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elected as Republican, never elected as Libertarian [j] [16] Steve Vaillancourt: New Hampshire: Hillsborough–12 1996 2014 elected as Democrat, re-elected as Libertarian, switched to Republican [k] [17] Daniel P. Gordon: Rhode Island: 71st district 4 January 2011 4 January 2013 elected as Republican, never elected as Libertarian [l] [18] Neil ...
In April 2020, Representative Justin Amash from Michigan's 3rd congressional district became the first Libertarian member of Congress, after switching from the Republican Party and spending time as an independent. However, Amash has never been elected as a Libertarian, and did not seek re-election in 2020.
Also in 2018, Bobbi Hicks received 38% of the vote in a race in Arkansas's 10th Senate district in the Arkansas Senate, the best ever for a Libertarian candidate in a partisan state senate election. There have been 14 candidates elected to state senate who had a Libertarian and major party cross endorsement: 1 in New Hampshire in 1992, 6 in New ...
The one major exception was in the 2016 presidential race and 2018 U.S. Senate races, when former Republican Gov. Gary Johnson ran as a Libertarian and got more than 9% of the vote for president ...
List of Libertarian Party politicians who have held office in the United States; List of Green politicians who have held office in the United States; List of Communist Party USA members who have held office in the United States; List of Democratic Socialists of America public officeholders
The New Jersey Libertarian Party had 24,438 members in 2023, state records show. That's a fraction of the registered Democrats (2,547,517) and Republicans (1,555,014) in the state but ...
(The Libertarian Party selects the two positions in separate votes.* But the winner of the presidential nomination typically has significant influence in the outcome of the second contest.)
This is a list of notable performances of third party and independent candidates in elections to the United States Senate.. It is rare for candidates, other than those of the six parties which have succeeded as major parties (Federalist Party, Democratic-Republican Party, National Republican Party, Democratic Party, Whig Party, Republican Party), to take large shares of the vote in elections.