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He was first elected as a Republican, and left the Republican Party to become an independent in early 2020 before switching to the Libertarian Party in April 2020. He did not seek re-election in 2020 [2] and switched back to the Republican Party in 2024 to run for the U.S. Senate election in Michigan. [3]
2010 National Committee Chairman balloting 2010 National Committee Vice-Chairman balloting [2]; Candidates 1st 2nd 3rd Candidates 1st Mark Hinkle 114 208 281
The party fielded 173 candidates for federal, state, county, and local positions for the 2008 elections. [8]The party received media attention when it announced on August 1 that Suzanna Hupp, a former Texas state representative, had called Jason Jordan and Joe Allport, two Libertarian candidates for state representative in districts Republicans were concerned with losing, asking them to drop ...
The party was down to 800 such members in 2004. The party had a candidate in every congressional race in 2000 but failed to repeat in 2002. For 2004, the party had candidates in all 15 congressional races and 21 state House races [5] in 2007, the party joined with the existing third parties to form Michigan Third Parties Coalition lobbying ...
Both party candidates are unchallenged in their primaries for the swing district. In Michigan's 8th congressional district encompassing Flint and Saginaw, U.S. Rep. Dan Kildee's retirement leaves ...
Scott Boman, 2008 Libertarian Party nominee for the U.S. Senate in Michigan [25] Rupert Boneham, Survivor contestant and 2012 Libertarian Party nominee for Governor of Indiana [26] Murray Bookchin, writer [27] Neal Boortz, radio host [28] Andy Borsa, member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives [29] James Bovard, author [30]
The one major exception was in the 2016 presidential race and 2018 U.S. Senate races, when former Republican Gov. Gary Johnson ran as a Libertarian and got more than 9% of the vote for president ...
Boman was the Libertarian candidate for United States Senate in 2012. He placed third with 84,480 votes; [71] the most votes earned by a third-party United States Senate candidate from Michigan [7] since Libertarian Jon Coon ran for that office in 1994. [72] [73] He was also included in two statewide scientific polls [74] in the post-primary ...