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2024 Libertarian National Convention


2024 Libertarian National Convention


The 2024 Libertarian National Convention was a political event to select the Libertarian Party nominees for president and vice president in the 2024 election. It was held from May 24 to the early morning of May 27, 2024, at the Washington Hilton in Washington, D.C.

Background

Elections wereheld for the chairmanship of the Libertarian National Committee, currently held by Angela McArdle, as well as the position of vice chair, currently held by Andrew Watkins. McArdle was elected at the 2022 convention in Reno, Nevada, by acquiring the votes of 69% of delegates. She was elected with the support of the controversial Mises Caucus, a faction of the party that supports paleolibertarianism, which was created in opposition to Nicholas Sarwark's tenure as chairman. Independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. originally ruled out a nomination, then accepted a nomination the day of the convention, but was eliminated in the first round with 19 delegate votes. Donald J. Trump asked for the party nomination but was disqualified for not having submitted the appropriate paperwork.

Presidential nomination

Candidates needed to submit papers with the signatures of at least 30 delegates to be nominated. The following candidates met the threshold:

  • Lars Mapstead
  • Art Olivier
  • Mike ter Maat
  • Joshua "Toad" Anderson
  • Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
  • Joshua Smith
  • Charles Ballay
  • Chase Oliver
  • Michael Rectenwald
  • Jacob Hornberger

A delegate also attempted to nominate Donald Trump, but the nomination was considered invalid due to Trump not submitting nomination papers.

Balloting

Ten candidates were nominated for the first round. Delegates could also cast a write-in vote or vote for none of the above (NOTA). If no candidate reaches 50%, the candidate with the lowest vote total and all candidates below 5% are eliminated and the convention votes again.

Ballay, Kennedy Jr., Anderson, and Olivier were eliminated after the first round, Hornberger was eliminated after the second round, Smith was eliminated after the third round, Mapstead was eliminated after the fourth round, ter Maat was eliminated after the fifth round.

Following his elimination in the fifth round, ter Maat announced he would run as Oliver's running mate. Michael Heise, founder of the Mises Caucus, which endorsed Rectenwald, noted that the caucus also offered ter Maat the vice presidential position.

The sixth round was a head-to-head between Oliver and Rectenwald. No candidate received 50% of the vote due to votes for NOTA and write-ins. As the lowest placed nominated candidate, Rectenwald was eliminated. This set up a seventh round between Oliver and NOTA. Chair Angela McArdle noted that should NOTA receive a majority, the party would not nominate a candidate for president.

Oliver won the nomination on the seventh ballot with 60.6% of the vote.

This is the first convention that delegates did not nominate the candidate who won the first round of voting since the 2004 convention.

Vice presidential nomination

Candidates needed to submit papers with the signatures of at least 30 delegates to be nominated. The following candidates met the threshold:

  • Clint Russell
  • Kendal Ludden
  • Mark Stewart Greenstein
  • Mike ter Maat
  • Freddie Clegg

Balloting

Five candidates were nominated for the first round. Delegates could also write-in a candidate or vote for NOTA in any round. If no candidate reaches 50%, the candidate with the lowest vote total and all candidates below 5% are eliminated and the convention votes again. Delegates voted to suspend the rules and additionally suspend all candidates with below 15% in the first round.

Clegg, Greenstein, and Ludden were eliminated after the first round.

Mike ter Maat, who was endorsed by presidential nominee Chase Oliver, was nominated on the second ballot with 51.3% of the vote.

Convention speakers

According to the convention website, the following people were scheduled to appear as convention speakers:

  • Robert F. Kennedy Jr., environmental lawyer and independent presidential candidate
  • Peter A. McCullough, cardiologist and epidemiologist
  • Vivek Ramaswamy, entrepreneur and former Republican presidential candidate
  • Gabriel Shipton, brother of Julian Assange
  • Ron Paul, former U.S. Representative (1976–1977, 1979–1985, 1997–2013), 1988 Libertarian presidential nominee, 2008 and 2012 candidate for the Republican presidential nomination
  • Mark Skousen, economist and writer
  • Dave Smith, comedian and commentator
  • Donald Trump, former president and presumptive Republican presidential nominee

After the May 1 announcement that Trump would be addressing the convention, Kennedy proposed a formal debate between the two at the convention, as he would also be making an appearance. According to Kennedy, Trump declined.

Inviting Trump to speak has been highly controversial within the party, and a motion has been introduced on the Libertarian National Committee to rescind the invitation issued by party chair McArdle. During his speech, Trump made a play for the Libertarian nomination and vowed to appoint a Libertarian to his cabinet.

Ramaswamy, in addition to speaking, engaged in a debate with the winner of the libertarian vice-presidential debate, which is to be determined by a straw poll at the convention.

Nicole Shanahan, the running mate of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., was anticipated to speak on May 26. However, she backed out after Kennedy was eliminated from contention for the Libertarian nomination in the first round of balloting.

Delegate allocation

Delegates to the convention are allocated to state party affiliates based on the number of sustaining members of the national Libertarian Party per state, as well as the percentage of the vote cast by state in the 2020 presidential election for Libertarian nominee Jo Jorgensen. A total of 1,051 delegates are currently selected to vote at the convention.

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See also

  • 2024 Libertarian Party presidential primaries
  • 2024 Democratic National Convention
  • 2024 Republican National Convention

Notes

References

External links

  • Official website

Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: 2024 Libertarian National Convention by Wikipedia (Historical)


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