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On March 1, 2016, Johnson won the Libertarian Party of Minnesota caucus with 76% of the vote. [24] On March 29, 2016, Johnson attended the first nationally televised pre-nomination convention Libertarian Party presidential debate, hosted by Fox Business Network, on John Stossel's show Stossel. The two-hour debate was divided into two one hour ...
The party's nominee for the 2016 presidential election was chosen directly by registered delegates at the 2016 Libertarian National Convention, which ran from May 26 to 30, 2016. The delegates nominated former New Mexico governor Gary Johnson for president and former Massachusetts governor Bill Weld for vice president.
Gary Johnson took over 75% of the 226 first-preference votes cast, with John McAfee a distant second on 11.5% and Austin Petersen third on 7.5%. [ 12 ] Minnesota Libertarian Party presidential caucus, March 1, 2016 [ 13 ]
In recent national polls, Johnson got about 10 percent in a three-way matchup against Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton. Libertarians now have a presidential candidate: Gary Johnson Skip to main ...
Libertarian party presidential nominee Gary Johnson inexplicably stuck out his tongue during a serious conversation about the election.
The final results showed Johnson received 1% of the popular vote, a total of 1,275,971 votes. [97] This was the best result in the Libertarian Party's history by raw vote number, though under the 1.1 percentage of the vote won by Ed Clark in 1980.
The two-time Libertarian Party presidential nominee shares his thoughts on Chase Oliver and the election.
Gary Johnson Governor of New Mexico, 1995–2003 Libertarian Party presidential nominee, 2012 New Mexico: May 29, 2016 [56] Bill Weld of Massachusetts: Other parties National total National percentage Highest single state total Highest single state percentage Independence Party of New York: 4,489,221: 3.3% 402,452 (3.4%) California 74,031 (9.3%)