Two Craig Libertarian candidates are running for state legislative offices

Craig residents Sacha and Travis Mero are running for House Representative District 57 and for Congressional District 3, respectively.

The married couple doesnt anticipate easy wins, but they do want to get the message out about Libertarianism and challenge the two-party system. They both got the go-ahead at the Colorado Libertarian caucus in April and will be on the November ballot.

Sacha Mero ran for the District 8 State Senate seat in 2012, and said she got 4.5 percent of the vote without any campaign funding.

That just shows how much people are fed up with our two-party system, she said.

But, now the two are working together and setting up a local Libertarian group to garner more support.

This time, we have a lot more organization, Travis Mero said.

Theyre talking to people in the districts, campaigning and raising funds. Their goal is to challenge voting along a party line and to start conversations.

A lot of people will find they lean Libertarian, Sacha Mero said.

The Meros said thats because Libertarians fall in the middle on a lot of issues. Libertarianism is about personal liberty and limiting government power, Sacha Mero said.

The couple is for broad Second Amendment rights, same-sex marriage, a womans right to choose and the legalization of drugs. They want to limit government reach, empowering local governments to have the most power.

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Two Craig Libertarian candidates are running for state legislative offices

Justice Clarence Thomas asked to delay ruling that could impact Ohio governors race

The Libertarian Party of Ohio has asked Justice Clarence Thomas to delay a ruling by a federal appeals court in Cincinnati which this week approved a lower courts decision to remove the partys candidates for governor and attorney general from the states primary ballot.

The party made the request just one day after Justice Elena Kagan rejected its request for a delay. The Libertarians hope Thomas will grant their appeal, a first step in having the high court hear the case before Tuesdays primary.

A three-judge panel of the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously upheld a ruling by a federal judge that Libertarian gubernatorial candidate Charlie Earl and attorney general candidate Steven Linnabary.

The decision could be a factor in the November election. If Earl is nominated, he could siphon away votes in November from Republican Gov. John Kasich in his race against Democrat Ed Fitzgerald.

Under a law approved by the Republican legislature and signed by Kasich, the Libertarians needed to file a party formation petition with more than 38,500 valid signatures. In addition, at least 500 signatures must each come from at least eight of the states congressional districts.

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Justice Clarence Thomas asked to delay ruling that could impact Ohio governors race

Ohio Libertarians appeal over ballot status

COLUMBUS, Ohio The Libertarian Party of Ohio immediately appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday after a lower court denied its attempt to get a gubernatorial candidate on Tuesdays primary ballot.

Their candidate, Charlie Earl, was disqualified by Secretary of State Jon Husted after his nominating petitions were challenged. Husted agreed with a hearing officer who found two Earl petitioners failed to properly disclose their employers.

Libertarians sought to reinstate Earls ballot status, arguing that Husteds ruling violated petition circulators First Amendment rights and conflicted with previous state rulings allowing them to submit signatures without declaring an employer.

With five days until the election, the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati said Thursday the party was too unlikely to succeed in a First Amendment challenge to Husteds ruling to proceed.

The three-judge panel acknowledged the decision could present severe and irreparable harm on the party and likely undermine its status as a ballot-qualified party in the state.

We note that the LPO has struggled to become and remain a ballot-qualified party in Ohio, and we acknowledge that this decision entails that their efforts must continue still, the opinion said. But we also note that we decide one case at a time, on the record before us. In so doing, we preserve the First Amendments primary place in our democracy over the long run.

Husteds office praised the ruling.

Todays ruling is more validation that we are following the law and properly administering elections in Ohio, spokesman Matt McClellan said.

Aaron Keith Harris, who chairs the partys state central committee, called the ruling disappointing and said the party had asked for a stay in order to file its appeal.

Whatever the outcome, the Libertarian Party of Ohio is looking forward to taking our unique message of fiscal responsibility and social tolerance to Ohio voters in the May 6 primary where we expect thousands of voters to choose the Libertarian ballot and in the general election with more than 20 candidates across the state, he said.

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Ohio Libertarians appeal over ballot status

Book Talk: Cass Sunstein on Why Nudge?: The Politics of Libertarian Paternalism – Video


Book Talk: Cass Sunstein on Why Nudge?: The Politics of Libertarian Paternalism
A Harvard Law School Library Book Talk Professor Cass Sunstein discusses his book Why Nudge?: The Politics of Libertarian Paternalism. Panelists: Iris Bohnet Richard Fallon Frank I. Michelman...

