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Draft Minutes from December LNC meeting

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    LNC Meeting Minutes, December
    6-7, 2008, San Diego, CA

      To: Libertarian
      National Committee

      From: Bob
      Sullentrup

      CC: Robert
      Kraus

      Date: 12/7/2008

    Current Status: Draft

    Version last updated December
    7, 2008

    These
    minutes due out in 30 days: January 6, 2008

    Dates
    below may be superseded by mail ballot:

    LNC
    comments due in 45 days: January 21, 2008

    Revision
    released (latest) 14 days prior: February 14, 2009

    Barring
    objection, minutes official 10 days prior: February 18, 2009

    * Automatic approval dates
    relative to February 28 Charleston meeting

    The meeting commenced at 8:12am on
    December 6, 2008.

    Intervening Mail Ballots

    LNC mail ballots since the last meeting
    in DC included:

    • Sent 9/10/2008. Moved, that
      the tape of any and all recordings of the LNC meeting of Sept 6 &
      7, 2008 be preserved until such time as we determine, by a majority
      vote of the Committee, that they are no longer necessary. Co-Sponsors
      Rachel Hawkridge, Dan Karlan, Stewart Flood, Lee Wrights, Julie Fox,
      Mary Ruwart. Passed 13-1, 3 abstentions.
      • Voting in favor: Michael Jingozian,
        Bob Sullentrup, Michael Colley, Lee Wrights, Mary Ruwart, Tony Ryan,
        Mark Hinkle Rebecca Sink-Burris, Stewart Flood, Dan Karlan, James Lark,
        Julie Fox, Rachel Hawkridge
      • Opposed: Aaron Starr
      • Abstaining: Bill Redpath,
        Pat Dixon, Angela Keaton

    Moment of Reflection

    Chair Bill Redpath called for a moment
    of reflection, a practice at LNC meetings.

    Opportunity for Public Comment

    Kevin Takenaga (CA) welcomed the
    LNC to San Diego.

    Andy Jacobs (CA) asked why 2000 ballot
    access signatures were directed to be burned by the LP Political Director
    in violation of election law? Mr. Jacobs claimed this action and associated
    misallocation of petitioners caused collateral damage to ballot access
    efforts in other states. Lee Wrights noted later that no petition
    signatures had been destroyed.

    Richard Newhouse noted he has discovered
    some college-level books on libertarianism entitled American Government
    by Holmes, Englehardt, Elder Zoetewey and Ryden

    and The Challenge of Democracy by Janda, Berry and Goldman.

    Rob Power (CA) encouraged the LP
    to reach out to the political left as much as it does to the political
    right.

    Andy Jacobs (CA) also praised Paul
    Frankel and others for their volunteer work collecting LP candidates
    for publication on the LP website.

    David Nolan (AZ) wanted to know if
    he would be allowed to speak during the deliberations of the Bob Barr
    Resolution. The Chair said that the matter was on the agenda and that
    his speaking was up to the discretion of the body.

    Dr. Lark noted that in as much as
    the LNC was in California, he wanted to make a special recognition of
    the late Marshall Fritz who received a round of applause.

    Paperwork Check

    Chair Bill Redpath asked the Secretary
    to confirm the binder’s contents.

    Pat Dixon, Dan Karlan and Stewart
    Flood provided additional materials.

    Attendance and Credentials

    Secretary Bob Sullentrup confirmed
    the attendance of the members and alternates.

    Attending the September 6-7, 2008
    LNC meeting in Arlington were:

      Officers: Chair Bill Redpath,
      Vice-Chair Michael Jingozian, Treasurer Aaron Starr, Secretary Bob Sullentrup.

      At-Large Representatives: Admiral
      Michael Colley, Pat Dixon, Angela Keaton, Lee Wrights, Dr. Mary Ruwart.

      Regional Representatives: Tony
      Ryan(1), Mark Hinkle (2), Rebecca Sink-Burris (3), Stewart Flood(4),
      Dr. James Lark (5-S), Dan Karlan (5-N), Julie Fox (6), Rachel Hawkridge
      (7).

      Regional Alternates: Scott Lieberman
      (2)

      Alternates not attending were
      George Squyres (1), Bob Jackson (3), Heather Scott(4), Berlie Etzel
      (5-S), Jake Porter (6) and Steve LaBianca (7).

      Hardy Macia (5-N) has resigned
      as an alternate and has not been replaced.

      LNC Counsel Bill Hall did not
      attend but was available by telephone.

    Staff included Acting Executive Director
    Robert Kraus, and Political Director Sean Haugh,

    Others in the gallery consisted of
    Gene Trosper (CA), Mike Seebeck (CA), BetteRose Ryan (SD), Andy Jacobs
    (CA), David and Elizabeth Nolan (AZ), Rob Power (CA), Kevin Takanaga
    (CA), Ruth Bennett (WA), M Carling (CA), Brian Holtz (CA), Brian Dougherty
    (CA), Don Patterson (CA), George Phillies (MA), Wayne Allyn Root (NV),
    Alan Hacker (TX), Alicia Mattson (TN), Jim Duensing (NV) , Debra
    Dedmond (NV), Viki Kirkland (FL), Bo Cain (CA), Matthew Barnes (CA),
    Kelly Barnes (CA), Ken Gilespie, Mike McMahon, Carlony Marbry (CA).
    Christina Ohalan (TX), Zander Collier (CA), Jesse Thomas (CA), Starchild
    (CA).

    The following table lists the composition
    of the current LNC as accepted at the May 26, 2008 meeting. Hardy Macia
    resigned in November 2008 as Region 5 North alternate.

    RegionAffiliatesRepresentativeAlternate
    Region 1 Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Kansas, Montana,
    Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming
    Tony Ryan1 (AZ)George Squyres (AZ)
    Region 2CaliforniaMark Hinkle (CA)Scott Lieberman (CA)
    Region 3Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, IndianaRebecca Sink-Burris (IN)Bob Jackson (MI)
    Region 4Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi,
    North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas
    Stewart Flood (SC)Heather Scott (TN)
    Region 5 – SouthDelaware, District of Columbia, Maryland,
    Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia
    James W. Lark, III (VA)Berlie Etzel (PA)
    Region 5 – NorthConnecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, New
    Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, Vermont
    Dan Karlan (NJ)(vacant)
    Region 6Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri,
    Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wisconsin
    Julie Fox (IL)Jake Porter (MO)
    Region 7Florida, Hawaii, Idaho, Oregon, WashingtonRachel Hawkridge (WA)Steve LaBianca (FL)
    OrphansOklahoma, Massachusetts, Arkansas

    Report of Potential Conflicts
    of Interest

    Rachel Hawkridge reported she is
    involved with and may raise money for LPWashington and NorthWest Legal
    Foundation.

    Approval of the Agenda

    The group amended the agenda by adding,
    removing and reordering items. The resulting agenda is given below with
    changes in italics or strikethrough.

    Libertarian National
    Committee, Inc.

    December
    6-7, 2008 Meeting Agenda

    San Diego, CA

    Call to Order
8:00am
Minutes
    Moment of Reflection
1
    Opportunity for Public Comment
10
    Credentials Report and Paperwork Check
    (Secretary)
5
    Report of Potential Conflicts of Interest
5
    Approval of the Agenda
5
    Standing Reports
    Chair's Report
20
    Treasurer's Report
30
    Secretary's Report
10
    Wayne Allyn Root to address the
    LNC

    Barr Resolution (Ryan)

30

15

    Discipline of Angela Keaton (moved
    until after lunch
    )
30
    Staff Report
    Staff
60
    Counsel's Report
15 30
    Action Items Previously Submitted
    in Writing
    (none)
0

    Reports Previously Submitted in Writing
    Campus Organizing Report (Lark)
5
    Various Regions

    California Report (Takanaga)

5 per region

10

    Action Items Not Previously Submitted
    in Writing
    Mission Statement (Hawkridge)
60
    LNC Term Goals (Lark / Dixon)
60
    Executive Director Search (Colley)
10
    Budget 2009 (Starr) (already submitted
    in writing)
120
    Convention 2010 (Colley)
15

    Convention Electronic Voting Demonstration
    (Mattson)

    Platform Committee Nominations and
    Selection

30

60

    Bylaws Committee Report (Karlan)
10
    LNCC Report (Hawkridge)
10
    Policy Manual Amendment—Authorization
    of Lawsuits (Lark)
20
    Policy Manual Amendment—Mail Ballot
    Reporting and Strategic Plan (Karlan)

    LNC Meeting Video Recording &
    Archiving (Keaton)

    Volunteer Confidentiality Form (Redpath)

10

15

15

    LP News Content (Keaton)

    Other Resolution(s) (Hawkridge)


15


10

    Set LNC Meeting dates for July
    or Aug and Nov or Dec

    Opportunity for Public Comment

15

10

    Adjournment


    The agenda was amended, and attempted
    to be amended, as follows:

    • Dan Karlan wanted his item
      ‘Mail Ballot Reporting’ to read ‘Mail Ballot Reporting and Strategic
      Plan’
    • Aaron Starr moved to remove
      the ‘Barr Resolution’. The motion failed 4-12.
    • Lee Wrights moved to remove
      the ‘Discipline of Angela Keaton’. The motion failed.
    • Dr. Lark moved the place the
      ‘Discipline of Angela Keaton’ after the budget. Aaron Starr moved
      a substitute to take up the matter right after the Saturday lunch. The
      motion to substitute passed and the motion to move the matter to after
      lunch was approved.
    • Lee Wrights moved to extend
      the counsel’s report to 30 minutes – approved without objection.

    Without objection the resulting agenda
    given above was approved.

    Officer Reports

    Chair’s Report

    Chair Bill Redpath provided an oral
    report noting he had done the following since the September meeting
    in Arlington, VA:

    • Campaigned for US Senate in
      Virginia
    • Since the election has been
      conducting more interviews such as one in Baton Rouge and an upcoming
      interview out of Salt Lake City
    • The chairman has received
      a response from Russ Verney regarding list sharing. The response indicated
      ‘first things first’ – the campaign will pay down its debts and
      then would address data sharing
    • The chairman plans to proceed
      with Alan Gura on the FEC lawsuit that seeks to allow contributions
      received from estates to not be subject to limits.

    Treasurer’s Report

    Aaron Starr presented a treasurer’s
    report and noted these highlights:

    • A graph of revenues by year
      since 1992 indicated receipts drop after presidential elections. A tough
      year for the LP is coming up.
    • Though assets trail liabilities
      by about $40k, we anticipate a receipt from the Berrington Estate in
      January which will bring the financials to a net of about 0.

    Aaron fielded questions regarding
    current financials and his report is attached as Appendix A.

    Ruth Bennett noted there is no provision
    in the upcoming budget for Judicial Committee expenses that may be required.
    Candidates ran for their positions not expecting to have to incur travel.
    She recommended the LNC plan for such eventualities.

    Secretary’s Report

    Bob Sullentrup stated he is pleased
    to welcome the 2010 conventioneers to St. Louis and listed some of the
    amenities within walking distance of the Renaissance Grand hotel which
    includes:

    • The Arch and Museum of Westward
      Expansion,
    • The Mississippi riverfront,
    • Busch Stadium,
    • Ballpark Village,
    • The City Museum for kids,
    • A renovated Union Station
      with food court, otel and shops,
    • Anheuser Busch brewery tours
      and Clydesdales,
    • Laclede’s Landing for music,
      dancing and dining, and
    • Lumiere Place Casino and hotel.

    Metrolink and public transportation
    are free downtown.

    Dan Karlan noted the Bylaws specify:

    • The National Committee
      shall use roll call voting on all substantive motions
      (Article 8,
      section 11), and
    • The National Committee
      may, without meeting together, transact business by mail
      . (Article
      8, section 9)

Accordingly,
the minutes should include roll call ballots on mail ballots.

    Bob agreed to provide that information
    for the September minutes and to include the roll calls on mail ballots
    in the future.

