, who spoke
to about 20 residents in Newport Beach on Tuesday night. “Once we get
past that point, beating [George W.] Bush and [Al] Gore will be the easy
part. If I am involved in a debate with those two, I’ll clean their
clock.”
The 65-year-old rocket scientist, who grew up in California, has been
spreading his message across the nation for the past several months.
Traveling with his wife in the family motor home, Bowman has been
building steam with virtually no advertising or national media coverage.
“We don’t want Pat Buchanan trumpeting his ideas for this party,” said
Allan Beek, who invited Bowman to speak in Newport Beach. “Dr. Bowman is
a reasonable person with reasonable ideas. I have three hot-button issues
and he pushes all of them.”
Bowman must fend off challenges from party rivals Pat Buchanan, a staunch
conservative, and John Anderson, a former congressman.
One Florida newspaper called Bowman the longest of longshots, but with
the defections of Trump and Ventura, Bowman has emerged as one of the
party’s leading candidates.
With Buchanan omitted from the March 7 California primary election,
Bowman -- who bested his opponent in the Iowa primary last month -- could
keep gaining ground.
The victory may prove vital to his campaign. The candidate who wins the
nomination will receive the party’s $12.6 million in federal funds that
can be used for the presidential run.
Bowman said the party’s two factions -- neither of which he supports --
has produced undue friction may have caused irreparable damage.
“I don’t know if this will break up the party or keep it together,” he
said. “But I’d like to bring both sides together and then create a broad
coalition of third parties.”
Bowman is surely ambitious. Not only is he seeking the Reform Party
nomination, but also the Green, Pacifist and Labor bids as well.
His platform aims to dissuade corporate fat cats from national and
foreign politics. He said, if elected, he will let the people wield the
power.
The ideas come from a man who wants to see the FBI and the CIA
controlled, rid the country of “useless” nuclear weapons and issue
pardons to Leonard Peltier and Mumia Abu Jamal, among other things.
“One thing I have never been is a politician and I won’t start now,” he
said. “The only reason I want to go to Washington, D.C. is to give the
power back to the people.”
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