By: hlslib

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Book Talk: Cass Sunstein on Why Nudge?: The Politics of Libertarian Paternalism - Video

Libertarian party candidates visit the Alamo

SAN ANTONIO Using the Alamo as their backdrop, Libertarian party candidates running for statewide office pledged to open Texas' borders and legalize marijuana at a news conference Thursday.

I believe in the sovereign power of the individual, said Robert Butler, the party's candidate for lieutenant governor.

He then quoted Alamo fighter Davy Crockett, saying, I am no man's man. I bark at no man's bid. I will never come and go, and fetch and carry, at the whistle of the great man in the white house, no matter who he is.

Jamie Balagia, a local attorney who also practices in his hometown of Austin, is the party's candidate for Attorney General.

He said if elected, he would enforce the state's laws but make his political views well-known, including his thoughts on legalizing marijuana.

Looking at children visiting the historical mission behind him, Balagia said, I wonder how many of them will end up in handcuffs?

emoravec@express-news.net

Twitter: @EvaRuth

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Libertarian party candidates visit the Alamo

Rand Paul on his pursuit of Silicon Valley

Interview by Tory Newmyer

Sen. Rand Paul outside the U.S. Capitol in October, 2013

FORTUNE -- Sen. Rand Paul, the libertarian-leaning Kentucky Republican and likely presidential contender, sat down with Fortune's Tory Newmyer in April after his latest swing through Silicon Valley to talk about his efforts to build a base there. Edited excerpts:

You talked in Berkeley about how the Republican Party needs to acknowledge there's something wrong with what it's offering, the way Domino's (DPZ) did with its pizza. What can Silicon Valley teach the Republican Party about making a better pizza?

I think there's a big debate in any political party when they lose. We've lost twice at the presidential level, so everybody's debating what should we do. Half the people say, "We believe too strongly in things and we need to dilute that message a little bit, be a little more like the Democrats or a little bit more moderate to win." I'm of the opinion that with the things that are our core beliefs, we actually should be bolder. So for example, on believing in low taxes and less regulation, our last couple of candidates were for revenue-neutral tax reform -- not sexy, not exciting, and really not destined to do too much to the economy other than shift the tax burden from one person to the other. Frankly, nobody is going to knock on a door for you if you're saying, "Hey I'm for revenue neutral tax reform. Vote for me." And so frankly on our core issues of taxes, regulations, balanced budgets, I think we should be more hardcore, or bolder than we've been.

MORE:Rand Paul and the techies: A love story

But then we have to take our core message and find out other extensions of our message that might attract people if presented to them that haven't been attracted to them in the past. So even on tax cutting, I think we should make the argument that the historical, government stimulus -- Obama had one when he came into office, almost $1 trillion, $800 billion -- that that kind of stimulus doesn't work as well as if we'd cut taxes by $800 billion. They're not equivalent. The reason they're not equivalent is if you're the economy and you give me $800 billion and I give it back, I've got to choose who to give it to. And the way business works is the vast majority of businesses fail. I use the statistic nine out of 10 -- it may or may not be right, it may be eight out of 10. Whatever the number is, the majority of small businesses fail when they start. So if I give the money to you and say, "Start a Pizza Hut," I'll be wrong eight or nine times out of 10. But if you've already got a Pizza Hut and I gave you a reduction in taxes, I'll be right 100% of the time. Give it to somebody who the consumer has voted upon.

What have you learned from your conversations with entrepreneurs like Peter Thiel and others in Silicon Valley?

Almost everybody I talk to out there from Peter on will say, "You know what? We think Silicon Valley is a little more libertarian than it is Democrat, even though 80 to 90% of the money went to President Obama." And it's been a deterrent to some Republicans going out there. Many more of them are libertarian-leaning Republicans than they are Democrats, and they may not know it yet. But actually most of them do know it. Frankly a lot of people who supported President Obama will say, "You know what? It turns out I am a lot more fiscally conservative than President Obama on taxes and regulation." They're not happy about either one of those. But they're more moderate on social issues than the Republicans are.

