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Monday, May 14, 2007
Steve Chapman :: Townhall.com Columnist
What's Wrong With a Clutter of Candidates?
by Steve Chapman
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In more than one presidential election, I've walked into the polling booth, looked at the names on the ballot, crumpled to my knees in anguish, sobbed inconsolably and cried to the heavens, "Are those the only choices?" Okay, maybe I don't go through all the theatrics, and probably you don't, either, but we both know the feeling.

Well, the campaign gods must have been listening, because this year, we have more candidates than the Everglades has alligators. This abundance can be inconvenient, as when I picked up The New York Times the morning after the Republican presidential debate, saw a photo of the 10 participants, and realized I didn't know half of them from the clerk at Ace Hardware.

But having to bone up so you can distinguish Rep. Duncan Hunter of California from former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee is a small price to pay for an array of options in the Republican primaries. The Democrats also have a crowded field. In the next debate, seven of them will divvy up 10 percent of the allotted time, and Delaware Sen. Joe Biden will take the rest.

Yet some people think all those choices are a terrible burden. An editorial in The Washington Post grumped that there are "too many candidates talking about too much." In the Post's view, "Voters trying to sort out their presidential choices aren't helped by debates cluttered with the likes of Mike Gravel (hint: he's a former senator from Alaska) on the Democratic side and Ron Paul (hint: he's a libertarian House member from Texas) among the Republicans."

Of course some people think it's not helpful to have the debates cluttered with the likes of Hillary Clinton and John McCain (hint: they're overexposed Washington veterans with a penchant for doing whatever it takes to win). But the Post's passion for the neat and orderly suggests that someone has been spending too much time with Martha Stewart.

In a nation of more than 300 million people in a campaign that still has a year and a half to run, is it absurd to imagine there might be 18 individuals who warrant consideration? If anything, the problem is that plenty of people who might make good presidents aren't in the race -- starting with former Joint Chiefs Chairman Colin Powell, Sen. Chuck Hagel, R-Neb., and former Sen. Bob Kerrey, D-Neb.

The profusion makes for crowded platforms, but it also introduces a wider range of opinion than you'll find on the Sunday morning talk shows. Only mavericks will challenge the entrenched verities that generally give us policy options running the gamut from A to B. Continued...

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About The Author
Steve Chapman is a columnist and editorial writer for the Chicago Tribune.
 
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After last
night, I won't be considering Paul, either. I don't like his stand on Iraq.

Duncan Hunter
Tonight , from Columbia, SC,the GOP candidates will hold a 'debate'. Sheep and wolves and one outstanding leader: Duncan Hunter. At nine o'clock, you can tune in and watch all of them. But, if the affair is run with the decorum and equity we've come to expect from Britt Hume, you will able to characterize each candidate on his merits. I think you will see that the nearly three-decade long record of public service from Duncan Hunter shines in contrast to the varied and often tarnished tale of the rest. An Airborne Ranger in Vietnam, a member and Chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, married to Lynne for thirty-three years. His son, Marine Captain Duncan Hunter Jr. preparing for his third Iraq tour. I could go on, but you can see that there are elements here which set Duncan Hunter apart from the crowd. Yes, the field may be crowded, but it already includes the only candidate fit to handle the Presidency in the troubled times ahead: Duncan Hunter
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