Libertarian Party May Hold First Minor Party Presidential Primary in North Carolina History

The North Carolina Libertarian Party has requested that the state provide it with a presidential primary, which would be held on May 8. The party has requested that the State Board of Elections list six candidates on the party’s presidential primary ballot: Roger Gary, R. J. Harris, Gary Johnson, Lee Wrights, Carl Person, and Bill Still.

No party, other than the Democratic and Republican Parties, has ever had a presidential primary in North Carolina. North Carolina started holding presidential primaries in 1972. Between 1975 and 2007, no one could get on a North Carolina presidential primary ballot unless he or she had either qualified for primary season matching funds, or submitted 10,000 signatures of party members. The only party (other than the Democratic and Republican Parties) entitled to a primary in North Carolina in presidential election years after 1975 was the Libertarian Party, which was able to nominate by primary in these presidential election years: 1980, 1984, 2000, and 2004. But no Libertarian presidential candidate has ever qualified for primary season matching funds, and the party has never had enough registered members to make it feasible for a presidential candidate to get 10,000 signatures of party members. But, in 2007, the law was changed, so that any candidate who is discussed in the news media is now automatically put on the ballot.

In most states with “media” methods for presidential candidates to get on the primary ballot, state elections officials ask the minor party leaders to just tell them which presidential candidates to list on the party’s primary ballot. “Media” coverage of candidates seeking the nomination of minor parties is not very good, and most states acknowledge that and don’t enforce the law literally for minor parties.


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Libertarian Party May Hold First Minor Party Presidential Primary in North Carolina History — No Comments

  1. Pingback: Libertarian Party May Hold First Minor Party Presidential Primary in North Carolina History | ThirdPartyPolitics.us

  2. The national convention will choose its candidate on May 5th, three days BEFORE the scheduled primary. Add to that, LPNC is bound by its bylaws to nominate the candidate of the national party. So the result of the primary is either redundant or embarrassing. Stupid.

  3. I wish the demopublicans were as easily embarrassed. They don’t seem fazed by meaningless single candidate elections. Why should the LPNC be embarrassed about holding a meaningless primary election? The demopublicans don’t really nominate strictly according to the primary results either. But they are not embarrassed to get the publicity from the event anyway.

  4. The Libertarian Party has a primary for other office anyway, on the same day in May 2012, so adding some candidates to the presidential part of the Libertarian Party primary should cost virtually nothing.

  5. Pingback: Boston Bruins Goalie Skips White House Visit for Vaguely Libertarian-Sounding …

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