You've got an apparent supporter in Joe Lonsdale. A company he co-founded, Palantir, got startup funding from the CIA venture fund to enhance the surveillance agencies' ability to sort data. What would you say to civil libertarians who look at the capacity they've developed and say it presents the potential for problems?

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Rand Paul on his pursuit of Silicon Valley

Local Libertarians attend state convention

Three Upshur County delegates attended the Texas state Libertarian Party convention in Temple April 11 to 13.

Among the 218 voting delegates at the Temple Convention Center were Upshur County Libertarian Chairman Vance Lowry, Allen Weatherford and Sherri Little. Lowry said about 300 persons--counting alternate delegates, delegates spouses, vendors, the press and observersattended overall.

Lowry said Wednesday that while the state party declined Weatherfords resolution to eliminate the issue of immigration from the state platform altogetheron grounds it is a national rather than state issuethe convention did change the plank on immigration and border control to keep citizens from thinking Libertarians comprise an open borders party.

That was the only part of the past platform which was altered, Lowry said. He added that the biggest thing Im excited about is that two East Texans, Smith County party Chairman Rudy Wright and Gregg County party Chairman Brandee Brown, were named to the partys state Executive Committee from state Senate District One.

Wright and Mrs. Brownformer Republicans who supported Ron Paul for that partys Presidential nominationwill be talented organizers, and their presence will give the Tyler and Longview areas representation on the state committee for the first time, Lowry noted.

Noting that the pair were former Republicans who had supported Ron Paul for that partys Presidential nomination, Lowry said the 218 voting delegates included a boatload of disaffected RepublicansPaul supporters who were mistreated by the GOP.

The Upshur delegation split on its vote for the partys gubernatorial nomination, which went to Kathie Glass by one vote on the second ballot, Lowry said. He and Ms. Little supported Ms. Glass (who was the partys gubernatorial nominee in 2010), while Weatherford did not. (Libertarians nominate their candidates at conventions rather than by primary elections.)

While the party has an entire slate of candidates for statewide office in the November election, its two main candidates are Mrs. Glass and Robert Butler, who won the conventions nomination for Lieutenant Governor, said Lowry. (In addition, Upshur County Libertarians have nominated Peggy LaGrone, who is seeking her old job as County Clerk, to oppose Republican Terri Ross in November.)

In an email to The Mirror Thursday, Ms. Little said her main reason for attending the convention was to vote in the governors race.

I continue to support Kathie Glass for a number of reasons, primary being that no one else has done so much to promote the party, such as traveling and speaking all over Texas.

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Local Libertarians attend state convention

New Republican Liberty Caucus endorses Fulcher, other challengers

A libertarian group operating within the Idaho Republican Party is making its first endorsements in a slate led by Sen. Russ Fulcher in his challenge to two-term GOP Gov. Butch Otter.

The Republican Liberty Caucus of Idaho also backs challengers to three other statewide incumbents: Idaho County Commissioner Jim Chmelik over Lt. Gov. Brad Little; Boise lawyer C.T. Chris Troupis over Attorney General Lawrence Wasden; and Boise businessman Todd Hatfield over Controller Brandon Woolf.

In races for open statewide seats, the group endorses Rep. Lawerence Denney for secretary of state over Evan Frasure, Phil McGrane and Mitch Toryanski; and for John Eynon for superintendent of public instruction over Andy Grover, Randy Jensen and Sherri Ybarra.

The group was chartered as an arm of a national group, the Republican Liberty Caucus, founded in 1991 at the urging of Roger MacBride, a 1976 Libertarian Party presidential candidate.

To gain the endorsements, candidates were required to sign The Liberty Compact, which reads:

I pledge to the citizens of this state, and to the American people, that as their elected representative I will work to restore liberty, not restrict it; shrink government, not expand it; reduce taxes, not raise them; abolish programs, not create them; promote the freedom and independence of citizens, not the interference of government in their lives; and observe the limited, enumerated powers of our Constitution, not ignore them.

Founded in 2012 at the Idaho Republican Party convention, the Liberty Caucus also made what it calls a first round 31 of endorsements for the Legislature.

