This summer, the Libertarian Party in Iowa embarked on a "10 percent strategy," hoping to win 2 percent of the vote for governor in order to secure major-party status in 2012. Iowa lacks a tradition of strong third-party voting like our neighbor to the north, and the unofficial results indicate that no alternative to Terry Branstad and Chet Culver cleared the 2 percent threshold in the governor's race. Iowa Party candidate Jonathan Narcisse came closer to that mark than Libertarian Eric Cooper.Read the rest for the full rundown.
Although no third party is set up to have a larger statewide impact in 2012, minor party candidates received an unusually high share of the vote in some areas. In a few races, the votes for third-party candidates exceeded the difference between the Democrat and the Republican. . . .
Nov 8, 2010
IA: "Unusually High Share" of Votes for Third Party Candidates in 2010
From Bleeding Heartland:
Labels:
IA,
independents,
Libertarian
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