    Roll Calls for Mail Ballots Reported
    in September:

    • Approval of 5-26 minutes,
      passed 11-4, 2 abstentions
      • Voting in favor: Michael Jingozian,
        Bob Sullentrup, Aaron Starr, Michael Colley, Mark Hinkle, Stewart Flood,
        Dan Karlan, James Lark, Rachel Hawkridge, Bill Redpath, Pat Dixon
      • Opposed: Lee Wrights,
        Mary Ruwart, Tony Ryan, Angela Keaton
      • Abstaining: Rebecca Sink-Burris,
        Julie Fox

    • Approval of 5-22 minutes,
      passed 12-1, 4 abstentions
      • Voting in favor: Michael Jingozian,
        Bob Sullentrup, Aaron Starr, Michael Colley, Mark Hinkle, Stewart Flood,
        Dan Karlan, James Lark, Pat Dixon, Rebecca Sink-Burris, Julie Fox, Tony
        Ryan
      • Opposed: Angela Keaton
      • Abstaining: Lee Wrights, Mary
        Ruwart, Bill Redpath, Rachel Hawkridge

    • APRC Resolution, passed 13-3,
      one abstention
      • Voting in favor: Michael Jingozian,
        Aaron Starr, Michael Colley, Mark Hinkle, Stewart Flood, Pat Dixon,
        Rebecca Sink-Burris, Julie Fox, Tony Ryan, Lee Wrights, Mary Ruwart,
        Rachel Hawkridge, Angela Keaton
      • Opposed: Bob Sullentrup,
        Dan Karlan, James Lark
      • Abstaining: Bill Redpath

    • Remove Give-or-Get amounts
      from the website, fails 8-9
      • Voting in favor: Bob Sullentrup,
        Angela Keaton, Lee Wrights, Mary Ruwart, Tony Ryan, Mark Hinkle, Julie
        Fox, Rachel Hawkridge
      • Opposed: Aaron Starr,
        Michael Colley, Stewart Flood, Pat Dixon, Rebecca Sink-Burris, Dan Karlan,
        James Lark, Bill Redpath, Michael Jingozian,

    Wayne Allyn Root

    Wayne Allyn Root, LP 2008 Vice Presidential
    nominee, addressed the LNC.

    Wayne noted ‘we are friends’,
    meaning he started as a libertarian-Republica. He is now is solidly
    Libertarian and not going back. . He noted Obama, the most liberal president
    ever, campaigned as a centrist and won. He encouraged Libertarians to
    remain as fervently Libertarian as ever, but to campaign in a way that
    lets Americans hear the message. “You be as radical as you want, and
    I’ll spread the message”. His job as LP candidate was to win over
    converts.

    In so doing, Wayne worked with many
    Libertarians and groups, including shaking hands and campaigning at
    the Gay Pride parade in San Francisco. He listed Aaron Starr, Alan Hacker,
    Kevin Takenaga, Bob Sullentrup and others as some of the many with whom
    he had worked during the campaign.

    In addition, Wayne had 1000 media
    experiences including interviews and appearances. This has led to him
    becoming an established ‘Libertarian face’ in the US. Since the
    Election he has been invited to be on Fox nine times, KABC in LA and
    other major media sources. This number of appearances has allowed him
    to experiment with various messages and approaches to hone those that
    resonate with the public.

    Some of the winning messages include
    school choice. Wayne said he termed it ‘school choice’, rather than
    ‘eliminate government schools’ as a means of portraying the issue
    in a manner that better resonates with the public. Wayne even said in
    an interview that ‘school choice is the civil rights issue of the
    21st Century’, a phrase co-opted by the McCain camp.

    Another winning message is to oppose
    ‘government unions’. About 1500 Americans e-mailed Wayne to express
    their affinity for his message and to vent their displeasure and distress
    with what government and its policies have been doing to them.

    Wayne has a book coming out in May
    that includes a 25-city book tour.

    Wayne noted the campaign failed to
    attract Ron Paul supporters in numbers he would have liked. The main
    lesson he took from the campaign was the role of money. Obama did not
    win because of the attractiveness of his message. He won because he
    raised more money. And it did not come from small donors. 60% of his
    donors contributed $2300. This translated into a 10-1 TV ad advantage
    in Nevada and for Nevada friends of Wayne reporting a several-to-zero
    phone calls to support Obama over McCain. That caused NV, a red state,
    to turn blue.

    In that vein, Wayne noted his appearances
    attracted 20 people in a location while Obama garnered 70,000. “We
    won’t make it with 20 people contributing $10 checks who then say
    they have supported the campaign’.

    While Wayne was proud of all of his
    interviews, he did complain about an interview that appeared in Reason
    Magazine that made him out to be a racist. This interview was based
    on comments at a cocktail party during which Wayne did not know the
    interview was underway. He felt ambushed.

    A question from the gallery asked
    if a lawsuit initiated now against the Commission on Presidential Debates
    would help gain entry into the 2012. Bob Sullentrup, founder of Rock-The-Debates,
    noted that the CPD has been sued since its inception in 1987, and that
    the litigation resulted in the CPD having to produce ‘objective standards’,
    which essentially consists of a candidate polling at 15%. “Of course,
    the polls they use don’t always include all candidates”, Bob noted
    “effectively eliminating them at the outset.”

    Wayne sacrificed his time and money
    – he has yet to be reimbursed $20k or so by the campaign – and is
    proud of the inroads he was able to make. Rachel Hawkridge saluted Wayne
    for his efforts and expressed on behalf of the LNC its appreciation
    for his dedication and service.

    Barr Resolution

    Tony Ryan introduced the following
    resolution as written by David Nolan, one of the Party’s founders.

      RESOLUTION SUBMITTED FOR LNC
      CONSIDERATION

      Author: David Nolan

      Whereas Congressman Bob Barr obtained
      the Libertarian Party’s Presidential nomination by holding out the
      prospects of tens of millions of dollars in campaign funding and as
      much as five percent of the popular vote for President, and

      Whereas the Barr/Root campaign failed
      totally to deliver on those promises, and

      Whereas the failures of that campaign
      were due substantially to incompetence and lack of understanding of
      libertarian principles on the part of the campaign’s management, as
      summarized in the attached Bill of Particulars,

      Therefore be it Resolved that
      the Libertarian National Committee hereby expresses it extreme disappointment
      at the mismanagement and ineptitude of the Barr/Root campaign, which
      resulted in the same 0.4% of the vote that previous Presidential candidates
      have achieved, even as libertarian principles were denied, downplayed
      and obscured by that campaign. Be it further resolved that
      we condemn the actions taken by Russ Verney and Shane Cory which resulted
      in the failures of the Barr/Root campaign, and specifically disavow
      any LNC responsibility for any debts incurred by the Barr/Root campaign
      or its agents and employees.

      BARR/ROOT CAMPAIGN – BILL
      OF PARTICULARS

      Specific shortcomings of the Barr/Root
      campaign which contributed to its failure to achieve its stated goals
      and disqualify it from receiving any financial aid from the Libertarian
      National Committee.

      AVOIDANCE OF THE WORD “LIBERTARIAN”

      The Barr /Root campaign went to great
      lengths to avoid using the word “Libertarian” wherever possible.
      The Barr ’08 website did not display the word “Libertarian” in
      a prominent fashion, and campaign material rarely included mention of
      the Libertarian Party. Our party was not mentioned in the Barr
      ’08 campaign brochure, on most signs or bumper stickers, and in many
      press releases. Often, Bob Barr was described only as a “former Congressman,”

      with no mention of his party affiliation.
      Campaign Manager Russ Verney has admitted that

      this was a deliberate strategy, stating
      that his goal was to build awareness of Bob Barr only,

      with no concern for building the
      Libertarian Party brand.

      MISDIRECTION OF FUNDS

      The Barr/Root campaign raised more
      than $1.3 million in contributions, but spent almost nothing on advertising
      to the voting public. Campaign staffers were paid inflated salaries;
      money was spent on refurbishing Bob Barr’s Atlanta offices; “political
      consultants” were paid at least $100,000; $19,000 was spent on limousines.
      But almost nothing was spent on promoting Barr or the Libertarian Party
      via paid broadcast or print advertising.

      BALLOT ACCESS

      Despite raising slightly more money
      than any other recent Libertarian Presidential campaign, the Barr ’08
      team achieved ballot status for our ticket in only 45 states – the
      lowest number since 1984. This failure is due largely to ineptitude
      and arrogance on the part of Shane Cory, who began ballot drives late
      and refused the services of experienced petitioners. Some petitioners
      were not paid for services rendered, leaving the LNC in the embarrassing
      position of being dunned by those petitioners.

      INSULTING TREATMENT OF RON PAUL

      The Barr ’08 campaign team repeatedly
      and deliberately dismissed and insulted Congressman Ron Paul, who demonstrated
      an unprecedented amount of support in the months prior to the Libertarian
      nominating convention. When TV personality Stephen Colbert interviewed
      Bob Barr shortly after he received the nomination and asked why previous
      Libertarian candidates had not received higher vote totals, Barr replied
      that “The Libertarian Party has never had a good candidate before”
      – thus insulting Ron Paul and all of our previous Presidential candidates.
      In September, Barr agreed to participate in a press conference organized
      by Ron Paul, but failed to show up. This understandably enraged Dr.
      Paul and led to his eventually endorsing fringe candidate Chuck Baldwin
      for President. As a result, the enthusiasm and potential financial
      support of Dr. Paul’s thousands of avid supporters were lost.

    Tony Ryan asked David Nolan if we
    might absolve Wayne Allyn Root from the resolution based on the
    comments we had just heard. The resolution addressed only the management
    of the campaign and not Wayne Allyn Root.

    The Chair, after passing the gavel
    to Vice Chair Michael Jingozian, entered into the discussion noting
    what he believed to be incorrect statements contained in the resolution:

      Often, Bob Barr was described
      only as a “former Congressman,” with no mention of his party affiliation.
      Campaign Manager Russ Verney has admitted that this was a deliberate
      strategy, stating that his goal was to build awareness of Bob Barr only,
      with no concern for building the Libertarian Party brand.

    The Chair said Russ Verney had never
    said that. Instead, the campaign was one that tried to ‘appeal
    to Independents’.

      This (ballot access) failure
      is due largely to ineptitude and arrogance on the part of Shane Cory,
      who began ballot drives late and refused the services of experienced
      petitioners.

    The chair, whose involvement in ballot
    access surpassed that of anyone on the board, said this statement was
    false.

      Some petitioners were not
      paid for services rendered, leaving the LNC in the embarrassing position
      of being dunned by those petitioners.

    The chair said this never happened.

    The Chair then read the following
    e-mail from Russ Verney.

      To: Bill Redpath

      From: Russ Verney

      Date: December 5, 2008

      Subject: An Interim report on the
      2008 presidential campaign.

      Mr Chairman:

      I understand that Wayne Allyn Root
      will be making a presentation to the LNC, therefore I have not included
      any statistics that are unique to him because he can present them far
      more eloquently than I can in a memo.

      Total Vote for Bob Barr and Wayne
      Root – 520,386

      The Barr Root ticket received the
      second highest raw vote total for any Libertarian Party presidential
      ticket.

      Bob Barr undoubtedly received the
      highest level of media coverage of any LP presidential candidate and
      I believe the same is true for Wayne on the VP level.

      Just from August 2
      through November 3rd Bob conducted at least:

      31
      national TV interviews including 15 on CNN and 8 on Fox News Network

      31
      local TV interviews

      93
      radio interviews

      38
      newspaper interviews

      11
      magazine interviews

      4
      news conferences

      36 speeches,
      most at leading Universities

      1
      debate televised on C-SPAN

      Additionally, Bob Barr was the subject
      of more than 240 print and significant on-line news reports during September
      and October.

      The Barr Root ticket was on the ballot
      in 45 states and their names appeared before 95% of all voters.

      Best States (not final
      numbers)

      Texas 56,342

      California 51,479

      Georgia 28,414

      North Carolina 25,279 Obama won the
      state by about 13,700 votes

      New York 22,520

      Michigan 20,802

      Pennsylvania 19,436

      Indiana 19,243 Obama won the state
      by 26,000 votes

      Illinois 19,004

      Ohio 18,663

      Florida 16,134

      Massachusetts 12,989

      Missouri 11,117 McCain won the state
      by 3,600 votes

      Arizona 10,387

      Virginia 10,165

      Colorado 9,361

      Minnesota 9,176

      Maryland 8,943

      Wisconsin 8,795

      Washington 8,583

      Tennessee 8,472

      Dollars spent per
      vote (approximately)

      Obama 10

      McCain 6.3

      Nader 5.9

      Barr 3

      For perspective:

      Buchanan in 2000 35

      Paul in ’08 primaries 15

      Perot in 1992 3

      Bob Barr issued numerous fact and
      policy laden News Releases and had several Editorial Opinions published
      in forums with national circulation. He also published 2 books during
      the campaign:

      Patriot

      Nation: Bob Barr’s Laws of the Universe vol. 1

      Lessons
      in Liberty

      Below is a graph representing some
      of the on-line activity of the campaign that generally shows a 25% monthly
      growth rate (note: Meetup is the only networking group that charges
      for some of its services).

