Politics & Government
Third-Party Presidential Candidates to Debate Tuesday
The debate airs at 5:55 p.m. PDT with Larry King moderating. The four participating candidates include Jill Stein of the Green Party, Gary Johnson of the Libertarian Party, Virgil Goode of the Constitution Party, and Rocky Anderson of the Justice Party.

After three presidential debates and one vice-presidential debate between the Democratic incumbents and their Republican challengers, the third-party candidates are finally getting their national forum.
Tuesday at 5:55 p.m. Pacific time, a televised debate among four third-party candidates will be moderated by longtime talk-show host Larry King. All six presidential candidates were invited by the debate's host, FreeAndEqual.org β but President Barack Obama and Gov. Mitt Romney failed to RSVP.
Related:Β How will you vote if you don't like either presidential candidate?
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Presidential nomineesΒ Jill Stein of the Green Party, Gary Johnson of the Libertarian Party, Virgil Goode of the Constitution Party, and Rocky Anderson of the Justice Party will participate in Tuesday's debate.
Viewers have been invitedΒ to submit questions to the third-party candidates, either throughΒ Free and Equalβs website, or on Twitter usingΒ the hashtagΒ #AskEmThisLarry.
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The last third-party candidate to face Democratic and Republican nominees in a televised debate was independent Ross Perot in 1992.
The Commission on Presidential Debates, which sponsors debates between the major-party candidates, including this year's forums with Barack Obama and Mitt Romney, requires that a candidate be averaging at least 15 percent in national polls to be included.
Third-party candidates complain that the stipulation is a hurdle almost impossible to clear before voters have a chance to hear their views.
"This commission exists for the principal purpose of protecting and strengthening the two parties," George Farah of Open Debates, a group that advocates changing the debate system,Β told NPR.
Stein wasΒ arrested outside this year's second presidential debate at Hofstra UniversityΒ after she attempted to enter the debate, calling it a "mockery of democracy," according to the Huffington Post. Johnson filed a lawsuit against the Commission in September, arguing that he'd been unfairly excluded from debating.
The debate at the Hilton Chicago is sponsored by the nonprofitΒ Free & Equal ElectionsΒ and will be telecast on the CSPAN channel, Al Jazeera andΒ LINK TV andΒ streamed atΒ www.freeandequal.org/liveΒ andΒ cspan.org, according to Free and Equal.
Are third-party candidates relevant in this year's presidential election? Would you vote for one? Share your thoughts in the comments below.
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