Among the notable legislative endorsements: Scott Smiths bid to unseat Senate President Pro Tem Brent Hill of Rexburg; Danielle Ahrens over nine-term Sen. Shawn Keough in Sandpoint; Toby Schindelbeck over Rep. Luke Malek in Coeur dAlene; Lee Rice over Sen. Todd Lakey in Nampa; Robert Muse over Rep. Rick Youngblood in Nampa; Diego Rodriguez over Sen. Fred Martin in Boise; Charles Pratt Porter over Lori DenHertog and Rich Jarvis for Fulchers open Senate seat in southwest Ada County; Lance Earl over Rep. Kelley Packer in Bannock and Power counties; and Ron Nate over Rep. Doug Hancey in Madison County.

RLC state charters are organized specifically to bring voters back into the Republican Party at the state level that left due to apathy, antagonistic behaviors of of GOP county central committees or poor candidate choices, said RLC Idaho Secretary Jason Robinson.

Robinson said the Idaho chapter is the largest state organization in the country, but he said both state and national membership numbers are confidential and not something I can release.

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New Republican Liberty Caucus endorses Fulcher, other challengers

Groups split over their GOP support

A PAC founded by North Idaho businesspeople is supporting Gov. Butch Otter's re-election. A new libertarian PAC is backing challenger Sen. Russ Fulcher.

The North Idaho Republican Political Action Committee and the Republican Liberty Caucus of Idaho PAC offer plenty of contrary advice on other statewide races and the Legislature.

The North Idaho group focuses on northern counties and was founded to support "reasonable" Republicans. In its first election two years ago, the group had a 6-1 record in legislative races and helped defeat scandal-plagued Rep. Phil Hart. The group has upped the ante in 2014 by targeting five tea party-friendly GOP lawmakers for defeat, supporting five incumbents and endorsing in two races for open seats.

The North Idaho group formed to respond to claims that business-backed lawmakers were RINOs - "Republicans in Name Only." The PAC opposes the GOP platform's call to have legislators elect U.S. senators, abolish the Federal Reserve Bank and return to the gold standard.

The two groups exemplify the battle for control of the Idaho Republican Party, pitting libertarian and tea party loyalists against Otter allies. The conflict reaches from the top of the ticket to hundreds of precinct committee races.

The Idaho branch of Liberty Caucus, established in 2012, is affiliated with the national Republican Liberty Caucus, founded in 1991 by former members of the Libertarian Party.

The North Idaho PAC endorsed all four GOP incumbents statewide who face primaries: Otter, Lt. Gov. Brad Little, Attorney General Lawrence Wasden and Controller Brandon Woolf.

The Liberty Caucus backs their challengers: Idaho County Commissioner Jim Chmelik over Little; Boise lawyer C.T. "Chris" Troupis over Wasden; Boise businessman Todd Hatfield over Woolf; and Fulcher.

For the open secretary of state job, the business group endorses Ada County Chief Deputy Clerk Phil McGrane, while the Liberty Caucus backs Rep. Lawerence Denney. The other GOP candidates are Evan Frasure and Mitch Toryanski.

The Liberty Caucus endorsed John Eynon for superintendent of public instruction over Andy Grover, Randy Jensen and Sherri Ybarra. The North Idaho PAC made no call in the race, but it is backing challengers to lawmakers who opposed Otter's state-run health exchange.

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Groups split over their GOP support

As libertarianism begins to gain in popularity and seep into the youth culture, there is increasing pressure from …

Submitted by Logn Albright of the Mises Canada blog,

As libertarianism begins to gain in popularity and seep into the youth culture, there is increasing pressure from certain strains of the movement to attempt to modify the theory and transform it into something that it is not.

To begin with, let us examine what is meant by the term libertarian, what its limits are, and what it attempts to explain. Libertarianism is exclusively a political philosophy describing the legitimate use of force in society. It claims that humans have the right of self-ownership, and that theft, assault and other forms of aggression violate this right, except in the case of legitimate self-defense against an aggressor. This is where the philosophy begins and ends, and although some libertarians dispute the circumstances under which force is acceptable (the Night Watchman state versus no state at all), it still has the legitimate use of force as its core.

It is not an economic philosophy, although its conclusion tends to support free market capitalism due to the lack of coercion inherent in such a system. Still, there is no dictum against collective ownership so long as it is voluntary. This is what anarcho-communism is all about.