      Prior to election day the web site
      Tech President noted that Bob Barr was out performing John McCain with
      respect to Meetup members.

    Your browser may not support display of this image.

    Aaron Starr asked for an opinion
    from the Chair: Was this resolution tantamount to a condemnation? The
    Chair decided that it was not.

    Stewart Flood noted that some of
    Angela’s comments may have been libelous and thus put the LNC at risk.

    After further discussion, Aaron Starr
    again asked if this resolution were essentially ‘a slap in the face’.
    The Chair again ruled that it was not.

    The motion failed 3-12

    Voting in favor: Michael Jingozian,
    Angela Keaton, Tony Ryan

    Voting against: Aaron Starr, Bob
    Sullentrup. Admiral Michael Colley, Pat Dixon, Dr. Mary Ruwart, Mark
    Hinkle, Rebecca Sink-Burris, Stewart Flood, Dr. James Lark, Dan Karlan,
    Julie Fox, Rachel Hawkridge

    Staff Report

    Before turning the report over to
    Sean Haugh, Robert Kraus noted the Barr Resolution, if passed, would
    have a ‘hugely detrimental effect on Staff’.

    Sean Haugh noted the LP has gained
    ballot status in Maryland through 2010.

    Sean wants to start the petitioning
    in Nebraska before April, 2009. In so doing, Nebraska will recognize
    Libertarian voters as Libertarians rather than reclassifying them as
    Independent. Scott Kohlhaus will begin ballot access fundraising January
    1.

    Sean wants to start petitioning early
    in Nebraska, Alaska and South Dakota. SD has the advantage of us being
    able to reuse signatures already collected. As time goes on, the validity
    rate of the signatures will erode as people move or otherwise become
    invalid (e.g, deaths, incarcerations)

    Staff reports are provided in Appendix
    C.

    Responding to an objection to the
    Give-or-Get totals included in the staff report, Dr. Lark moved to allow
    those who did not wish to participate in the program to be able to do
    so with their names not included in staff reports.

    Aaron Starr moved to postpone consideration
    until after the budget. The motion to postpone failed.

    The main motion passed 14-2. Bill
    Redpath did not vote

    Voting in favor: Michael Jingozian,
    Bob Sullentrup,, Admiral Michael Colley, Pat Dixon, Lee Wrights, Dr. Mary
    Ruwart. Tony Ryan, Mark Hinkle, Rebecca Sink-Burris, Stewart Flood,
    Dr. James Lark, Dan Karlan (5-N), Julie Fox, Rachel Hawkridge.

Voting
against: Aaron Starr, Angela Keaton,

    Counsel’s Report

    Bill Hall participated in the Counsel’s
    Report by teleconference.

    As a point of personal privilege,
    Bill noted the Staff Report failed to note two elected Libertarians
    in partisan elections in Michigan. (
    who?)

    Lee Wrights moved to enter executive
    session for the purpose of discussing the counsel’s report. Dr. Lark
    seconded. There was no objection.

    Before entering executive session
    Mark Hinkle noted that Kevin Takenaga had to catch a flight. With the
    indulgence of the body Mark Hinkle asked to hear from Kevin Takenaga
    to right after lunch. Without a vote the request was so obliged.

    SATURDAY PM

    California Report

    With the indulgence of the body Kevin
    Takenaga, California Chair who had to catch a plane, addressed the LNC
    at this time. Kevin praised the several elected Libertarians from the
    Golden State that includes:

    • Brian Holtz
    • Norm Westwell
    • Kate O’Brien
    • Frank Manske
    • Eric Henrickson
    • Johnathan Hall
    • Tom Tryon
    • John Inks

    Other LP work in California included
    the LP’s support for Proposition 8, the measure that made same-sex
    marriages illegal.

    Steven Greenhut of the Orange
    County Register
    , is a newly minted Libertarian who defected from
    the ranks of the Republicans.

    California, following a recommendation
    of the Barr campaign has formed many meet-up groups that continue to
    attract new members.

    Discipline of Angela Keaton

    Stewart Flood read the following
    resolution:

    Resolution
    of Discipline

      Whereas, Angela Keaton has engaged
      in conduct injurious to the Libertarian Party and its purposes; now,
      therefore, be it

      RESOLVED, That Angela Keaton's membership
      in the Libertarian National Committee is suspended pursuant to Article
      8, Section 5 of the Bylaws of the Libertarian Party; and further be
      it

      RESOLVED, That the aforementioned
      suspension is hereby rescinded, contingent upon a determination by the
      Secretary that Angela Keaton has submitted within seven days of the
      adoption of this resolution a letter for publication in LP News including
      (and limited to):

      • An apology for being in breach
        of a board member’s fiduciary duty of loyalty to the Libertarian Party,
        publicly declaring her disinterest in the party, providing material
        support to another political party and seeking to undermine the success
        of and attempting to injure the Libertarian Party and its public image.
        The contents of the apology to include the following:
        • An apology to the members
          of the Libertarian Party for seeking to undermine the success of and
          attempting to injure the Libertarian Party and its public image by posting
          on her blog in July 2008, “Friends don’t let friends join the LP”
          and on September 5, 2008, “The LP is hopeless”

        • An apology to the members
          of the Libertarian Party for violating the fiduciary duty of a board
          member by joining and providing material support to a competing political
          party while serving on the board of the Libertarian Party

        • An apology to the members
          of the Libertarian Party of New Hampshire for attempting on August 21,
          2008 to sabotage the party’s attempt to win the right to candidate
          substitution for future elections

        • An apology to Wayne Allyn
          Root and the Libertarian Party for attempting to injure their public
          images by knowingly publishing on June 13, 2008 false assertions that
          an indictment on charges of fraud was pending against Mr. Root

        • An apology to the members
          of the Libertarian Party for misusing donor data to contact major LP
          donors and falsely telling them that the Libertarian Party had defrauded
          them

      • An apology for exhibiting
        a pattern of reckless behavior and poor judgment, potentially exposing
        the LP to harassment lawsuits, creating an uncomfortable environment
        for staff and fellow LNC members, and potentially discouraging groups
        of people from joining the LP. The contents of the apology to
        include the following:

        • An apology to LP staff member
          Casey Hansen for violating the LNC Policy Manual Article 1, Section
          8.D and risking sexual harassment accusations by blogging on September
          6, 2008, “Nice staff piece of ass, Casey. Dark, young and easy
          prey for a cougar like myself.”

        • An apology to Aaron Starr
          and the Libertarian National Committee for violating LNC Policy Manual,
          Article 1, Section 8.D (which prohibits harassment of LP staff or fellow
          LNC members with racial epithets and derogatory posters, pictures, cartoons,
          or drawings) by posting on her blog on June 16, 2008 a photo-shopped
          image of herself and Mr. Starr portraying him in Darth Vader costume
          and Hitler moustache and identifying him as “Darth Herr Vader”

        • An apology to the Libertarian
          National Committee for violating LNC Policy Manual, Article 1, Section
          8.D and risking sexual harassment accusations by posting on her blog
          on September 6, 2008 sexual comments regarding several LNC Members and
          one candidate for the Executive Director position

        • An apology to Southerners
          and Christians for violating LNC Policy Manual Article 1 Section 8.A
          which states, “All collective deprecation, whether alluding to sex,
          race, color, national origin, disability, age, religion, or any other
          protected category, must be avoided. Every person is a unique
          individual, and as the Libertarian Party is the Party of Individual
          Liberty, this injunction should doubly apply”, for posting on her
          blog on June 13, 2008 referring to an LP member from the South as a
          “hillbilly” and further stating, “All those Christian types married
          to their uncle cousins look the same to me.”

      • An apology to the Libertarian
        Party for violating the confidentiality of the September 7, 2008 Executive
        Session with a blog post on the same date and also for violating the
        confidentiality of a February 2008 Executive Session with a blog post
        on June 15, 2008

      • An apology to Stewart Flood
        for threatening by phone on November 6, 2008, “I could have things
        done to you.”

      • A promise not to commit similar
        offenses in the future while serving as a member of the Libertarian
        National Committee.

    Aaron Starr seconded the resolution.

    Stewart then proceeded to present
    a 23-page document of evidence.

    Bob Sullentrup moved to extend discussion
    for 30 minutes. With no objection, the LNC proceeded.

    Dan Karlan moved to divide the issue
    and Aaron Starr seconded.

    Before dividing the question, Pat
    Dixon requested we allow Angela Keaton to respond to the material Stewart
    had presented.

    Angela Keaton noted:

    • Her ongoing opposition to
      the Barr campaign was widely known
    • Her thanks to her detractors
      for taking the time to compile her ‘greatest hits’
    • Her right to spew invective
      across the Internet
    • That she had a lot of supporters
      whose interests she was promoting
    • That she was promoting the
      real issues of ‘the movement’ in an exemplary way that others on
      the board were falling short of doing
    • That her words represented
      her honest opinions and as such were not breaches of any fiduciary obligations
      on the board
    • That she harbored disdain
      for the Party’s leadership.

    The motion to divide failed 6-8.

    Pat Dixon raised three key items
    that he wished Ms. Keaton would address. Angela responded in due time.
    The issues were:

    • Breaching the confidentiality
      of executive session. Ms. Keaton noted the executive session was improperly
      called because she claimed it reduced to a means of putting her on trial.
      Moreover, Ms. Keaton threatened to divulge executive session material
      should a bait-and-switch tactic be used against her again.
    • Respect for staff (sexual
      harassment charges involving Casey Hansen). Ms. Keaton said she had
      offered a ‘half-hearted apology’ who at the time did not know about
      the statements.
    • Threatening of Stewart Flood..
      Ms. Keaton said she has always regarded Mr. Flood as dangerous and was
      afraid he ‘will fall on me’.

    Someone (Dan
    Karlan
    ?) also noted Ms. Keaton’s
    failure to disclose her involvement with the Boston Tea Party as a conflict
    of interest earlier in the meeting was another breach. The LNC removed
    Steven Burden from the 2008 Platform Committee by virtue of his involvement
    with another Party.

    Rebecca Sink-Burris moved to extend
    time for another 10 minutes.

    Julie Fox acknowledged some of the
    concerns harbored by Ms. Keaton. At the same time ‘you brought a lot
    of this on yourself’ by lack of respect for decorum and dereliction
    of responsibilities.

    Bob Sullentrup noted that even if
    in executive session matters seem to turn into a witch hunt, there still
    is a responsibility on the part of LNC members to not broadcast it.
    Moreover, the pattern of sexual harassment, even if not perceived as
    harassment by the target, can be construed as tacit endorsement of such
    practices if the LNC were to take no remedial action and would face
    the potential for a huge financial liability.

    After a five-minute extension by
    Dr. Lark, Michael Jingozian offered a substitute motion:

    The
    LNC shall form a dispute resolution committee to address this issue.

    Mary Ruwart seconded. The motion
    to substitute passed.

    This newly minted main motion passed
    with no objection.

    The LNC plans on populating the dispute
    resolution committee first thing Sunday.

    Reports Previously Submitted
    in Writing

    Campus Organizing

    Dr. Lark indicated that his report
    several weeks ago and is attached as Appendix D. He stated he
    would entertain questions about it; there were no questions.

    Regional Reports

    Stewart Flood read a letter from
    Barbara Howe, the NC Chair. Ms. Howe noted Michael Munger received 125k
    votes – 2.85% – thus securing NC ballot access for four years. This
    is a significant development considering the expense incurred in securing
    ballot access in NC.

