This is Gary Johnson's plea to Bernie Sanders supporters
Much of the political conventional wisdom assumes that Johnson, the former Republican governor of New Mexico, will siphon votes from presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump.
But Johnson told Business Insider in an interview last week that the candidate he most aligns with after himself, based on an online test he took, is actually Sanders.
"For me personally, outside of siding with myself all the time, Bernie is next in line," Johnson said. "Obviously, Bernie and I come to a 'T' in the road when it comes to economics. Somebody has to pay for 'free.' And I think most people recognize that."
He added, however, that his positions on abortion rights, marriage equality, the legalization of marijuana, and his acknowledgement of "crony capitalism" are all in line with Sanders' positions.
Johnson said "crony capitalism," on which Sanders has railed on the campaign trail, it's "alive and well." He said that "benefit or advantage is for sale and it's being sold."
"Government can provide a level playing field for everyone," he said.
But he added that it's unlikely he is able to bring Sanders on to his campaign once the Democratic presidential hopeful ends his campaign, which Sanders has inched toward in recent days.
"Well, the logical partnership [for Sanders] would be with Hillary Clinton, and it looks like that's not happening," he said. "Look, Bernie is an independent and the reality is I don't see that's happening."
"I'd love to have Bernie supporters take a look at me and from an objective standpoint," he continued.
The former two-term governor of New Mexico, who made a bid for the presidency as the Libertarian nominee in 2012, is polling at 9% against Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton, the presumptive Republican and Democratic nominees, in the RealClearPolitics average of several polls. In a recent Fox News poll, Johnson garnered as high as 12% of the vote in a three-way race.
If Johnson can break 15% in enough polls ahead of the fall, he can make his way onto the stage in the general-election debates.