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The following candidates achieved at least one of the following in the 2024 election cycle: appeared on a primary ballot, received votes in a LP-sanctioned contest that did not require ballot access, were invited to a party-sanctioned debate or forum, or were included on the Libertarian National Committee's list of candidates.
This section includes candidates who filed paperwork with the Federal Election Commission with intent to run under the Libertarian Party and who met one or more of the following criteria: a) meet Wikipedia's notability guidelines; b) participated in at least three Libertarian Party-sponsored debates; or c) received non-trivial media coverage as ...
Reince Priebus, White House Chief of Staff (2017), Chair of the Republican National Committee (2011–2017), and Chair of the Wisconsin Republican Party (2007–2011) [15] John Ratcliffe, Director of National Intelligence (2020–2021) and U.S. Representative from TX-04 (2015–2020) [16] Wilbur Ross, U.S. Secretary of Commerce (2017–2021) [13]
Donald Trump will address the Libertarian Party’s convention Saturday, a move illustrative of his campaign’s intensifying concern over third-party candidates.
“Libertarians and third-party candidates like Chase can change the outcome in elections that are razor-thin in swing states,” Lars Mapstead, a Libertarian candidate who ran against Oliver for ...
On February 29, 2024, Oliver participated in a presidential candidates debate hosted by the Free & Equal Elections Foundation, alongside Party for Socialism and Liberation nominee Claudia De la Cruz, Green Party candidates Jill Stein and Jasmine Sherman, and fellow Libertarian candidate Lars Mapstead.
In 1972, the party considered suing county clerks in Placer and Butte counties for refusing to allow voters to register as Libertarians. [9] In 1978, Ed Clark, who had been the affiliate's chairman from 1973 to 1974 and later the national presidential candidate in 1980, ran as an independent for governor of California to gain party recognition and received over five percent. [10]
The Libertarian Party and the No on Measure C coalition each submitted an opposition argument. Hearing date for Measure C Fresno voter guide dilemma set after one-time allies differ Skip to main ...