    (who?) reported Eric Sundwald is recommending the
    LNC not investigate the Tom Stevens matter any further. Tom Stevens
    regrettably has suffered a stroke and is incapacitated. The issue involved
    Mr. Stevens being both an LP Judicial Committee member and was a presidential
    candidate on the Objectivist Party ticket in Florida and Colorado.

    Mission Statement

    Aaron Starr moved to change the agenda
    by moving the mission statement to a different spot. The motion failed
    for lack of a second.

    Rachel Hawkridge introduced David
    Nolan who advocated a broad- based mission statement for the Party.

    The current mission statement2
    of the Libertarian is:

      The mission of the LP is to
      move public policy in a libertarian direction by building a
      political party that elects Libertarians to public office.

    Rachel Hawkridge moved and Dr. Ruwart
    seconded the following:

      The mission of the LP is to
      move public policy in a libertarian direction by building a network
      of pro-freedom activists who can effectively support public policy changes
      and oppose negative changes by working within the political process
      on an issue-by-issue basis.

    Without objection, the words ‘on
    an issue-by-issue basis’ were struck (
    who
    moved
    ?)

      The mission of the LP is to
      move public policy in a libertarian direction by building a network
      of pro-freedom activists who can effectively support public policy changes
      and oppose negative changes by working within the political process.

    Dan Karlan moved to amend by deleting
    ‘can effectively’. With no objection, the main motion read:

      The mission of the LP is to
      move public policy in a libertarian direction by building a network
      of pro-freedom activists who support public policy changes and oppose
      negative changes by working within the political process.

    Aaron Starr moved to postpone discussion
    until next meeting in Charleston. The postponement failed 6-9.

    Michael Jingozian called the question
    which failed.

    Mark Hinkle offered a substitute:

      The mission of the LP should
      be to unite voters who want more personal liberty and more economic
      liberty behind electoral choices that will most move public policy in
      a libertarian direction.

Without
objection, the words ‘should be’ were changed to ‘is’.

A
request to allow Starchild to address the body passed.

    Lee Wrights moved to table the issue
    until Charleston. Wrights was on the prevailing side of the issue and
    the motion had changed. The motion to postpone now passed.

    Goals

    Pat Dixon introduced the following
    e-mail that he had sent to the LNC:

      Date:
      December 4, 2008 8:43:13 AM CST

      Subject: Final proposal regarding
      LNC goals

      Fellow LNC members,

      I have spoken with many of
      you regarding the discussion of short term goals for our LNC term at
      our upcoming meeting and I thank you for your constructive input. Based
      on your recommendations I propose the following approach that may save
      time and reach consensus. I will print copies of this and bring them
      with me for distribution.

      I also intend to ask that we
      have a discussion of our strategic plan at our next meeting to address
      the long term goals and whether we should follow through or abandon
      the strategic plan.

      *********************

      First, I will make a motion
      to approve the process for adoption of goals which is the same as I
      have sent previously, which we used 2 years ago. If this motion fails,
      we end the topic and move on to the next agenda item. Based on your
      prior feedback, I expect this motion to pass:

      Motion: I move adoption of
      the following procedure …

      Goal setting procedure:

      – All goals should be measurable
      with stated metrics. There will be 3 categories of goals: POLITICAL,
      FINANCIAL, ORGANIZATIONAL. They should all have an end date within the
      LNC 2 year term.

      – No more than 3 goals in each
      category will be formally adopted. Additionally, any goal that does
      not have 2/3 support by vote of the LNC will be dropped. Therefore,
      the top vote getters in each category that meet or exceed 2/3 of the
      LNC members that respond, not to exceed 3, will be formally adopted.

      – Approval voting will be used.
      In approval voting, you cast a YES/NO vote (APPROVE/DISAPPROVE) for
      each proposed goal in a category. Therefore, you can vote for none,
      all, or a specified few of the goals in each category. In the case of
      a tie for one of the top 3 spots, those goals will remain in the list
      if they have 2/3 support.

      Example 1: If 4 goals tie for
      1st, they will remain and all others will drop.

      Example 2: If one goal is 1st
      and 5 tie for second, all 6 will remain.

      Example 3: If 1 goal each is
      1st and 2nd and 5 tie for third, all 7 will remain in the list.

      *********************

      Next, I will move that those
      goals that we have already shown consensus for based on my discussions
      with you be adopted.

      POLITICAL:

      1) 48 state Ballot access (Champion:
      Bill RedPath)

      ORGANIZATIONAL:

      1) The LNC will have 18,000
      sustaining members as of Dec. 31, 2009 (Champion: Mark Hinkle, submitted
      by Dr Jim Lark, amended by Aaron Starr)

      2) The LNC will ensure that
      each state has an operational affiliate party by July 1, 2009 (Champion:
      Dan Karlan, submitted by Dr Jim Lark and amended by Aaron Starr)

      "Operational state affiliate" defined
      in the following manner:

      * There is a properly maintained
      website for the affiliate

      * There is at least one LP
      member in the state who actively serves as an official contact for the
      affiliate in its dealings with the LNC, and there is at least one LP
      member in the state who actively serves as a contact for the affiliate
      in its dealings with the state government.

      * LPHQ has a copy of the current
      bylaws and associated documents for the affiliate, along with a copy
      of the relevant laws of that state regarding political parties and ballot
      access.

      FINANCIAL:

      1) The LNC will raise at least
      $1.3 million during 2009 (Champion: Mike Jingozian, submitted by Dr
      Jim Lark, amended by Aaron Starr)

      *********************

      Lastly I will present other
      goals that have been submitted in order of those that you have indicated
      your support for and consider each one at a time. I intend to limit
      discussion to 5 minutes for each proposal. The order of support that
      you have indicated is:

      FINANCIAL:

      – Full compliance with the
      Reserve Requirements as stated in Article V Section 5 of the LNC Policy
      manual by the end of the LNC term (Champion: Aaron Starr, submitted by
      Pat Dixon)

      ORGANIZATIONAL:

      – Select 2012 convention site
      before 2010 convention (Champion: ????, submitted by Pat Dixon)

      POLITICAL:

      – Remain the Party of Principle
      as We Grow (Champion: Mary Ruwart, submitted by Mary Ruwart)

      FINANCIAL:

      – Achieve above-median market
      rate compensation for the executive director compared to Washington
      DC non-profits (Champion: Admiral Colley, submitted by Pat Dixon)

      POLITICAL

      – Seek out friendly legislators
      in three (3) states to introduce legislation to ease ballot access requirements.
      (Champion: ?????, submitted by Aaron Starr)

      POLITICAL

      – Provide recognition to elected
      Libertarians by publishing at least one elected official profile in
      each issue of LP News. (Champion: ?????, submitted by Aaron Starr)

      FINANCIAL:

      – Add 300 new donors pledging
      monthly by credit card or ach debit. (Champion: ?????, submitted by Aaron
      Starr)

      POLITICAL:

      – Invest in marketing to help
      identify where the LP should invest (Champion: Pat Dixon)

      *********************

      Yours in Liberty,

      Patrick
      J Dixon

      Libertarian
      Party National Committee, At-Large member

      Chair, Libertarian
      Party of Texas

    To start, Pat Dixon moved the following
    to address the procedure.

      Goal setting procedure:

      – All goals should be measurable
      with stated metrics. There will be 3 categories of goals: POLITICAL,
      FINANCIAL, ORGANIZATIONAL. They should all have an end date within the
      LNC 2 year term.

      – No more than 3 goals in each
      category will be formally adopted. Additionally, any goal that does
      not have 2/3 support by vote of the LNC will be dropped. Therefore,
      the top vote getters in each category that meet or exceed 2/3 of the
      LNC members that respond, not to exceed 3, will be formally adopted.

      – Approval voting will be used.
      In approval voting, you cast a YES/NO vote (APPROVE/DISAPPROVE) for
      each proposed goal in a category. Therefore, you can vote for none,
      all, or a specified few of the goals in each category. In the case of
      a tie for one of the top 3 spots, those goals will remain in the list
      if they have 2/3 support.

      Example 1: If 4 goals tie for
      1st, they will remain and all others will drop.

      Example 2: If one goal is 1st
      and 5 tie for second, all 6 will remain.

      Example 3: If 1 goal each is
      1st and 2nd and 5 tie for third, all 7 will remain in the list.

    Mary Ruwart moved to change ‘3
    goals per category’ to ‘5 goals per category’. Mary Ruwart’s
    motion passed.

    Pat Dixon’s motion as amended passed.

    Pat Dixon then moved

      POLITICAL:

      1) 48 state Ballot access (Champion:
      Bill RedPath)

      ORGANIZATIONAL:

      1. The LNC will have 18,000
        sustaining members as of Dec. 31, 2009 (Champion: Mark Hinkle, submitted
        by Dr Jim Lark, amended by Aaron Starr)

      2) The LNC will ensure that
      each state has an operational affiliate party by July 1, 2009 (Champion:
      Dan Karlan, submitted by Dr Jim Lark and amended by Aaron Starr)

      "Operational state affiliate" defined
      in the following manner:

      * There is a properly maintained
      website for the affiliate

      * There is at least one LP
      member in the state who actively serves as an official contact for the
      affiliate in its dealings with the LNC, and there is at least one LP
      member in the state who actively serves as a contact for the affiliate
      in its dealings with the state government.

      * LPHQ has a copy of the current
      bylaws and associated documents for the affiliate, along with a copy
      of the relevant laws of that state regarding political parties and ballot
      access.

      FINANCIAL:

      1. The LNC will raise at
        least $1.3 million during 2009 (Champion: Mike Jingozian, submitted
        by Dr Jim Lark, amended by Aaron Starr)

    Aaron Starr moved to divide the issue

    into the four questions preceded by numbers. The motion to divide passed.

    Accordingly we next addressed the
    first goal:

      POLITICAL:

      1) 48 state Ballot access (Champion:
      Bill RedPath)


    Aaron Starr moved to substitute:

      POLITICAL

      – Seek out friendly legislators
      in three (3) states to introduce legislation to ease ballot access requirements.
      (Champion: ?????, submitted by Aaron Starr)

    The substitution failed for lack
    of a second.

    Mary Ruwart moved to amend to say
    that we ‘Raise one third of the necessary funds this term in order
    to achieve 48 state ballot access in 2012’. The amendment failed.

    Mark Hinkle moved Bill Redpath craft
    language for this goal and defer the matter to a mail ballot (i.e.,
    to essentially commit the issue to a committee). There was no objection
    to this motion.

    Next we considered:

      ORGANIZATIONAL:

      1) The LNC will have 18,000
      sustaining members as of Dec. 31, 2009 (Champion: Mark Hinkle, submitted
      by Dr Jim Lark, amended by Aaron Starr)

    Lee Wrights moved to suspend the
    rules for the purpose of having Pat Dixon and champions of the various
    goals craft language for the remainder of the items and present in (no
    later than) the Charleston meeting.

    The suspension of the rules passed
    with no objection.

    The motion passed on a voice vote
    after Mary Ruwart had called the question.

    Policy Manual Addition for Mail
    Ballots

    With Admiral Colley temporarily stepping
    out the room, Dan Karlan presented his change to the Policy Manual:

    Article
    III, Section 2, Sub-Section A (page 15), append a new third paragraph:

      The Secretary shall report
      the results of mail ballots at each LNC meeting immediately following
      those ballots. The minutes of each meeting of the LNC shall include
      the following aspects of each mail ballot conducted since the prior
      meeting and reported by the Secretary at that meeting: the complete
      text of the motion, the names of the co-sponsors, the dates of the initiation
      and completion of the balloting, and the roll of those voting on the
      motion.

    With no objection and the Secretary
    affirming his support the motion passed.

    Executive
    Director Search

    Admiral Colley noted the search continues
    for an executive director with interviews ongoing, including some conduced
    in San Diego.

    Meeting Dates
    for 2009

    The LNC settled on the following
    dates:

    Charleston, LSLA Conference Feb 28,
    Saturday PM

    March 1, Sunday all day

    July 18-19 Likely St. Louis or Boise,
    ID3

    December 5-6

    Adjournment / Recess

    Lee Wrights moved to adjourn. Motion
    passed.

    Sunday AM

    The Sunday session commenced at 8:03.

