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NEWS FROM THE LIBERTARIAN PARTY OF CALIFORNIA
400 Capitol Mall, Suite 900
Sacramento, CA 95814
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For immediate release: March 6, 2000
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For additional information:
Juan Ros, Executive Director
Phone: (818) 782-8400
Mailto:director@ca.lp.org
Web: http://www.ca.lp.org/
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114 Libertarians on primary ballot tomorrow
SACRAMENTO -- A record number of Libertarian
Party candidates for partisan office will appear
on California's primary ballot tomorrow -- 114 to
be exact, more candidates than all other "third"
parties combined, the party announced today.
"On Super Tuesday, the Libertarian Party of
California is the 'Super Party,'" stated Libertarian
state chair Mark Hinkle. "The reason for a
political party's existence is to get candidates
elected to office, and you can't do that unless you
run candidates. That's exactly what we're doing."
45 Libertarians are running for U.S.
Representative, 16 for State Senate, and 52 for
State Assembly. At the top of the ticket is U.S.
Senate candidate Gail Lightfoot, who received
217,000 votes in her 1998 run for Secretary of State.
That adds up to a total 114 Libertarian candidates,
compared with 76 Natural Law Party candidates, 13
Reform Party candidates, 10 Green Party candidates,
and only 5 American Independent Party candidates.
"Any way you cut it, the Libertarian Party has
done its job better than any other third party on
the ballot," Hinkle noted. "As a result, voters will
have more Libertarians to choose from than ever before.
Plus, with more Libertarian candidates campaigning up
and down the state, more Californians will hear and
understand our message of greater freedom and smaller
government."
The Libertarian 114-candidate total is a record
slate for the state party, shattering the previous
record of 100 candidates in both 1992 and 1980. The
Libertarian candidate count has seen a dramatic increase
over the last several election cycles, from 74
candidates in 1996 to 93 candidates in 1998, to 114 in
2000.
"Our record slate of candidates this year is further
proof that frustrated and disenfranchised Californians
are turning to the Libertarian Party," Hinkle explained.
"Party membership is up and our voter registrations
surpassed the Reform Party's last month. By any
standard, the Libertarian Party is a third party success
story -- and our successes are just beginning."
Five Libertarian candidates for president also
appear on the California ballot tomorrow in a
presidential preference contest. The party's
presidential nominee will be chosen by delegates to the
Libertarian National Convention, to be held June 30 -
July 3 in Anaheim.
An unknown number of Libertarians are running for
nonpartisan local office as well.
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