Similarly, libertarianism has little to say about politics except for what follows directly from its central precept. Taxes are immoral because they involve coercion. Democracy is no better than dictatorship if it imposes the will of the many onto the few by force. And so on.

But because libertarianism has become fashionable among a certain segment of the population, and because we wish to expand the movement and convert others to it, there has been a push to expand this simple definition into a more holistic ethical code encompassing every aspect of life, almost akin to a religion. We are told that non-discrimination based on superficial characteristics like race and sex is an inherently libertarian position. It is not. So long as discrimination does not violate anyones rights of self-ownership, the theory simply has nothing to say about it (although we can observe that a capitalistic system is unlikely to encourage such behavior due to the way it tends to impact profits.)

Where these well-meaning meddlers go wrong is in assuming that just because libertarianism per se doesnt have a position on racism, that libertarians qua human beings do not have such a position either. This is absurd. Libertarianism is by its nature a narrow philosophy, with plenty of room to coexist along with other philosophies as well. Just as being a vegetarian does not exclude one from being Jewish, so does being a libertarian not exclude one from being a humanitarian.

We are more than a simple political philosophy, and while this defines the moral lens through which we see much of the world, it is not the totality of our being. For example, libertarianism has nothing to say on the subject of suicide. If we own ourselves, we have the right to terminate ourselves. Period. However, no libertarian I have ever met would encourage such an activity, and most would find it utterly reprehensible. The point is that you can hold a belief that something is wrong without having to fold it into a specific political philosophy where it has no business being.

Granted, certain ethical outlooks fit nicely within libertarianism while others do not. Kants categorical imperative that we treat humans as ends in themselves rather than means to an end works well, as does the Biblical Golden Rule, treat others as you would like to be treated. They are not explicitly part of libertarian theory, but they are compatible with it.On the other hand, one would be hard pressed to combine a restrictive set of laws, such as Sharia, with the non-aggression principle.

The trouble is that by attempting to redefine a narrow political philosophy to encompass all things that we like and think are nice like non-discrimination, like treating people as ends rather than means we dilute its power and simplicity. We destroy what makes it great. Once we proceed down the road of declaring everything we think is good to be libertarian, we will quickly find that libertarianism suddenly has no meaning at all.

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As libertarianism begins to gain in popularity and seep into the youth culture, there is increasing pressure from ...

Bedford press officer refuses to answer questions after I tell him I have libertarian bias – Video


Bedford press officer refuses to answer questions after I tell him I have libertarian bias
Sponsor: http://infinitecoin.com - Bedford press officer refuses to answer questions after I tell him I have libertarian bias Partial transcript...of text th...

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Bedford press officer refuses to answer questions after I tell him I have libertarian bias - Video

Utahs Libertarian Party announces candidates

The Libertarian Party of Utah met Saturday in Draper to approve and nominate its candidates for the November 2014 general election.

Below is the press release they provided with the results:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE APRIL 26, 2014 (Salt Lake City) The Libertarian Party of Utah met today in Draper to approve and nominate its slate of candidates for the November, 2014 General Election. The nominated candidates are:

Federal Candidates: Craig Bowden US House 1 Jim L Vein US House 4

Utah Constitutional Office Candidates: W. Andrew McCullough Attorney General

Utah Senate: Dwight Steffner State Senate 18 Brent Zimmerman State Senate 22

Utah House: Roger S. Condie State House 7 Megan Clegg State House 23 Chelsea Travis State House 35 Rainer Huck State House 40 Bret Black State House 44 Lee Anne Walker State House 46 Barry Evan Short State House 72

Utah State Libertarian Party Chairman Courtney White was pleased by the results, stating, Im excited about the slate of candidates we nominated today. Each of them brings something special to the table, and all are dedicated to protecting the liberty of their constituents.

The Libertarian Party of Utah supports a government limited in scope to protecting and preserving the innate rights of all individuals against all concentrations of power, be it governmental or corporate power over the individual, and which respects the earnings of every Utahn by controlling government spending. In that light, the party is pleased to note that it has selected its candidates without resorting to an expensive primary election conducted at public expense, unlike some other parties.

Additional information: http://www.UtahLP.org or http://www.facebook.com/lputah

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Utahs Libertarian Party announces candidates