    Population of Conflict Resolution
    Committee

    Bill Redpath recognized Michael Jingozian
    who recommended the following members to populate the Conflict
    Resolution committee:

    Rachel
    Hawkridge, Tony Ryan, Mary Ruwart, Rebecca Sink-Burris, Admiral Michael
    Colley,

    Michael Jingozian

    Angela Keaton objected to the formation
    of the committee. Her objection was ruled out of order.

    The committee membership was established
    without objection.

    2009
    Budget

    Bob Sullentrup moved to reduce the
    amount of time for the 2009 Budget from 120 to 30 minutes. The motion
    failed.

    Aaron Starr presented the proposed
    2009 budget, pegged at $1.3M as an order of magnitude. Aaron covered
    budget items line by line answering questions and providing explanations.

    The LNC entered executive session
    for the purpose of discussing salaries and compensation.

    The 2009 proposed budget is attached
    as Appendix B.

    Washington
    “Top Two” Litigation

    Coming out of executive session from
    the budget discussion, Pat Dixon moved to suspend the rules to consider
    for 10 minutes appropriating $15k previously authorized for challenging
    the FEC limits on bequests to support the Washington State “top two”
    litigation. The “top two” refers to the primary system that we wish
    to throw out in order to preserve trademark protection for the Libertarian
    Party name. The fear is D’s and R’s would use this procedure to
    eliminate ‘spoilers’.

    The suspension of the rules passed
    and Mr. Dixon introduced the motion.

    The motion passed 15-1.

    Voting in favor: Michael Jingozian,
    Bob Sullentrup, Admiral Michael Colley, Pat Dixon, Angela Keaton, Lee
    Wrights, Dr. Mary Ruwart, Tony Ryan(1), Mark Hinkle (2), Rebecca Sink-Burris
    (3), Stewart Flood(4), Dr. James Lark (5-S), Dan Karlan (5-N),
    Julie Fox (6), Rachel Hawkridge (7)

    Voting against: Aaron Starr

    Bill Redpath did not vote.

    2009
    Budget, continued

    Mary Ruwart called the question on
    the 2009 budget as proposed. The motion passed 10-6.

    Voting in favor: Michael Jingozian,
    Aaron Starr, Bob Sullentrup. Admiral Michael Colley, Pat Dixon, Tony
    Ryan, Mark Hinkle, Rebecca Sink-Burris, Stewart Flood, Dan Karlan.

    Opposed: Angela Keaton, Lee Wrights,
    Dr. Mary Ruwart, Dr. James Lark, Julie Fox, Rachel Hawkridge

    Bill Redpath did not vote

    Lee Wrights challenged that the budget
    had not been previously submitted in writing. The chair ruled the budget
    had been submitted in writing.

    Rachel Hawkridge moved Michael Jingozian
    provide his ‘quick and dirty’ marketing proposal regarding ways
    to enhance 2009 revenue to the LNC, and that the Executive Committee
    meet before the end of the year to make corresponding budget adjustments.
    There was no objection to Rachel’s motion.

    Agenda

    Pat Dixon moved to strike Alicia
    Mattson’s E-voting demo from the agenda. There was no objection

Platform
Committee Nominations and Selection

    No candidates other than those nominated
    previously via e-mail were added to the list of candidates for the Platform
    Committee. Ballot results were as follows.

    Receiving majority support and selected
    for the Platform Committee were

      Adam Mayer 13

      Rebecca Sink-Burris 13

      Richard Randall 12

      Brian Holtz 11

      Alicia Mattson 11

      Stephen Gordon 10

      John Roland 10

      Rob Power 9

      Joe Hauptman 9

    Not receiving a majority were

      Chris Barber 8

      Susan Hogarth 8

      Stephen Green 6

      John Howell 5

      Starchild 5

      James Oakson 3

      Michael Carmany 2

      Corey Carpenter 2

      Scott Stewart 1

      John Jacob –

      Richard Stewart –

      Aaron Starr moved, then later
      withdrew, a motion to fill the tenth person on the Committee in Charleston.

      Mary Ruwart proposed a voice
      vote to choose between Chris Barber and Susan Hogarth who had fallen
      one vote short. Mary’s motion passed.

      Susan Hogarth was selected 9-5.
      Chris Barber is the alternate.

      Rebecca Sink-Burris moved Alicia
      Mattson be the interim chair of the Platform committee. The motion passed.

      Bob Sullentrup commended Alicia
      Mattson for her ‘masterful’ job Alicia as 2008 Platform Committee
      chair, suffering the slings and arrows from many sources yet maintaining
      her composure, refusing to be bullied and letting the Convention’s
      will to ultimately prevail.

    Convention 2010

    Admiral Colley said the LP will hold
    its convention at the Renaissance Grand hotel in downtown St. Louis
    Memorial Day weekend in 2010. The Convention will be Saturday, Sunday
    and a half day Monday.

    This property offered the best prices,
    had a central location, offered MetroLink light rail transportation
    from the airport and additional amenities. Room rate is $109, locked
    in at the 2008 price. Room commitments: 41 Thu, 341 Fri, 341 Sat, 316
    Sun, 31 Mon for a total of 1165. The LNC would be responsible for room
    attrition penalties of 70% of that number.

    Pat Dixon moved to accept the recommendation
    of St. Louis. There was no objection.

Convention
Electronic Voting Demonstration (Mattson)

    Pat Dixon had moved to defer Alicia
    Mattson’s demo to Charleston.

Bylaws
Committee Report (Karlan)

    Bill Redpath at this point had to
    leave for the airport to catch a flight United had changed and was unwilling
    to let him change.

Vice-Chair
Michael Jingozian took over running the meeting.

    Before leaving, Bill noted that he
    had appointed M Carling as LNC parliamentarian, a prerogative within
    his authority.

    Dan Karlan noted the Bylaws Committee
    has started its work. The plan includes meeting face-to-face in Charleston
    and to conduct much business by e-mail. There is likely to be no pre-convention
    meeting.

    Dan noted that some of the committee
    members will be unable to come to Charleston. In order to secure a quorum,
    Dan needed to have the LNC approve alternates,

Dan
moved to appoint Vicki Kirkland as Bylaws Committee alternate. There
were no objections

Dan
moved to apponit M Carling as an alternate. M’s appointement passed
10-5.

Julie
Fox nominated Starchild. Starchild was selected as an alternate. 8-6,

LNCC
Report (Hawkridge)

Rachel
Hawkridge quizzed Alicia Mattson and Aaron Starr on the LNCC and its
decisions and practices.

Bob
Sullentrup moved to end discussion. The motion passed 8-4.

    LNC Meeting Video Recording &
    Archiving (Keaton)

    Angela Keaton moved to upgrade the
    video recording capabilities to digital and create a permanent archive
    of all meeting recordings, accessible to any member on request, and
    no destruction of recordings.

This
motion was one to reconsider a matter previously adopted.

With
no objection, the word ‘digital’ was changed to ‘high quality’.
(
who?)

Aaron
Starr noted individual initiative could easily provide this service.

    Lee Wrights moves to postpone the
    matter to Charleston. There were no objections to the postponement.

Policy
Manual Amendment—Authorization of Lawsuits (Lark)

    Dr. Jim Lark sent the following e-mail
    to the LNC on November 21:

      Submitted to: Libertarian National Committee,
      Nov. 21, 2008

      Submitted by: James W. Lark, III

      Region 5S Representative, Libertarian
      National Committee

      During the Libertarian National Committee
      meeting on Sept. 6-7, 2008, I was requested by the LNC to prepare proposed
      language for the Policy Manual concerning a procedure for the authorization
      of lawsuits. I have enclosed proposed language below for your consideration.

      Please note that the wording of the
      language is largely the product of LNC general counsel Bill Hall, who
      graciously prepared some language for my consideration. I have made
      what I believe are a few minor modifications of his language.
      I provided the proposed language to Mr. Hall for his comments; he indicated
      that he found no problems with that language.

      The proposal is to amend Article
      I of the LNC Policy Manual to add a new section (to be numbered Section
      9) that will read as follows:

      Section 9: Authorization of Lawsuits

      Prior to the filing of a lawsuit,
      or the joining of a lawsuit filed in any court, in which the LNC or
      the national Libertarian Party is proposed to be a named plaintiff,
      the Chair shall:

      (1) Advise all LNC members (including
      alternates) of the proposed lawsuit, its purpose, and its estimated
      cost;

      (2) Confirm, or seek and obtain
      approval for, the budgetary authority for the expenses of the lawsuit
      as provided for in Article V, Section 2 of this Policy Manual; and

      (3) Seek and obtain approval of
      the Executive Committee for participation in the lawsuit.

      (end of Policy Manual addition)

      Issue for Consideration

      Due to the fact that participation
      in litigation may require the Chair to make a commitment very quickly,
      I believe it would be better to require the Chair to seek and obtain
      approval of the Executive Committee rather than the LNC. However, I
      request that you consider whether to modify item (3) to require the
      Chair to seek and obtain approval of the LNC, rather than the Executive
      Committee.

      I have enclosed Article V (Finances),
      Section 2 (Budget) of the LNC Policy Manual for your consideration:

      Section 2: BUDGET

      A. PREPARATION

      1. The Executive Committee, in consultation
      with the Executive Director, shall develop an annual operating budget
      and present it to the LNC for approval prior to the start of each fiscal
      year. This budget shall include a statement of anticipated revenue and

      expenditures in sufficient detail
      to adequately outline specific activities and plans, including those
      for raising funds, and to outline the major categories of expense required
      to implement each activity or plan.

      2. No budget shall be submitted to
      the LNC for approval that exceeds 110% of the actual revenue over the
      immediate past 12 months prior to the date of the budget approval.

      3. Absent LNC action directing otherwise,
      year-end closing positive or negative fund balances for restricted funds
      shall be reflected in the next year's budget as incremental budgeted
      expenses or revenues.

      B. AMENDMENT

      1. The budget may be amended at any
      time by a majority vote of the LNC.

      2. Expense items within one budget
      area may be amended with the consent of the Executive Committee, as
      long as the total expense for that budget area is not increased.

      3. A line for a previously unbudgeted
      item, total expense for a new line not exceeding 1% of budgeted revenues,
      may be added to the budget by the Chair, with the consent of the Executive
      Committee. The cumulative amount budgeted for any item that was not
      approved by the LNC shall not exceed 1% of budgeted revenues without
      LNC approval.

      4. An existing budget line may be
      increased by the Chair, with the consent of the Executive Committee,
      during the period between LNC meetings, provided that there is a corresponding
      reduction from the contingency fund.

      5. The National Committee shall be
      notified in advance by the Executive Director of any intention to undertake
      any project that is estimated, on gross, to cost more than 2.5% of budgeted
      revenue. The Executive Director must immediately report to the National
      Committee when any project's gross cost unintentionally exceeds 2.5%
      of budgeted

      revenue.

      C. SPENDING LIMIT

      1. Funds shall not be disbursed for
      any expense which is not in the budget. Funds shall not be disbursed
      for any budget line which exceed the total budgeted expense amount by
      10% or $100, whichever is more.

      2. Discretionary Disbursement:

      The Director may not disburse any
      funds in excess of these limits until a budget amendment is approved.
      Failure to follow this policy may be cause for dismissal.

      The Chair shall be allowed $1,000
      in discretionary funds within any (rolling) three month period and not
      to exceed $5,000 per term unless those expenditures are approved by
      the LNC. Penalty for violation of this shall be the same as listed in
      the Policy Manual V.2.C.3.

      3. The Treasurer is required to report
      any violations of this policy to the LNC.

      D. REVENUE SHORTFALL REPORTING

      At the end of each month within a
      fiscal year, the Executive Director must immediately report to the Executive
      Committee if cumulative revenue is less than 90% of the accepted budget
      and submit detailed plans for appropriate expense reductions for the
      remainder of the budget period.

      E. REVIEW

      The Executive Director shall provide
      monthly budgets for the next calendar year including when the proposed
      budget might use reserve funds for any purpose.

    Aaron Starr moved to amend changing
    ‘named plaintiff’ to ‘a participant’. This provides for the
    times when the LNC is footing the bill but not named as a plaintiff.

    Mark Hinkle and Mary Ruwart offered
    suggestions. In the end, there was unanimous consent to withdraw the
    matter to run the changes past counsel before adoption.

