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For now, the focus is on the campaign in Vermont, where the secession candidates
-- on a shoestring budget -- plan a largely Internet-based campaign. As of Wednesday, they hadn't launched a dedicated Web site, though one is planned. Garritano, a Shelburne independent who's never run for office before, promised his wife the campaign wouldn't cost them much money. He's sticking to that: So far, he's spent $20 on business cards. Come November, he won't be identified as a "secession" candidate on the ballot; it will just say "independent." "If somehow, miraculously, I got elected lieutenant governor, I'd make an effort to get back some of our rights
-- right to freedom of speech, freedom of association and other Constitution-Bill of Rights things that have been taken away from us," Garritano said. Steele, a 44-year-old political neophyte from Kirby who owns Internet radio station Free Vermont Radio, says he'll take a grassroots approach to campaigning
-- traversing the state in a recreational vehicle with his wife, 5-year-old daughter and 3-year-old son. "The plan is to travel around the state with my family, try to make it a fun thing," he said. "Go out, do some live broadcasts, pound some doors and then come back to the campground with my family in the RV." Former Gov. Thomas Salmon is among those who doubt Vermont will ever break its ties with Washington, D.C. "Do I think Vermont has a realistic chance of seceding in the near-term, midterm or long-term future? No, I don't," said Salmon, who served in the 1970s. "We did our time as an independent Republic, from 1777 to 1791. I think one time as an independent republic is enough."
[Associated
Press;
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