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The Water Cooler Title: Palin Foe Murkowski Mulls Third-Party Run Sen. Lisa Murkowski speaks with supporter Marty Weeks at her campaign headquarters in Anchorage, Alaska after the polls closed Tuesday evening, August 24, 2010. (Anchorage Daily News, MCT / Landov) The ongoing battle for who won the Republican primary in the Alaska Senate race will come down to the absentee ballots, but in an exclusive interview with The Daily Beast, a source within the Murkowski campaign says they know of one possible legal option to pursue a third-party run. If Murkowski is not victorious when the absentee ballots are counted and decides to wage an Independent party bid, they might consider using this option, which the source wouldn't describe, but did confirm they were seriously looking at. "We are going to take a look at them and see whether the option is there or not, but it's a decision she (Murkowski) has to make," the Murkowski camp source said. "There is an option I know of." Murkowski is not a secessionist, which Alaskans know, and an aggressive PR campaign promoting her independence rather than the AIP may be her only route back to Washington this fall. In a general election, Murkowski would be hard to beat. The camp said it would also be a message to their supporters who didn't bother going to the polls Tuesday. Shushannah Walshe: Palin's Prey Lashes Out Although its not exactly clear what options the Murkowski camp are now exploring, one possibility is running a write-in campaign, which would be a very difficult and unlikely option. According to the elections coordinator in the Alaska Department of Elections, Murkowski has until October 28 to file as a write-in, in which case write-in votes for her would be counted if the aggregate total of all write-ins is greater than ballots cast, or within the range that would require a recount. In the coordinator's 14 years, this has never happened in a state race. The other possibility: the Alaska Independence Party. Former Governor Wally Hickel lost the Republican primary in 1990, but won in the general by being on the Alaskan Independence Party (AIP) ticket. A third-party run could work for Murkowski as the Democrat's candidate is largely unknown Sitka mayor Scott McAdams, but she would have to overcome the main reason the AIP exists in the Last Frontier: They are a secessionist party calling for Alaska to leave the United States. Obviously, Murkowski is not a secessionist, which Alaskans know, and an aggressive PR campaign promoting her independence rather than the AIP may be her only route back to Washington this fall. In response, the Miller campaign pointed to heat Miller received in the primary because he left the Republican Party and then returned in protest over a dispute with party Chairman Randy Ruedrich, stressing that Murkowski doing the same would be an uncomfortable thing to do. It would be difficult ground to stand on. She loses the election and then says Im going to take my marbles and Im going home to be an Independent, said a Miller campaign aide.
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#3. To: Brian S (#0)
LOL! You libTURDS are DESPERATE! She could run as the second coming of you know who and she'd get her crypto-demonRAT a$$ handed to her worse than her daddy did!
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