Alaska Libertarian Party

Last updated
Libertarian Party of Alaska
AbbreviationAKLP
Chairman Nicholas Conrad
Founded1974;50 years ago (1974)
Headquarters Anchorage, Alaska
Membership (2021)Increase2.svg6,789 [1]
Ideology Libertarianism
Colorsa shade of Blue; Yellow
Senate
0 / 20
House of Representatives
0 / 40
U.S. Senate
0 / 2
U.S. House of Representatives
0 / 1
Other elected officials1 (June 2024) [2]
Website
alaskalp.org

The Libertarian Party of Alaska is the affiliate of the Libertarian Party (LP) in Alaska, headquartered in Anchorage.

Contents

It is the third-largest active [lower-alpha 1] party in Alaska and has the highest percentage of registered Libertarians of any state. [3] Since 2012 candidates running as Libertarians who have won the Democratic-Libertarian-Independence primary have always polled between 5% and 30% in at least one state or federal election every election.

Since Libertarian presidential candidates were on the ballot in 1976, Alaska has been a stronghold for Libertarians with it being their best-performing state in every election until 1992 and was in the top five except in 2004 and 2008. Many of the first offices held by Libertarians were in Alaska.

History

The Alaskan Libertarian Party was founded shortly after the national party and grew to become a stronghold for the new party in the late seventies and throughout the eighties. In 1973 John Hospers and Tonie Nathan, the party's 1972 presidential and vice presidential nominees, spoke at the party's first state convention in Fairbanks to fifty members of the party. [4] [5] During the 1980 presidential election Ed Clark and Eugene McCarthy both appeared and spoke at their state convention. [6]

Dick Randolph was elected to the Alaska House of Representatives as a Libertarian in the 1978 election. Randolph and Ken Fanning were elected to the state house in the 1980 election. Randolph received 15% of the popular vote as the party's nominee in the 1982 gubernatorial election, but the Libertarians lost both of their seats in the state house. He became the leader of the party, but left to run for the Republican nomination in the 1986 gubernatorial election. Republican Representative Fritz Pettyjohn said that Randolph was "the glue that held the party together" and his "departure will be a death blow". Andre Marrou was elected to the state house in 1984. [7] [8] [9]

In the 1986 gubernatorial election the party leadership rejected the primary winner, Mary O'Brannon, and chose to launch a write-in campaign with the lieutenant governor candidate and runner up in the primary, Ed Hoch, as their candidate after failing to remove her with a lawsuit due to her failing to meet the residency requirements. [10] [11] O'Brannon defeated Hoch in terms of popular vote with 1,050 against his 107 write-in votes, but she had lost over 14% and 28,000 votes from Randolph's 1982 campaign. [12] Marrou, the only sitting Libertarian in a state legislature at the time, lost reelection to the state house. [13]

In 1988 the party was successful in placing three legislature candidates on the ballot after the state Supreme Court ruled the filing deadline to be unconstitutional. [14] In 1992, the Alaskan affiliate along with the state's Constitution Party affiliate won a lawsuit against the Alaskan state Elections Division after both of their presidential ballot petitions were rejected. [15]

From 2009 to 2010 the party was engaged in a voter registration drive to reach 9,786 registered voters due to a 2004 bill that changed the Alaskan party qualification rules so that a party using the registration test must have registration of 3% of the last vote cast resulting in mid-term years having higher voter registration amounts needed than presidential election years. From April to June 2009 party registration increased by over 1,000 voters. [16] [17]

In 2016, Cean Stevens withdrew after winning the state Libertarian primary to allow Republican Party member and Tea Party favorite nominee of the 2010 Senate election, Joe Miller her spot on the ticket in the 2016 Senate election and Miller was unanimously approved by the executive board to take Stevens' place. [18] Miller came in second place and garnered nearly 30% of the vote, the highest percentage ever received by a Libertarian Senate candidate, but did not beat the total vote record established in 2002 Massachusetts Senate election by Michael Cloud.

Current officials

Former officials

Chairman

Electoral performance

Presidential

YearPresidential nomineeVotesChange
1972 John Hospers (write-in)45 (0.1%)Steady2.svg
1976 Roger MacBride 6,785 (5.5%)Increase2.svg 5.4%
1980 Ed Clark 18,479 (11.7%)Increase2.svg 6.2%
1984 David Bergland 6,378 (3.1%)Decrease2.svg 8.6%
1988 Ron Paul 5,484 (2.7%)Decrease2.svg 0.3%
1992 Andre Marrou 1,378 (0.5%)Decrease2.svg 2.2%
1996 Harry Browne 2,276 (0.9%)Increase2.svg 0.4%
2000 Harry Browne 2,636 (0.9%)Decrease2.svg 0.0%
2004 Michael Badnarik 1,675 (0.5%)Decrease2.svg 0.4%
2008 Bob Barr 1,589 (0.5%)Decrease2.svg 0.1%
2012 Gary Johnson 7,392 (2.5%)Increase2.svg 2.0%
2016 Gary Johnson 18,725 (5.9%)Increase2.svg 3.4%
2020 Jo Jorgensen 8,897 (2.5%)Decrease2.svg 3.4%

