Background[]
LP PA[]
2006 Board with 19 voting members[]
- Chuck Moulton (Chair)
- Chris Stump (Secretary)
- Quince Eddens (Eastern Vice Chair)
- Karen Simons (Treasurer)
- Mik Robertson (Western Vice Chair)
- Dave Jahn (Immediate Past Chair)
- Ken Krawchuk (Legislative)
- Willie Harmon (Fundraising)
- Ron Goodman (Membership)
- Gregory Teufel (Legal)
- Ron Satz (Research)
- Harold Kyriazi (Allegheny)
- David Tartaglia (Berks)
- Berlie Etzel (Clarion)
- Barry Dively (Cumberland)
- Austin Moyer (Delaware)
- Jim Gordon (Dauphin)
- James Babb (Montgomery)
- Bill Keslar (York)
Links[]
- Libertarian Platform from Vermont in PDF from 2006 and some Radio Commentary on the platform.
- Tom Martin wrote a Condensed Libertarian Platform.
- RLC vs L - email-Mik from December 2006
History[]
On election day, 1978, Libertarian Party candidates for congressional, state, and local offices amassed 1.25 million votes throughout the country. Richard Randolph was elected to the Alaska House of Representatives on the LP ticket, and Edward Clark piled up 377,960 votes for governor of California. After the LP presidential ticket gained 174,000 votes in 32 states in 1976, the sober Congressional Quarterly was moved to classify the fledgling Libertarian party as the third major political party in America. The remarkable growth rate of this new party may be seen in the fact that it only began in 1971 with a handful of members gathered in a Colorado living room.
Buzz[]
- Libertarian Perfect Storm, after the 2006 Libertarian Party Convention and platform overhaul
- Libertarian Reform Caucus
- Libertarian vs. Republican
Ls who have been mentioned for 2008's Presidential Race[]
o Lance Brown o Jim Burns o Gene Chapman o David Hollist o Steve Kubby o Kent McManigal o Robert Milnes o George Phillies o Christine Smith o Doug Stanhope