    Aaron Starr Personal Privilege

    Aaron Starr rose to a point of personal
    privilege, noting someone ordered food for the room that had been charged
    to LNC. Aaron would not name the individual.

    Starchild said he had inquired of
    the hotel if there were any more snacks coming, but that he did not
    order any. If he were involved, the matter was a misunderstanding.

    Policy Manual Amendment—Mail
    Ballot Reporting and Strategic Plan (Karlan)

    The LNC had managed to shoe-horn
    the mail ballot reporting issue in on Saturday. At that time, Dan Karlan
    withdrew the strategic planning portion. Accordingly, the strategic
    plan matter was not broached.

    Volunteer Confidentiality Form
    (Redpath)

    Jim Lark noted the Volunteer Confidentiality
    form found in tab 4 of the binder.

    The idea was for LNC members to sign
    the form certifying the proper treatment and handling of confidential
    information.

    Aaron Starr moved to postpone. There
    was an objection. Several members including Lee Wrights, Mary Ruwart,
    Angela Keaton and others were reluctant to sign the form.

    Nevertheless, the body postponed
    the matter for Charleston.

    LP News Content (Keaton)

    Angela Keaton asked to postpone this
    item. With no objection, the request was granted.

    Opportunity for Public Comment

    Since the LNC had to discuss the
    legal services contract in executive session and with Rachel Hawkridge
    having stepped away, the body moved to hearing from the public.

    David Nolan objected to the selection
    of Alicia Mattson as Platform Committee chair, noting the many complaints
    directed at her as 2008 Platform Committee chair.

    Ruth Bennett thanked the LNC for
    the financial support for the Top Two litigation.

    Starchild recommended the LNC eliminate
    the branding budget item. He was reminded the LNC already had. He recommended
    the LNC not pay for meeting rooms. The restaurant of the prior evening
    had space and the LNC could have met there for free. Starchild complained
    the blog had changed on the LP website and was unable to post anymore.
    He recommended we make the daily poll on the website daily and provide
    questions that are substantial. He stated it was crass to post quantities
    of amounts raised. He was reminded the monetary amounts had not been
    there for two months. Finally, he recommended we focus on LNC transparency,
    videotape everything and offer the tapes to members.m

    George Phillies, 2008 LP presidential
    candidate, recommended we sponsor effective projects and spend money
    wisely.

    Rob Power noted the LP in San Francisco
    is being killed by its being perceived as conservative. Accordingly,
    Rob recommended the LP show up at left wing progressive events.

    Mike Seebeck said it his intention
    to videotape LNC meetings. Videotapes, he said, offer the best evidence
    in court.

    Other Resolution(s) (Hawkridge)

    Rachel Hawkridge moved the following
    resolution that she wrote and Dr. Ruwart revised.

    Let it
    be resolved that the Libertarian National Committee hereby repudiates
    the United States Government's recent active duty military domestic
    operations.

    Attorney General Michael Mukasey declared
    that the Fourth Amendment, which bars unreasonable searches and seizures,
    does not apply to "domestic military operations" against terrorist
    threats. ("Mukasey Distances Himself from a Memo on Searches,"
    The New York Times, April 11, 2008)

    We the members of the Libertarian National
    Committee respectfully disagree with the Attorney General. We reassert
    the of the free people of the United States to be safe from incursions
    into the homeland territories of the 50 States as guaranteed by the
    Fourth Amendment of the United States.

    The 3rd Infantry Division's 1st Brigade
    Combat Team, formerly deployed to serve in Iraq, is now serving a 12
    month tour in the United States beginning Oct. 1 2008, the 1st BCT will
    be under the day-to-day control of U.S. Army North, the Army service
    component of Northern Command, as an on-call federal response force
    for natural or manmade emergencies and disasters, including terrorist
    attacks.

    We, the LNC, assert the authority invested
    in local police, fire, medical, and associated professionals are best
    suited to handle any natural or manmade emergencies and disasters,
    including terrorist attacks. The military is best suited for winning
    foreign wars and not policing the world, or the American homeland. The
    Libertarian National Committee strenuously objects to this flagrant
    violation of Posse Comitatus.

    We urge the citizens of the United States
    to protest this violation of the Fourth Amendment to their local, state,
    and federal representatives and demand an end to this illegal military
    encroachment.

    At the same time, Andrew Davis had
    provided the following

    RESOLUTION
    CONDEMING DOMESTIC DEPLOYMENT OF U.S. MILITARY

    WHEREAS, the domestic deployment of 20,000 uniformed military personnel
    planned by the United States government undermines the Posse Comitatus
    Act of 1878, which forbids the use of the military for domestic policing;
    and,

    WHEREAS, such a deployment is an alarming example of the increasing
    militarization of our society; and,

    WHEREAS, the increasing use of active duty military personnel, has,
    and will, lead to the abuse of American civil liberties, such as violations
    of the Fourth Amendment; and,

    WHEREAS, a state's National Guard‹not active duty members of Army
    combat units‹is the appropriate authority to handle local emergencies
    and disasters should they arise; and,

    WHEREAS, the use of the 3rd Infantry Division 1st Brigade Combat Team
    during a time of war puts further tension on an already strained U.S.
    military.

    THEREFORE, be it resolved, the Libertarian National Committee and its
    undersigned members hereby condemn the plans of the federal government
    to deploy 20,000 active duty members of the U.S. military to serve,
    for whatever reason, domestically in the United States. Furthermore,
    the Libertarian National Committee calls for the immediate abandonment
    of these plans, and instead suggests that should an emergency response
    team comprised of members other than local emergency responders (fire,
    police, HAZMAT) be developed and trained, it consist of members of the
    National Guard ‹not active duty personnel of the United States military.

    The Libertarian National Committee calls for the citizens of the United
    States to protest this militarization of our society, and its encroachment
    on American civil liberties, to their local, state and federal
    representatives.

After
some discussion, Rachel moved to substitute the Davis version for the
Ruwart version. The

substitution
passed without objection.

Aaron
Starr moved to change the word ‘protest’ to ‘ oppose’. The amendment
passed without objection

    Dan Karlan corrected the grammar
    of the third ‘whereas’, using ‘has led, and will lead,’. There
    was no objection.

The
resolution now read:

    RESOLUTION
    CONDEMING DOMESTIC DEPLOYMENT OF U.S. MILITARY

    WHEREAS, the domestic deployment of 20,000 uniformed military personnel
    planned by the United States government undermines the Posse Comitatus
    Act of 1878, which forbids the use of the military for domestic policing;
    and,

    WHEREAS, such a deployment is an alarming example of the increasing
    militarization of our society; and,

    WHEREAS, the increasing use of active duty military personnel, has led,
    and will lead, to the abuse of American civil liberties, such as violations
    of the Fourth Amendment; and,

    WHEREAS, a state's National Guard – not active duty members of Army
    combat units – is the appropriate authority to handle local emergencies
    and disasters should they arise; and,

    WHEREAS, the use of the 3rd Infantry Division 1st Brigade Combat Team
    during a time of war puts further tension on an already strained U.S.
    military.

    THEREFORE, be it resolved, the Libertarian National Committee and its
    undersigned members hereby condemn the plans of the federal government
    to deploy 20,000 active duty members of the U.S. military to serve,
    for
    whatever reason, domestically in the United States. Furthermore, the
    Libertarian National Committee calls for the immediate abandonment of
    these plans, and instead suggests that should an emergency response
    team comprised of members other than local emergency responders (fire,
    police, HAZMAT) be developed and trained, it consist of members of the
    National Guard – not active duty personnel of the United States military.

    The Libertarian National Committee calls for the citizens of the United
    States to oppose this militarization of our society, and its encroachment
    on American civil liberties, to their local, state and federal
    representatives.

    Michael Jingozian asked if there
    were any objection. Angela Keaton objected.

    Upon a roll call, the measure passed
    unanimously.

    Voting in favor:

      Michael Jingozian, Aaron Starr,
      Bob Sullentrup, Admiral Michael Colley, Pat Dixon, Angela Keaton, Lee
      Wrights, Dr. Mary Ruwart, Tony Ryan(1), Mark Hinkle (2), Rebecca Sink-Burris
      (3), Stewart Flood(4), Dr. James Lark (5-S), Dan Karlan (5-N), Julie
      Fox (6), Rachel Hawkridge (7)

Opposed:

No one

Bill
Redpath had left for the airport.

Executive
Session

Mary
Ruwart moved to enter executive session for the purpose of discussing
the legal counsel contract.

    At 2:42 pm the LNC meeting came to
    a close.

    Next Meetings

    The schedule for subsequent LNC meetings
    is as follows:

2009 LSLA Joint meeting February 28-March 1 Charleston,
SC

2009 TBD July 18-19

2009 TBD December 5-6

Libertarian
National Committee, Inc.
Statement of Net Assets
October-08
Assets
Current
Assets
Cash &
Equivalents
54,456
Accounts
Receivable-Net
(864)
Other Receivables-Net13,187
Inventories11,053
Other Current
Assets
11,492
Total Current
Assets
89,325
Property
and Equipment
Gross Assets268,331
Accumulated
Depreciation
(174,992)
Net Property
and Equipment
93,340
Other
Assets
Deposits7,020
Total Other
Assets
7,020
Total
Assets
189,684
Liabilities
and Net Assets
Liabilities
Accounts
Payable
97,882
Accrued
Payroll
18,925
Capital
Lease Liability
0
Deferred
Revenue
897
Deferred
Rent
6,812
Total Liabilities124,516
Net
Assets
Beginning
Net Assets
(275,566)
Restricted
Net Assets
43,224
Other Adjustments0
Current
Year Surplus
297,509
Total Net
Assets
65,168
Total
Liabilities and Net Assets
189,684

Libertarian
National Committee, Inc.
Statement
of Operations
2008 YTD
Support
and Revenue
Membership
Dues
415,439
Donations342,120
Recurring
Gifts
248,933
Board Member
Solicitations
108,118
Projects0
Ballot
Access Donations
311,422
Campus
Outreach Donations
0
Convention
Revenues
1,460
Publications,
Materials and Other Sales
16,269
Total Support
and Revenue
1,443,761
Cost
of Support and Revenue
Fundraising
Costs
210,796
Membership
Fundraising Costs
56,356
Convention33,531
Direct
Costs
0
Total Cost
of Support and Revenue
300,683
Net
Support and Revenue Available for Programs
1,143,078
Program
Expenses
Administrative
Expense
328,382
Compensation335,543
Affiliate
Support
3,231
Ballot
Access
507,591
Brand Development794
Campus
Outreach
0
Candidate
Support
500
Litigation0
Lobbying0
Media Relations27,890
Member
Communications
72,781
Outreach0
Voter Registration0
Total Program
Expenses
1,276,711
Net Operating
Surplus (Deficit)
(133,632)
Other
Revenue/Expense
Interest
Income
0
Interest
Expense
0
Other Income0
Total Other
Revenue Expense
0
Net
Surplus (Deficit)
(133,632)

Libertarian
National Committee, Inc.
Statement of Operations — Annualized
Comparison and Adopted Budget
2008 ADOPTED BUDGET2009 PROPOSED BUDGET
$%$%
Support
and Revenue
Membership
Dues
394,000 27.8%555,000 46.5%
Donations604,500 42.6%243,000 20.4%
Recurring
Gifts
324,000 22.8%292,000 24.5%
Board Member
Solicitations
90,000 6.3%85,000 7.1%
Projects0 0.0%0 0.0%
Ballot Access
Donations
0 0.0%0 0.0%
Campus Outreach
Donations
0 0.0%0 0.0%
Convention
Revenues
0 0.0%0 0.0%
Publications,
Materials and Other Sales
7,000 0.5%18,000 1.5%
Total Support
and Revenue
1,419,500 100.0%1,193,000 100.0%
Cost
of Support and Revenue
Fundraising
Costs
201,300 14.2%257,000 21.5%
Membership
Fundraising Costs
247,600 17.4%173,000 14.5%
Convention10,000 0.7%0 0.0%
Direct Costs0 0.0%0 0.0%
Total Cost
of Support and Revenue
458,900 32.3%430,000 36.0%
Net
Support and Revenue Available for Programs
960,600 67.7%763,000 64.0%
Program
Expenses
Administrative
Expense
357,600 25.2%378,700 31.7%
Compensation419,200 29.5%309,800 26.0%
Affiliate
Support
4,500 0.3%0 0.0%
Ballot Access0 0.0%0 0.0%
Brand Development0 0.0%0 0.0%
Campus Outreach0 0.0%0 0.0%
Candidate
Support
16,200 1.1%5,000 0.4%
Litigation15,000 1.1%35,000 2.9%
Lobbying0 0.0%0 0.0%
Media Relations4,500 0.3%6,000 0.5%
Member Communications54,000 3.8%28,000 2.3%
Outreach11,000 0.8%0 0.0%
Voter Registration0 0.0%0 0.0%
Total Program
Expenses
882,000 62.1%762,500 63.9%
Net Operating
Surplus (Deficit)
78,600 5.5%500 0.0%
Other
Revenue/Expense
Interest
Income
0 0.0%0 0.0%
Interest
Expense
0 0.0%0 0.0%
Other Income0 0.0%0 0.0%
Total Other
Revenue Expense
0 0.0%0 0.0%
Net Surplus
(Deficit)
78,600 5.5%500 0.0%

LPHQ Update

    12/6/2008

    Operation’s Director
    Report (Acting ED)

    by Robert Kraus

    Overview

    Since the last LNC meeting, LPHQ
    has focused mainly on 2009 budget planning and the presidential campaign.

