The journey from there to here

This joint press release is from www.badnarik.org, the official website of Libertarian Party Candidate Michael Badnarik's presidential campaign:

PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES BADNARIK & COBB TO DEBATE IN MIAMI
September 27

JOINT NEWS RELEASE
For immediate release: September 27, 2004

Contact:
Stephen Gordon (Badnarik/Campagna) communications@badnarik.org 256-227-8360
Jason Neville (Cobb/LaMarche) jason@votecobb.org 504-338-3683

PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES BADNARIK & COBB TO DEBATE IN MIAMI
The Open Format Debate featuring the Libertarian & Green Party candidates will be a stark contrast to the other Miami “debate”

MIAMI—Michael Badnarik and David Cobb, the presidential candidates from the Libertarian and Green parties, will take questions from media, students and the public in an open forum the night of—and just feet from—the first televised “debate” between the two-party candidates.

The debate will take place on Thursday, September 30, at 5 p.m., at the Holiday Inn Ballroom, 1350 S. Dixie Highway, in Coral Gables. Pacifica Radio will interview audience members and debate participants following the two hour debate. From 9 p.m. until 10:30, the candidates and audience will watch a live broadcast of the restricted, two-party debate after which Badnarik and Cobb will offer their rebuttals.

Independent candidate Ralph Nader, who has been invited to participate in the open format debate, has not yet accepted the invitation.

Unlike the scripted and staged exchange between the two-party candidates which will take place directly across Dixie Highway from the Holiday Inn Ballroom, the open format debate will allow for uncensored questions from the public and students and will represent a wide range of viewpoints on the critical issues facing our country.

Two non-partisan student organizations, the University of Miami’s Council for Democracy and the Miami-Dade College Student Senate, are sponsoring the unrestricted, open format debate along with the Center for Voting and Democracy, a nonprofit, non-partisan Maryland-based organization. John Anderson, the former Republican congressman and independent presidential candidate who is the chair of the Center for Voting and Democracy, will present an opening statement prior to the debate.

Admission to the debate is $5 for students and $10 for the general public.

“This open debate will provide students in South Florida and throughout the nation an unparalleled opportunity to realize the richness, substance and diversity of American discourse outside the two-party monopoly,” said Edward Martos, President of the Council for Democracy, a non-partisan student organization dedicated to raising political awareness.


Comments
on Sep 28, 2004
Ah, now you didn't tell me you were up against a Greens party. Sorry but I have to support them in the debate. But I look forward to hearing the results of the debate Gideon. An excellent idea to dry and get the media focussed on minor parties I think.
on Sep 28, 2004
Ah, now you didn't tell me you were up against a Greens party. Sorry but I have to support them in the debate. But I look forward to hearing the results of the debate Gideon. An excellent idea to dry and get the media focussed on minor parties I think.
on Sep 28, 2004

lol...I had you pegged as a Green, champas.

What has been absolutely incredible in this year's election, though, is that the Greens and Libertarians, despite being vastly different politically, have been working together for mutual recognition. I think if we can keep this up, it will help both parties immensely

on Sep 28, 2004
Will this debate be broadcasted on CSPAN?

- GX
on Sep 28, 2004
I'm not sure, Grim. They've done a good job covering Badnarik and Cobb's campaigns so far, so it's a possibility.
on Sep 28, 2004
I think it is great to have a "real" debate, and I think there should be one including all of the "major" candidates. I don't know who this should include, but doesn't the secret service have some way of determening if you are a major candidate so they can decide who gets SS protection? That might be a good criteria.
on Sep 28, 2004
I think it is great to have a "real" debate, and I think there should be one including all of the "major" candidates. I don't know who this should include, but doesn't the secret service have some way of determening if you are a major candidate so they can decide who gets SS protection? That might be a good criteria.
sandy, Bush and Kerry have been invited to each of these debates. Each has declined. The invitation list has generally been Bush, Kerry, Badnarik, Cobb, Nader, and Peroutka.