Libertarian enters Senate race while Isakson adds to campaign fund

Republican U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson still hasn’t attracted a Democratic challenger. But he’s drawn two other contenders hoping to derail his bid for a third term in the U.S. Senate.

Libertarian Allen Buckley said Wednesday that he will run next year against Isakson on the third-party ticket. He joins Republican Derrick Grayson, a MARTA engineer and minister who garnered 1 percent of the vote in the 2014 Senate primary.

Isakson remains well-stocked for the challenge. The veteran Republican’s campaign said Wednesday that Isakson raised $1 million in the third quarter and now has about $5.4 million in cash on hand.

Buckley, an attorney and accountant in metro Atlanta, ran as a Libertarian in the 2008 race between Republican U.S. Sen. Saxby Chambliss and Democrat Jim Martin, and his 128,000 or so votes helped force the race into a runoff that Chambliss eventually won. Buckley also lost bids for the U.S. Senate in 2004 and lieutenant governor in 2006.

Buckley said this time around he thinks he can “possibly” win the election on a campaign of cutting the size of federal government and reining in programs.

“My campaign will emphasize the real issues and provide solutions to the significant problems our country faces, including excessive debt, entitlements, regulation and foreign intervention,” Buckley said.

Democrats are still searching for a challenger to run against Isakson after the Rev. Raphael Warnock said last week that he has decided not to run for office. Warnock is the pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church, and party strategists hoped his bid would help energize minority voters.

The $1 million the 70-year-old Isakson took in during the third quarter was down from the numbers he posted in the first two quarters this year. Isakson recently announced he has Parkinson’s disease, though he has said it wouldn’t jeopardize his ability to serve another six-year term. And given his lack of Democratic opposition and the slew of more competitive Senate races nationally, it’s been harder for Isakson to show donors he needs the cash.

Still, Isakson campaign consultant Heath Garrett said Isakson’s haul this year and cash-on-hand levels are records for Georgia U.S. Senate candidates in an off year.