    Please feel free to address any
    issues not covered in the staff reports at the upcoming LNC meeting
    and we will do our best to address or answer any concerns.

    Staff Update

    Our staff levels remain at appropriate
    levels and includes a smaller than usual assemble of college students.
    We have recently cut back on our student’s hours to an “as needed”
    basis to help curtail costs and Austin and Louise will be actively looking
    for unpaid college interns next semester.

    Below are our current staffers
    and summary of their current job responsibilities/overview of what they
    do on a weekly/daily basis:

  • Robert Kraus, Acting ED
    / Operations Director:
    • Fiscal Management (a/p,
      a/r, general bookkeeping in QuickBooks)
    • Working with Aaron Starr
      and the EC on the 2009 Budget
    • Maintaining compliance with
      government policies including FEC filing
    • Management of LP Staff (human
      resources including payroll and benefits administration)
    • Oversight of database management
      & cleanup (Raiser’s Edge)
    • General purchasing and procurement
    • Customer service (internal
      and external communications with board members, affiliates, donors,
      etc.)
    • Working with the Chair,
      Andrew Davis and others to get out a cohesive Libertarian message across
      to the public
    • Facilities and equipment
      planning and maintenance
    • Preparation of financial
      and membership reports
    • Administrator of lp.org
      & hq.lp.org email and group list servers
    • Management of our higher
      donor direct solicitation endeavors (such as our telemarketing program
      with John Swallow)
    • Creating and overseeing
      various initiatives to establish a “cause célèbre” for our donors
      (such as Operation Elect-US to expand our political stature by increasing
      the number of elected Libertarians in office)

  • Andrew Davis, Communications
    Director:
    • Scan national media for
      topics for press releases, blog entries, and Email messages
    • Draft press releases, blogs,
      email solicitations, email messages to members
    • Answer press inquiries and
      book media appearances for party officials
    • Write content for Web site,
      when needed Design graphics for Web site, emails, blogs, advertisements
      and newsletters
    • Develop content for monthly
      newsletter and newspaper layout and design monthly newsletter (and soon,
      perhaps, LP News)
    • Administrate and monitor
      the LP's Facebook and MySpace accounts, adding content and updating
      information
    • Function as the intermediary
      between the Party and the public
    • Essentially, responsible
      for any in-house communication with the outside world

  • Sean Haugh, Political Director
    • Follow up with people who
      have expressed a desire to run for office, starting by introducing them
      to their state party Chair or their designee
    • Track candidates' activities
      and offer them one-on-one support for their campaigns
    • Research, and dissemination
      of what I've found, on the what offices are available and how to file
      for them
    • Working with state parties
      and local activists to get ballot access reform bills introduced in
      state legislatures, and developing lobbying strategies for them
    • Managing our ballot access
      lawsuits and getting them ready for the next phase of declaratory relief
    • Write articles for LP News,
      Pledge News and lp.org on ballot access and candidates
    • Maintain and update the
      list of elected Libertarians
    • Customer service to state
      and local affiliates in all areas, right now concentrating on recruiting
      and placing candidates for 2009 and 2010
    • Report on my activities
      to the LNC, always keeping the Chair and ED aware of what I've found
      so they can inform the board and other relevant people
    • Answering email questions
      about the Party and its positions
    • Working with allies (e.g.,
      Ballot Access News, FairVote, freeandequal.org, other third parties)
      to build coalitions for ballot access reform at the state level and
      share information to the benefit of all concerned
    • Preparing for petitioning
      efforts to begin in 2009 and 2010
    • Working with Austin and
      interns for follow up phone calls to candidate leads

  • Louise Calise, Direct Marketing
    Manager
    • Maintain accuracy of monthly
      giving program (donor calls and email changes; contact donors for updated
      information)
    • Process monthly gifts for
      members of monthly giving program and evaluate transactions that do
      not go through to find out why including contacting the donor for updated
      information
    • Oversee Member Service Specialists
      in the sorting incoming mail, updating membership information and caging
      of donations
    • Re-checking of daily deposits
      and cash audits
    • Work with vendors for house
      and acquisition appeals (copy, art, print, mailshop)
    • Analyze results on all mail
      appeals and select segments from house file for each house mail appeal,
      and order lists for each acquisition appeal
    • Data pulls from donor database
      for house mail appeal and for omission in acquisition appeal
    • Data pulls for membership
      cards, acknowledgments and cultivation
    • Oversee printing and mailing
      of membership cards; print and mail acknowledgments; search for creative
      ideas to cultivate high dollar and loyal donors
    • Work with Aaron Starr on
      the Board Member Solicitation program

  • Austin Petersen, Volunteer
    Coordinator
    • Respond to letters and email
      requests from volunteers
    • Recruit volunteers from
      advertisements
    • Work on operation “Elect
      Us” with Sean Haugh (calling candidates, etc.)
    • Produce, shoot, edit original
      videos for the LP. Continue creating infrastructure of permanent online
      web 2.0 material resources for training, education, inspiration, and
      recruitment
    • Work with state affiliates,
      and volunteers on event ideas, and creating opportunities for locals
      to be active
    • Edit LP.org website events
      and volunteer receipt lists
    • Write blogs for LP.org
    • Write articles for LP NEWS
      and Pledge news
    • Network with other high
      level organizations, and politicians in DC to increase the stature and
      reputation of the party
    • Manage supply of work for
      1-3 rotating interns
    • Research current affairs
      and provide creative material for advertisements to be posted
    • Provide education and training
      to the Libertarian community (Leadership Institute knowledge)
    • Staff booths at LP events,
      direct recruitment of volunteers for affiliate events
    • Study opposition party tactics,
      emulate successes, learn from their failures

  • Susan Dixon, Member Services
    Specialist
    • Process and cage all checks,
      credit cards and cash received via mail into RE
    • Photocopy checks before
      deposit
    • Process and cage all web
      transactions into RE
    • Process refunds and contribution
      returns
    • Update and maintain records
      in RE
    • Import new inquiry and volunteers
      from web and send prepare data for information packets
    • Prepare data for new memberships
      and renewals and print letters for membership cards
    • Prepare daily reports and
      do daily cash audits
    • Create new records for people
      who ask for information packets
    • Properly sort and file all
      source material to comply with FEC rules

  • Casey Hansen, Member Services
    Specialist
    • Answers and directs incoming
      phone calls
    • Accepts, opens and sorts
      mail/packages/couriers and supplies
    • Greets visitors
    • Produces and mails out LP
      Membership Cards
    • Produces and mails out LP
      Information Packets
    • Sorts and tags physical
      monetary contributions sent to the office (checks/money orders/cash)
    • Deposits checks at PCN bank
      after Louise has verified deposit and cash audits
    • Updates member’s address
      and contact information
    • Assists in general office
      upkeep, organization and maintaining office supplies
    • Any other extra tasks as
      assigned by other LNC staff such as general filing, research, and responding
      to member correspondence

  • We have cut back down to
    two college students working part time 1-2 days per week: Erin Taylor
    (a GW student) & Mark Meranta (a GMU student)

  • We also have a contractor,
    John Swallow, to help us with tele-fundraising of mid range ($250-500)
    donors part time. Since late Aug, he has raised over $12,000.00

Operations

    As mentioned above, Robert has
    been focused on budget prep, the campaign, preparation of pre-election
    and post election FEC reports, reducing expenses and raising money.

    Affiliates

    Sean Haugh provides a full report
    on campaigns and ballot access. Austin and Andrew have also been
    in frequent contact with our affiliates. Data dumps continue to go out
    regularly. We added a few extra dumps during the fall so the states
    can keep up and mail to all the new members and inquires.

    We have seen some major improvements
    on the information flow from states to LPHQ, especially from newer state
    chairs that appear to be more responsive in getting us data updates,
    events and news items. We encourage the regional reps to please
    continue to help us receive information from your states. Receiving
    news and event updates from our affiliates is an ongoing battle. Again,
    news worthy items (especially when accompanied by high quality color
    photos) can be sent to
    [email protected] while events simply can be sent to [email protected]

    Finance and Fundraising

    Internet Fundraising
    – Web Site

    Internet based fundraising continues
    to be a growth area for us. Since the launch of the new web site, we
    have raised a total of $272,227.00.

    Working closely with Andrew, Austin,
    Louise, Sean and Susan, Terra Eclipse is completely finished with the
    back end of our web and Andrew has taken the lead for most of our web
    site management needs. This should save us some considerable programming
    expenses. We are now able to export data such as inquiries and volunteers
    in batches, which is imported weekly into RE. This saves staff, and
    Susan especially, considerable time. We are working with Blakbaud to
    find a way to import the gift batch records into RE as well. TE has
    finished creating the back end for exporting gift batches which still
    must be manually entered by Susan into RE. We are currently working
    with TE on finishing the creation of the widgets (the linkable graphics
    which direct people to our web site and donation page) which we’ve
    delayed in order to save money.

    Phone-based Fundraising

    We had hired a new telemarketing
    vendor to do a renewal call series in late Oct and early Nov. Last year
    this resulted in over $30,000 in revenue for Nov 07 alone. Unfortunately
    we were unhappy with the results ($8,500 for Oct/Nov combined) and will
    be returning to our previous vendor. We made the switch mainly for financial
    reasons (the new vendor was half the price of the old one) but obviously,
    you get what you pay for. Thus we will use the new vendors pricing proposal
    to re-negotiate our terms with the old vendor.

    Finance

    Accounts payable remained higher
    than we would like for most of the last few months, yet we stay current
    on our bills. As mentioned in the last meeting, we had a high of $47,000
    in Aug which had been reduced to $18,100 for Oct and $22,200 for Nov.
    I do not anticipate getting back to our previous normal levels of $10-15,000
    if the economy continues to do poorly.

    Speaking of the reduced economic
    situation, in terms of profitability, we have somehow managed to have
    three months with small surpluses which brought our total loss for the
    year down to -$124,800 as of end of Nov from -$152,900 at the end of
    Aug. I do not expect this to improve for Dec. The only reason we had
    a surplus in November was due to an adjustment of $19,700 in our bequest
    from the estate which finally sold off their coin collection.

    We have seen a significant reduction
    in both on line and direct mail contributions over the last few weeks.
    For the 1st half of Nov (11-1-11/15) we received $68,000
    in donations, for the 2nd half only $11,241 was received.
    November has not traditionally been a great month for us with the exception
    of last year and 2003. The main reason last year was better was due
    in part to our tele-marketing efforts as previously mentioned. Here
    is a comparison of this Nov vs. prior ones:


    Your browser may not support display of this image.

    I think the 24% drop in the 08
    vs. 04 comparisons is the direct result of the economy. Many of
    the messages we have been receiving from donors say “I wish we could
    give you more but can not at this time.” For example, our average
    gift has gone from $44.59 in Oct down to $38.44 for Nov. People are
    still giving, but they are unable to give as much.

