Nov 01 2007
Stephen Colbert Files for President in South Carolina | Print |  E-mail
By Shahram Vahdany   

-- Tops Kucinich and Paul in National Poll

 Stephen Colbert's belated White House bid took an actual baby step Thursday, when he officially filed for the South Carolina primary as a Democrat. While he has vowed to also run as a Republican, apparently the filing fee in that state may weigh him down.

Meanwhile a new Rasmussen poll finds Colbert winning -- at least over a pair of second-tier candidates with passionate followings of their own. Colbert tops GOP Rep. Ron Paul, 36% to 32%, while he outpaces Democratic Rep. Dennis Kucinich by 37% to Kucinich 32%. In both cases, Rasmussen found, Colbert eats into their "base."

The same polling outfit recently found Colbert drawing about 12% of the vote in a three-way matchup with leading candidates Hillary Clinton and Rudy Giuliani.

Filing to to get on the ballot as a Democratic candidate in his native South Carolina, Colbert's campaign paid a $2,500 filing fee just before the noon deadline, said state Democratic Party Chairwoman Carol Fowler.

Whether he'll appear on the ballot will be decided by party officials later Thursday.

The host of Comedyt Central's "The Colbert Report" may not meet the party's "viable: candidate qualification.

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1. 01-11-2007 13:44
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - South Carolina Democrats squashed Stephen Colbert's fanciful White House bid on Thursday.  
 
 
Colbert, who poses as a conservative talk-show host on the Comedy Central cable network, filed to get on the ballot as a Democratic candidate in his native South Carolina. His campaign paid a $2,500 filing fee just before the noon deadline, said state Democratic Party Chairwoman Carol Fowler.  
 
 
However, after about 40 minutes of discussion by top party officials, the executive council voted 13-3 to keep the host of "The Colbert Report" off the ballot.  
 
"He's really trying to use South Carolina Democrats as suckers so he can further a comedy routine," said Waring Howe, a member of the executive council. And Colbert "serves to detract from the serious candidates on the ballot."  
 
But state Rep. Gilda Cobb-Hunter told the committee Colbert could showcase the state "in a way that none of the other candidates on the ballot have been able to do."  
 
 
"I think you're taking this a little too seriously," she said.  
 
When Colbert announced his candidacy on his show last month, he said he would run only in this key primary state. He said then he planned to run as a Democrat and a Republican - so he could lose twice.  
 
The GOP filing fee is $35,000; the deadline was Thursday night.  
 
Democrats say he will get his $2,500 back.
Guest
Dixie
2. 01-11-2007 14:55
Get over it
There is no Cobert in SC. GET A LIFE!!!! :( Be American, stop bashing the little guy by streading junk! Don't you read to news. Take the tumb out of your YKW!
Guest
nacksabith@yahoo.comNOSPAM! ">nack sabith

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