On April 22, the Socialist Equality Party announced that it will run a presidential campaign in 2016. The presidential candidate is Jerry White and the vice-presidential candidate is Niles Niemuth. See the announcement here.
The Socialist Equality Party was once named the Workers League. Under its old name, it first ran candidates in 1974, for Congress. In 1976 it ran no presidential candidate, but it placed eleven candidates for U.S. House on the ballot, including such difficult states as California and Illinois. It also put congressional candidates on the ballot in a few states in 1978, but not in 1980. In 1982 it appeared on the ballot in Michigan, the state with the party’s national office, but no other states. In 1984 it ran its first presidential ticket, and ran Ed Winn for President. He received 10,801 votes. In 1986 it had congressional or gubernatorial candidates on the ballot in Michigan, Minnesota, Indiana, and Pennsylvania.
In 1988 it ran Ed Winn for President again; this time he received 18,693 votes. It had no candidates in 1990, and in 1992 ran Helen Halyard for President, but she only polled 3,050 votes because she was only on in Michigan and New Jersey. In 1994 it had congressional candidates on the ballot in Michigan and Pennsylvania.
In 1996 it announced its new party name, Socialist Equality, and ran Jerry White for President. He was only on the ballot in three states and got 2,438 votes. It then stopped running candidates until 2003, when it placed a candidate on the ballot for Governor of California in the special recall gubernatorial election. That candidate, John Burton, received 6,748 votes with a ballot label of “independent.” In 2004 it ran Bill Van Auken for President; he polled 1,861 votes and was on the ballot in five states. In 2006 it was on the ballot for U.S. Senate in New York and U.S. House in Michigan. In 2008 it announced a very late presidential campaign, again running Jerry White, but he did not petition to be on the ballot anywhere and only filed for write-in status in New York, where he was recorded as having received 18 votes. In 2010 it had one candidate on the ballot, for Michigan legislature. In 2012 it again ran Jerry White for President; he was on in three states and received 1,097 votes. Thanks to Independent Political Report for the news of the 2016 announcement.
How many minor party Prez candidates will it take for the Donkey/Elephant Prez winner in Nov. 2016 to get elected with LESS than 50 percent of the popular votes ???
i.e. one more MINORITY RULE (OLIGARCHY) Prez — think 1860 and 1992 for 2 examples of several.
Abolish the time bomb Electoral College.
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P.R. and nonpartisan App.V.