House

YearHouse nomineeVotesChange
1986 Betty Breck4,182 (2.3%)Steady2.svg
1988 NoneNoneDecrease2.svg 2.3%
1998 NoneNoneSteady2.svg
2000 Len Karpinski4,802 (1.8%)Increase2.svg 1.8%
2002 Rob Clift3,797 (1.7%)Increase2.svg 0.1%
2004 Alvin A. Anders7,157 (2.4%)Increase2.svg 0.7%
2006 Alexander Crawford4,029 (1.7%)Decrease2.svg 0.7%
2008 NoneNoneDecrease2.svg 1.7%
2010 NoneNoneSteady2.svg
2012 Jim McDermott15,028 (5.2%)Increase2.svg 5.2%
2014 Jim McDermott21,290 (7.6%)Increase2.svg 2.4%
2016 Jim McDermott31,770 (10.3%)Increase2.svg 2.7%
2018 NoneNoneDecrease2.svg 10.3%
2020 NoneNoneSteady2.svg
2022 Chris Bye4,570 (1.7%)Increase2.svg 1.7%

Senate Class II

YearSenate nomineeVotesChange
2002 Leonard Karpinski2,354 (1.0%)Steady2.svg
2008 Fredrick Haase2,483 (0.8%)Decrease2.svg 0.3%
2014 Mark Fish10,512 (3.7%)Increase2.svg 1.9%
2020 NoneNoneDecrease2.svg 3.7%

Senate Class III

YearSenate nomineeVotesChange
1986 Chuck House3,161 (1.8%)Steady2.svg
1992 NoneNoneDecrease2.svg 1.8%
1998 Scott A. Kohlhaas5,046 (2.3%)Increase2.svg 2.3%
2004 Scott A. Kohlhaas1,240 (0.4%)Decrease2.svg 1.9%
2010 David Haase1,459 (0.6%)Increase2.svg 0.2%
2016 Joe Miller 90,825 (29.2%)Increase2.svg 28.6%

Gubernatorial

YearGubernatorial nomineeVotesChange
1982 Dick Randolph 29,067 (14.9%)Steady2.svg
1986 Mary Jane O'Brannon [lower-alpha 2] 1,050 (0.6%) [lower-alpha 3] Decrease2.svg 14.3%
1990 NoneNoneDecrease2.svg 0.6%
1994 NoneNoneSteady2.svg
1998 NoneNoneSteady2.svg
2002 William Toien1,109 (0.5%)Increase2.svg 0.5%
2006 William Toien682 (0.3%)Decrease2.svg 0.2%
2010 William Toien2,682 (1.1%)Increase2.svg 0.8%
2014 Carolyn Clift8,985 (3.2%)Increase2.svg 2.2%
2018 William Toien5,402 (1.9%)Decrease2.svg 1.3%

Voter Registration

The stagnate registration rate is due to the fact that the Democratic-Libertarian-Independence primary is open which allows any member of either party to vote for a candidate.

YearRV. %Change
20027,235(1.6%)Steady2.svg [29]
20037,235(1.6%)Steady2.svg [30]
20047,331(1.6%)Increase2.svg 0.0% [31]
20056,932(1.5%)Decrease2.svg 0.1% [32]
2006 [lower-alpha 4] 9,400(2.0%)Increase2.svg 0.6% [33]
20078,587(1.8%)Decrease2.svg 0.2% [34]
20088,117(1.7%)Decrease2.svg 0.1% [35]
20096,742(1.3%)Decrease2.svg 0.4% [36]
20109,280(1.9%)Increase2.svg 0.6% [37]
20118,804(1.8%)Decrease2.svg 0.1% [38]
20128,051(1.6%)Decrease2.svg 0.1% [39]
20137,687(1.5%)Decrease2.svg 0.1% [40]
20147,523(1.6%)Increase2.svg 0.1% [41]
20157,176(1.4%)Decrease2.svg 0.2% [42]
20167,477(1.5%)Increase2.svg 0.1% [43]
20177,599(1.4%)Decrease2.svg 0.0% [44]
20187,579(1.4%)Steady2.svg [45]
2019 [lower-alpha 5] 7,251(1.3%)Decrease2.svg 0.2% [46]

See also

Notes

  1. The Alaskan Independence Party has more registered voters, but has only ran four candidates in the past decade and none in 2018
  2. The party leadership rejected O'Brannon and ran a write-in campaign with Ed Hoch as their candidate
  3. Hoch: 107 (0.1%) Decrease2.svg 14.9%
  4. Listed as political group
  5. Listed as political group

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