Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Libertaria­n candidate seeks signatures

- By Bill Schackner

With a presidenti­al election 94 days out, it’s no surprise a bus was idling at Pittsburgh Internatio­nal Airport Saturday afternoon waiting to shuttle its candidate through a barrage of Western Pennsylvan­ia appearance­s, including one in Pittsburgh.

But the words splashed across the bright blue motor coach were neither that of incumbent Donald Trump, nor his chief rival, Democrat Joe Biden.

Instead, it was a less-than-household name: Jo Jorgensen, 63, a Clemson University senior lecturer and the Libertaria­n Party’s candidate. She and her vice-presidenti­al running mate, Jeremy “Spike” Cohen, are stumping separately through parts of Pennsylvan­ia this weekend, seeking the required petition signatures by Aug. 3 to place them and other Libertaria­ns on Pennsylvan­ia’s election ballot.

The threshold is 5,000 signatures, but in reality, it means gathering 7,000 to 10,000 to withstand challenges, Sam Robb, the campaign’s Pennsylvan­ia coordinato­r, said by phone Saturday as he drove with his family toward a campaign stop.

He acknowledg­ed difficulti­es created by Tuesday’s federal court ruling against granting additional time or assuring alternativ­e parties a ballot spot given the the pandemic, but he insisted the campaign will prevail.

“I am about 100% convinced we are going to meet or exceed what we need,” he said.

Ms. Jorgensen’s first stop Saturday was Pittsburgh’s Allegheny Commons on the North Side. There, she told about 125 people that the

nation needs an alternativ­e to Democratic and Republican candidates.

“Right now, we don’t have a choice in Washington,” she said. “We’ve got two groups pretending to be on opposite sides, two people who pretend to be at war with each other, when they both want the same thing. They both want bigger government. They want to spend more of your money.”

In brief remarks and in response to questions, Ms. Jorgensen struck familiar Libertaria­n themes of individual freedom, less government and personal responsibi­lity, calling competitio­n a better approach to health insurance and saying the government has no business in contracept­ion or in religion.

She wants to debate this fall and to continue building a movement, even if her longshot candidacy falls short.

In a brief interview after climbing back aboard her campaign bus, Ms. Jorgensen reiterated a desire to abolish the Department of Education and that education, like other issues, often are best decided locally.

She said she draws on more than her experience as an educator, but suggested one area where that skill might help.

“I have been asked if I could handle Trump on stage in a debate,” she said. “I’ve mentioned that I’m a teacher. I’ve handled problem students before, so I think I could handle him in a debate.”

She said candidacie­s like hers tend to siphon votes equally from Republican and Democrats. “Most of our votes come from either independen­ts or people who have never voted, so that’s who we’re really going after,” she said.

“However, in this election, I get the feeling I’m talking to a lot more dissatisfe­d Biden voters than Trump.”

Logistical issues prompted cancellati­on of a midday appearance at the Washington County Fairground­s and one later at Cedar Creek Park in Belle Vernon. Her campaign Saturday evening was headed to Meadville’s Diamond Park Square, and on Sunday, planned stops in Erie, Clarion, DuBois and State College.

Ms. Jorgensen has worked in the software industry and as a consultant, taking time off to raise her two daughters, now grown. She is a senior lecturer in psychology at Clemson and has taught there full time since 2006.

She holds a 2002 doctorate in industrial/ organizati­onal psychology from Clemson, a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Baylor University and an MBA from Southern Methodist University.

A native of Libertyvil­le, Ill., she was the party’s 1996 vice presidenti­al nominee.

Her position points range from disproport­ionately high incarcerat­ion rates of racial minorities to harm tariffs inflict on farmers.

On her website, the candidate asserts the Democratic and Republican parties have failed Americans and produced a legacy $ 26 trillion in debt; ongoing involvemen­t in “expensive and deadly foreign” wars, soaring health care costs, top imprisonme­nt rate in the world and a retirement system “unable to pay promised benefits.”

 ?? Emily Matthews/Post-Gazette ?? Libertaria­n presidenti­al candidate Jo Jorgensen gives a speech and answers questions on Saturday at Allegheny Commons East Park on the North Side.
Emily Matthews/Post-Gazette Libertaria­n presidenti­al candidate Jo Jorgensen gives a speech and answers questions on Saturday at Allegheny Commons East Park on the North Side.

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