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Bob Bird (politician)

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Bob Bird
Alaskan Independence Party nominee for
U.S. Senator from Alaska
Election date
November 4, 2008
OpponentTed Stevens (R) Mark Begich (D)
IncumbentTed Stevens
Personal details
BornAugust 1, 1951
Evanston, Illinois
Political partyAlaskan Independence
ResidenceKenai, Alaska
Occupationteacher, activist

Bob Bird (born August 1, 1951, in Evanston, Illinois)[1] is a pro-life activist, high school teacher,[2] and Alaskan Independence Party candidate for the United States Senate seat formerly occupied by Senator Ted Stevens.[3]

Bird has been teaching for 34 years on the secondary and collegiate levels, at high schools in Alaska and Minnesota and at Kenai Peninsula College. He has been a radio broadcaster for KSRM radio in Kenai for Alaska Baseball League and high school hockey games.

Education

Bird earned his B.S. degree from Bemidji State University in Minnesota, where he majored in Social Studies. He earned his Master's degree in history from Minnesota State University, Mankato in 1992.

Political involvement

Bob Bird ran as a Republican in the 1990 Alaska primary against incumbent Ted Stevens, earning 34,000 votes to Stevens' 81,000. Bird's notoriety stemmed from organizing and leading the first two events of the Alaska Rescue Project in 1989, the largest civil-disobedience event in the state's history. He served as president of Alaska Right to Life from 1995-97, was a delegate to the 1996 Republican National Convention in San Diego as a Pat Buchanan supporter and the Reform Party in Long Beach, California in 2000, also as a Buchanan delegate.

Bird joined the Alaskan Independence Party in 2004 and was a delegate to the Constitution Party's national convention as a supporter of Michael Peroutka.

In 2008, the Alaskan Independence Party nominated Bird as their candidate for the United States Senate. Bird's opponents included Ted Stevens—the six-term Republican incumbent who was convicted October 27, 2008 on seven (7) felony counts for failing to report $250,000 in gifts which he had received from a private company—and Mark Begich, the Democratic mayor of Anchorage, Alaska's largest city.

On October 29, 2008, Bird was endorsed by former Republican U.S. presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul of Texas.[4]

The November 4, 2008, general election featured five candidates for the U.S. Senate for Alaska: Mark Begich (Democrat), Bob Bird (Alaskan Independence), Ted Gianoutsos (Unaffiliated), Dave Haase (Libertarian), and Ted Stevens (Republican). The outcome was not resolved for two weeks until absentee, questioned and early voting results were tabulated. Begich defeated Stevens by 3,724 votes (150,728 to 147,004). Because Bird took 13,144 votes (4.15%), an article in the Washington Post by Chris Cillizza and Paul Kane suggested that Bird "may end up being the most important third-party candidate in the 2008 race"[5]--an opinion shared by the Independent Political Report in an August article, long before Bird gained significant media attention.

Since the election Bird has been promoting nullification. Bird's argument can be viewed at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xEwLHe5LLIw and http://youtube.com/watch?v=OZXqzovSBzw where he references the Citizens Rule Book, a document arguably consistent with Richard T. Hughes' thesis in Christian America and the Kingdom of God (see, http://books.google.com/books?id=M_WtIaIqWTgC.)

References

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