Los Angeles Times

Can anyone really become president?

Vermin Supreme is running. So is Seven the Dog. Don’t forget Chocolate Pancakes.

- By Melissa Gomez

Over 700 people have thrown their hats into the race for the nation’s highest office, including the huge yellow one that Dan “Taxation Is Theft” Behrman wears to campaign events.

There is just about every shade of politics you can imagine represente­d by the people who run for president.

There is Vermin Supreme, the perennial candidate who wears a boot for a hat and wants to give everyone free ponies. Or 89-yearold Mike Gravel, a former senator from Alaska who allows two teens to run his antiwar candidacy. And there’s Seven the Dog, whose principal campaign committee is the “Puppy Party — Friends of Seven the Dog.” Yes, they all are running. Including two dozen prominent candidates running for the Democratic nomination, more than 700 people have filed with the Federal Election Commission to run. (Some, we hope, are in jest, like Chocolate Pancakes of Manchester, Conn.)

Qualifying is easy — an individual must be at least 35 years old, a natural-born citizen and a U.S. resident for at least 14 years. Filing is a cakewalk — presidenti­al hopefuls need to fill out a statement of candidacy with the FEC, which is free to do.

And so hundreds have filed: 279 as Democrats, 107 as Republican­s, 34 as Libertaria­ns, 156 as independen­ts and others under names such as the Independen­t Conservati­ve Democratic Party, American People’s Freedom Party or the George Wallace Party.

The majority are running long-shot campaigns most voters will never hear about. Some acknowledg­e they have little hope of gaining traction. Other candidates think, just maybe, there’s a shot that their message might catch on.

But it’s not likely. Those seeking the Democratic or Republican or third-party nomination­s must earn the support of delegates during state caucuses and primaries to have a shot at the national nominating convention. Candidates striking out on their own as independen­ts must petition each state and Washington, D.C., to get on the ballot.

Many candidates say they are running solely to draw attention to issues such as the marginaliz­ation of Native Americans, taxation or promoting a progressiv­e agenda. Others think the two-party system is damaging and want third parties to be a part of the election conversati­on.

Here are a few who have filed to run:

Dan Behrman wears a huge yellow hat decorated with bumper stickers reading “Taxation is theft.” The hat started as a gimmick, then became part of his campaign strategy, says Behrman, 38. Now, he wears it regularly when he hosts events, even to the airport.

“Don’t let the hat fool you,” he tweeted in June, “this is a serious campaign.”

The software engineer is running for the nomination of the Libertaria­n Party, which will pick its candidate in May at its national convention in Austin, Texas.

In 2014, Behrman ran as a libertaria­n for the Texas House of Representa­tives against Democratic incumbent Justin Rodriguez; he got 23% of the vote.

Behrman said he decided to run for president because the country is divided and he believes his experience as a software engineer gives him a practical perspectiv­e on finding solutions “without shutting one side down.”

He supports “firing” the IRS, ending the war on drugs and eventually abolishing taxes, according to his website. The “digital nomad,” the site says, is “currently running his presidenti­al campaign from Cancun, Mexico.”

Mark Charles, a citizen of the Navajo Nation, is running as an independen­t. It has been more than 30 years since a prominent Native American has vied for the presidency.

Charles, 48, a public speaker based in Washington, announced his candidacy May 28. His campaign, he said, focuses on the marginaliz­ation of Native Americans by the federal government and on race, gender and class inequality in the U.S.

“Because we don’t know how to acknowledg­e our history, and the racism and the sexism and the white supremacy that’s embedded into our foundation­s, we don’t know how to solve the problems we’re facing today,” Charles said.

He proposes an agency similar to the truth and reconcilia­tion commission­s in Canada and South Africa, establishe­d to give citizens a chance to air grievances and hold officials responsibl­e for change. He also wants to talk about the way indigenous people in the U.S. have been marginaliz­ed by the Doctrine of Discovery, a 15th century Catholic document that allowed Spaniards to claim indigenous land in the Americas.

Charles frames his campaign as an “18-month-long dialogue” to educate voters on American history through a Native American lens.

To run for president, Crystal Bergfield quit her part-time job in the parks and recreation department of Westminste­r, Colo.

“For me, deciding to run was recognizin­g I have the skills, I have the courage, compassion and an innovative way of thinking,” said Bergfield, 36, who served in the Army as a unit supply specialist from 2004 to 2006.

She was medically discharged from the Army following a sexual assault incident, she said. Bergfield used the healing process to become a better leader. In January, she filed to run as an independen­t; she believes divisions in the country are exacerbate­d by the two-party system. She said she is running a “valuesbase­d” campaign and would hold appointed officials and federal employees to high standards and target government corruption.

She has six paid campaign staffers, and friends have volunteere­d to help where they can, she said.

Bergfield recognizes that she faces “an uphill battle” as an independen­t candidate.

“For me, my eye is on being president.”

Mike Gravel didn’t really want to run.

The former two-term Alaska senator, known for his antiwar and anti-imperialis­m platform, ran an unsuccessf­ul bid for the 2008 Democratic nomination. He is perhaps better known for reading the Pentagon Papers aloud in 1971 into the public domain and breaking into tears.

He’s now retired, and he lives in Seaside, in Monterey County, with his wife and their 14-year-old dog.

But earlier this year, two teens from New York sent him a request: They wanted to support his 2020 run for the presidency.

In June, the teens, Gravel and his Twitter account were profiled in the New York Times Magazine, in part for their effort in using political humor to elevate their cause.

“In an online world where everything is understood to be a performanc­e, @MikeGravel looks us squarely in the eye and admits, ‘Every politician is just a bunch of kids in a trench coat — so why not make them actual kids?’ ” Jamie Lauren Keiles wrote.

“They’ve been running the show,” Gravel said of the teens. “I’ve not lifted a finger.”

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 ??  ?? CRYSTAL BERGFIELD, a former city employee in Westminste­r, Colo., recognizes that she faces “an uphill battle” as an independen­t candidate for president.
CRYSTAL BERGFIELD, a former city employee in Westminste­r, Colo., recognizes that she faces “an uphill battle” as an independen­t candidate for president.

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