A man in New Hampshire attempted to register for the first-in-the-nation presidential primary on Friday using an interesting nickname: “Epstein Didn’t Kill Himself.”
Rod Webber is the man in question. His Twitter timeline suggests he’s something of an anarchist–though Webber insists he doesn’t identify with any political party and doesn’t “believe in isms.” He’s also a fairly well-known entity in New Hampshire primary politics due to his perennnial presence and undeniably outsized personality.
Manchester Ink Link offered a short biographical sketch in 2015:
Webber is a pacifist, a vegetarian, a singer-songwriter, a neo-hippie and performance artist, who’s made a name for himself on the campaign trail of late as “the flower guy.” He sports a beard and a top hat while philosophizing over Biblical passages on war and fracking, and what makes a man well-suited for public office, always offering a peace offering of a flower in the end, to punctuate his point of view.
And he’s no stranger to hobnobbing with politicians themselves.
The Ink Link article notes that Webber “has held hands and prayed with Jeb Bush” and previously “prompted Chris Christie to publicly question his standing as a good Catholic for practicing birth control.”
But those politicians are yesterday’s news; those headlines tomorrow’s fish-and-chip paper. Candidates and issues have changed.
On Friday, Webber had a different goal: to register as a candidate for the 100th anniversary of New Hampshire’s first-in-the-nation status.
Bearing a medium-sized cardboard sign marked with red ink or paint, Webber made his bid for ballot placement amidst a phalanx of national and local reporters who were hoping to catch a glimpse of–and eventually garner soundbites from–more well-known Democratic Party candidates like former vice president Joe Biden and entrepreneur Andrew Yang as they paid their $1000 filing fees.
Webber said he ticked all the boxes necessary for inclusion on the ballot but his effort was frustrated by Granite State officials.
New Hampshire Secretary of State Bill Gardner, a Democrat, denied him the opportunity to register and told Webber to “come back.”
“Come back with what?” Webber insisted as cameras clicked and whirred in the small room–observers grousing and chatting away. “I’ve come with the requisite money; I’m over 35; I’ve lived in the United States my entire life. I can use a nickname.”
New Hampshire law allows nicknames on the ballot, but doesn’t allow use of a nickname that “that constitutes a slogan or otherwise associates the candidate with a cause or issue.”
“This is the second time in two election cycles that Gardner has turned me down,” Webber told Law&Crime. “In 2015, I tried to register as ‘Flowerman’ which was what the press had referred to me as in hundreds of articles. According to state law, this is allowed. Gardner has no problem with John Ellis [“Jeb“] Bush, Rafael [“Ted“] Cruz or Rocky De La Fuente. So, as long as I got people to refer to me as ‘Epstein Didn’t Kill Himself’ publicly, Gardner would have to allow it.”
“Basically, Gardner has decided he gets to choose who gets to run for president or not. In 2015, I was told if I didn’t like his decision, I could make a complaint to some committee which he happened to run.”
Webber was sanguine about his chosen nickname.
“It doesn’t add up,” he noted. “The U.S. government has a long history of covering up crimes of a legal and moral nature.”
The law on point here, reads, in relevant part:
Every candidate for state or federal office who intends to have his or her name printed upon the ballot of any party for a primary shall designate in the declaration of candidacy, or on the primary petitions and assents to candidacy, the form in which the candidate’s name shall be printed on the ballot. The designated name may include the candidate’s given name or a shortened form of the candidate’s given name or a one-word nickname customarily related to the candidate, and by which the candidate is commonly recognized. The designated name may also include an initial for the first or middle name, or both. No candidate may designate a nickname that implies that the candidate is some other person, that constitutes a slogan or otherwise associates the candidate with a cause or issue, that has an offensive or profane meaning, or that creates a perception of a professional or vocational affiliation, such as “Doc” or “Coach.” No candidate may designate a name or nickname that includes characters other than the 26-letter English alphabet, a dash, an apostrophe, a period, or a comma. A candidate shall include his or her surname in the designation of the form in which the candidate’s name shall be printed on the ballot.
Was Webber turned down because Gardner believed his nickname would have constituted a slogan or associated him with a cause or issue? If so, why was he told to “come back” instead of categorically denied? Those questions are currently unclear.
Law&Crime reached out to the New Hampshire Secretary of State’s Office for clarification on why, exactly, Webber was turned away but no response was forthcoming at the time of publication.
Webber later expressed characteristic defiance about the incident:
[image via screengrab/Stephanie Murray/Politico]