Fred Karger huddled in the closet for his  entire 30-year career as a political strategist, keeping his sexuality a  secret as he worked on nine presidential campaigns, including those of  Ronald Reagan and George HW Bush. The 61-year-old Republican—who came  out five years ago and is the first openly gay person to file with the  FEC to run for president—says he is running not because he thinks he can  win, but because he wants to send a message to young people that they  don't have to live their lives the way he did.                                                                                                                                                                                           "I  always wanted to run for office but knew I never could, just as I could  never have a family," he tells the Los Angeles Times.
  "When you're gay and in the closet, you learn there are lots of things  you can't do." Karger says his goal is to be able to take part in a  debate—he'd like a word with Mitt Romney, for example, about the Mormon  Church's backing of Prop 8. But though Karger passed the Fox News  criteria of scoring above 1% in five national polls, his campaign says,  he wasn't invited to join the Iowa debate Thursday night.

