



About a month ago, journalist Carl Bernstein



A month later, Bill Weld is still a vice presidential candidate, but When Tim Kaine and Mike Pence met for the vice presidential debate last night, they weren’t joined by Libertarian William Weld, whose ticket doesn’t enjoy enough public support to qualify for the event. But that doesn’t mean Weld’s future is unimportant in politics right now.About a month ago, journalist Carl Bernstein suggested Weld, a former Republican governor who only recently committed to the Libertarians, could bow out of his bid for national office and throw his support to Hillary Clinton’s ticket. Both Weld and Libertarian presidential nominee Gary Johnson quickly dismissed the rumor as nonsense.A month later, Bill Weld is still a vice presidential candidate, but he told the Boston Globe yesterday that his focus is poised to change a bit.

The Libertarian vice presidential candidate, William F. Weld, said Tuesday that he plans to focus exclusively on blasting Donald Trump over the next five weeks, a strategic pivot aimed at denying Trump the White House and giving himself a key role in helping to rebuild the GOP.



Weld’s comments in a Globe interview mark a major shift in his mission since he pledged at the Libertarian convention in May that he would remain a Libertarian for life and would do all he could to help elect his running mate, Gary Johnson, the former Republican governor of New Mexico.





That doesn’t sound like someone who intends to remain with the Libertarian Party for the long haul.



Indeed, Weld also told the Globe he “not going to drop [Libertarians] this year,” which only raises further questions about what he intends to do after this year.



While Gary Johnson tends to treat the major-party nominees as equally objectionable, his running mate is clearly adopting a very different posture. From the Globe report: Weld, the former governor of Massachusetts, told the Globe “it would be fun to participate” in an effort to “come up with a new playbook” for the Republican Party after the 2016 elections.That doesn’t sound like someone who intends to remain with the Libertarian Party for the long haul.Indeed, Weld also told the Globe he “not going to drop [Libertarians] this year,” which only raises further questions about what he intends to do after this year.While Gary Johnson tends to treat the major-party nominees as equally objectionable, his running mate is clearly adopting a very different posture. From the Globe report:

Weld … said he is focusing on Trump because, while he disagrees with Hillary Clinton on fiscal and military issues, Trump’s agenda is so objectionable it’s “in a class by itself.”



“I think Mr. Trump’s proposals in the foreign policy area, including nuclear proliferation, tariffs, and free trade, would be so hurtful, domestically and in the world, that he has my full attention,” Weld said.