    The conclusion one might draw from
    this is that Aaron’s conservative projections of revenue for 2009
    are justified and that we really will need each and every board members
    help in directly soliciting donations to avoid the financial hardships
    that we experienced several years ago. Please do let Aaron know if you
    wish to participate so Louise can start researching possible donors
    for you to visit and John Swallow can start to arrange the appointments.

    Membership

    The membership report for 11/30/08
    previously submitted to the LNC is also attached. As with the last few
    months, I've included a comparison of 04 vs. 08 numbers on the first
    page.

    Highlights:

    Total active donors from 04/04-11/04
    increased by 3.57% (total of 752 net) Total active donors from 04/08-11/08
    increased by 17.56% (total of 2564 net)

    New donors Apr-Nov 04 = 2786 vs.
    Apr-Nov 08 = 5314 (90.74% increase) Renewals Apr-Nov 04 = 2436 vs. Apr-Nov
    08 = 4615 (89.45% increase)

    Presidential Campaign

    LPHQ would like to thank all the
    staff and volunteers of the Barr/Root campaign and especially the candidates
    themselves for their help in promoting the LP and our down ballot candidates.
    We all had a mostly enjoyable, positive experience working with the
    campaign and felt that we had made a real collaborative effort to expand
    our brand.

    We want to especially thank the
    campaign for encouraging their supporters, through their email blasts,
    letters and “60 Seconds” promotions, to join the LP, volunteer or
    request info from us. In addition, we appreciate their help in financing
    some of our ballot access efforts and encouraging their donors to aid
    us as well. We really could not have done it without you.

    We agree that, as Chairman Redpath
    said, we “did not win as many votes as most of us thought they would
    get, there is much that we gained in 2008 and a lot to be proud of for
    the Libertarian Party.”

    Without the record amount of media
    Barr/Root generated, their help in promoting our brand and candidates,
    our over all vote totals would never have eclipsed the record 13 million
    plus obtained. Nor would we have had the growth in membership, volunteers
    and inquires at both the state and national level.

    Communications
    Directors Report – Andrew Davis

    After the 2008 election year, 2009
    is sure to be challenging year for the Libertarian Party for media exposure.
    However, one benefit from the 2008 presidential election is that the
    Libertarian Party established itself as a credible expert on fiscal
    and pro-liberty issues. Building on the media successes of the
    Barr/Root presidential campaign, I believe 2009 can be a good year for
    the Libertarian Party in the off-season.

    My main goal for 2009 is to simply
    maintain a media presence for the Libertarian Party.

    We have recently invested in a media-tracking
    tool called Meltwater News. Meltwater works very much like Lexis
    Nexis in tracking media, except better and cheaper. Meltwater
    will allow us to effectively track our media hits, to find out which
    press releases are working, in which markets, running in what papers.
    Google News alerts miss many of our news hits that run in smaller papers,
    and Meltwater will be able to better track and count these hits.

    We can also pass these hits along
    to our state chairs in helping them identify sympathetic newspapers,
    and help development the media presence of our state affiliates in their
    areas.

    This is a very important component
    of the long-term media strategy of the Libertarian Party. One
    mistake we continue to repeat is having a large-scale media presence
    every four years with our presidential candidates. While our presidential
    campaigns should of course be the climax of any four-year cycle, it
    will help tremendously in our local presence if media is aware of our
    party, views and candidates.

    To do this, our state chairs must
    be trained in media strategy, which can easily be done by developing
    a training package that can be given to state chairs, and then passed
    to local leaders too.

    Another goal I'd like to set is booking
    a Libertarian Party official or representative on at least one major
    media hit a month. I wish I could be more aggressive in this goal
    (such as one a week), but I'd like to set a realistic goal instead of
    an unattainable one. I think once a month will set a solid foundation
    for the next four years, and one that we can always increase.

    You may have noticed a recent change
    to LP News and Pledge News. I have fully redesigned Pledge News
    to a more modern look, which makes it easier to read, more pleasant
    at which to look and also contain reoccurring features that readers
    enjoy. In each issue, there is one article about recent events,
    as well as a monthly column by our volunteer coordinator and political
    director. The back cover features snippets from recent news releases
    by the Party.

    LP News has also undergone a drastic
    redesign, and we have attempted to outsource it as had been tried for
    years. The quality has not been as high as we would have liked
    with our contractor, and we plan to bring it back in-house, which I
    strongly recommend. This will increase the speed at which the
    paper is completed, but more importantly, reduce the costs of production.

    Since the launch of the Web site,
    I have gained more control over it and can now use it to advertise programs,
    such as recently with the "Operation Elect-Us" drive.
    If you visit LP.org, you can see the graphic I designed on the front
    page to advertise the program, and also the landing page for the drive
    that features a (temporary) banner and a description of the drive written
    by Sean Haugh. A day after launching the new page, Haugh already
    reported candidates signing up.

    To engage our email subscribers,
    and to keep them donating and active in the party, we have started two,
    new weekly features called "Heroes of Capitalism" and "Monday
    Message." In the "HC" feature, we praise pro-capitalism
    individuals that have made unique and significant contributions to free
    market advocacy—not just inside the Libertarian Party.

    "The Monday Message" offers
    the Libertarian perspective on the hot issue of the week. They
    usually have been informal, light-hearted and a great read for the average
    constituent. It helps our members argue our positions better by
    providing the knowledge and information they need on these issues.

    The responses to both of these have
    been extremely positive:

    This kind of communication is greatly
    appreciated. In these difficult times we libertarians need all the good
    news and encouragement we can get. And who better to receive it from
    that the national political organization that represents us. This kind
    of daily/weekly editorial commentary is long overdue. Keep up the good
    work!

    Ron Paris

    Santa Rosa, CA

    Getting our party officials on big
    media hits, training our state affiliates to become better media strategists,
    keeping our members informed and engaged, are all important and necessary
    projects for the Libertarian Party in 2009. We've already made
    a strong start, and I plan to build on our gains from 2008.

    Direct
    Marketing Manager’s Report

    By Louise Calise

    Overview

    In
    2007 I revitalized the direct mail and telemarketing programs.
    The best result of the revitalizing is that now procedures are in place
    and schedules maintained. This allowed 2008 to be good for our
    direct mail and telemarketing programs.

    Since
    national elections are over we now need to write about and raise funds
    based on campaigns won, local and state campaigns that will happen in
    2009 and the costs of our legal battles with some states over ballot
    access. I am ready for the challenge.

    House Appeals

    So
    far this year (as of 11/6/08) we netted almost $250,000 from house solicitations
    alone. Going forward I am going to test a segment of our house
    file of 0-3 month donors. In other words, when doing the file
    pull for house mailings I am going to pull donors who have contributed
    within the last 3 months out separately from the other donors so we
    can get a true picture of how many (if any) of our donors give to direct
    mail appeals within a three month time. If our donors do not contribute
    more than once within three months, then when doing a file pull for
    house appeals I will omit donors of the past three months. This
    will save money and be more cost-effective. However, these donors
    will still be receiving LP News with a wallet BRE inserted.

    Speaking
    of LP News with the wallet BRE inserted – this is proving to be effective
    for fundraising. I began this in September 2008 and so far to
    date we have received a total of almost $10,000.00. Although this
    does not put the newsletter in the black at this time, I believe it
    will continue to be successful and be more cost-effective as we move
    forward and continue to insert the BRE.

    In
    analyzing the results of our 2008 house appeals, I can see that our
    members respond best to petitions enclosed in the package, or some kind
    of interactive reply device. Because of this I will be constantly
    looking for issues to have petitions signed for (i.e. petition regarding
    economy and/or another regarding Afghanistan).

    I
    recognized that members, who have expired 2 months before mailing a
    renewal notice to them, do not rejoin at a response rate for the mailing
    to be cost-effective; yet, members respond better to mail than telephone
    calls. Therefore, I am presently working on a new package for
    members who have expired 1 month before a renewal mailing so that I
    can bring up the number of these respondents and not have to mail to
    those who have expired 2 months before.

    Prospecting

    In
    2007 we mailed six prospect appeals. While the percent of return
    (0.33%) for these were very poor the average gift ($51.64) was good.
    In reviewing gifts that followed from the members who first responded
    to any one of our prospecting appeals, we have an additional 117 gifts,
    representing $15,466 (in addition to the contributions for the first
    gift). So in the long run our prospecting appeals for 2007 have
    grossed $30,084, with an average gift of $41.97. More importantly
    we have added additional members to the file.

    So
    far in 2008 we mailed thirteen prospect appeals. Only three appeals
    were to donors of other organizations. While the percent of return
    (1.40%) is higher than 2007 and the average gift is down ($38.85 from
    $51.64), the last appeal is still coming back. So I believe the
    average gift will rise. Additional gifts from these new members
    are 175, representing an additional $3,295. So in the long run
    our 2008 prospecting appeals to date have grossed $12,778, with an average
    gift of $30.28. Again, please remember that the average gift will
    rise as more money comes in from the last appeal. Also, a new
    prospect package is going to mail on or about January 14, 2009.

    For
    2009 I anticipate mailing at least a total quantity of 180,000 names
    with an estimate return of just under 1%. This will give us an
    estimated 1,400 new members.

    Telemarketing

    In
    2007 we used telemarketing efforts for renewals, ballot access and tested
    it for prospecting. We realized that doing telemarketing for prospecting
    does not work.

    Therefore,
    in 2008 we used telemarketing only for renewals and “additional gift”
    (ballot access). For 2009 we will continue doing the same in a
    limited way plus try two trials on getting current members to join our
    pledge club.

    Internet Fundraising

    So
    far this year we have raised a total of $385,812 over the internet ($272,227
    since the launch of the new site in June); whereas, in 2007 we raised
    a total of $186,570. Andrew Davis has been putting out internet
    blasts that give people information and updates on issues and within
    the blast always asks for a donation. So this process of doing
    email blasts is working well – thanks to Andrew for writing and thanks
    to Robert for pressing Andrew to write. When I speak with a member
    and when I mail appeals I always ask for an email address so they can
    be updated and added as we move forward.

    LNC
    “Give or Get Program”

    As of November 20, 2008 the Give
    or Get Program numbers are:

    Sum of
    Gift Amount
      Give/Get
    Board Member
      Get
      Give
      Grand Total
      Goal
    Aaron Starr
      1,240
      6,060
      7,300
      10,000
    Angela
    Keaton
      0
      0
      0
    Berlie
    R. Etzel
      25
      25
      0
    Bob Jackson
      0
      0
      0
    Daniel
    M. Karlan
      500
      500
      2,500
    George
    Squires
      0
      0
      0
    Hardy A.
    Macia
      5,668
      5,668
      10,000
    Heather
    Scott
      686
      686
      0
    Jake Porter
      35
      0
      35
      0
    James W.
    Lark
      6,000
      6,000
      10,000
    Julia Fox
      200
      200
      2,000
    Lee Wrights
      0
      0
      0
    Mark W.
    Hinkle
      150
      150
      5,000
    Mary Ruwart
      50
      100
      150
      0
    Michael
    C. Colley
      1,642
      1,642
      5,000
    Michael
    P. Jingozian
      1,818
      1,818
      5,000
    Patrick
    J. Dixon
      225
      770
      995
      5,000
    R. A. Ryan
      1,530
      1,530
      2,500
    Rachel
    Hawkridge
      50
      68
      118
      1,000
    Rebecca
    Sink-Burris
      449
      678
      1,127
      1,000
    Robert
    Sullentrup
      220
      245
      465
      2,000
    Scott Lieberman
      400
      400
      1,000
    Steve LaBianca
      0
      0
      0
    Stewart
    Flood
      175
      175
      10,000
    William
    B. Redpath
      26,857
      26,857
      10,000
    Grand Total
      2,444
      53,395
      55,839
      82,000

    2009 Proposed Mail Schedule

    Please
    see attached. (
    where
    is it
    ?)

    Conclusion

    Without
    at least the $500,000 for the 2009 direct mail marketing budget Aaron
    has proposed, I cannot promise to make all of the above happen.
    I do wish to achieve all that I have put forward, but need the help
    of the board in approving the budget and raising funds themselves through
    the Give or Get program.

    Thank
    you all, Louise

    Political Director’s Report – Sean
    Haugh

    Contents:

    Ballot Access Lawsuit
    Updates

    Lessons of 2008 Ballot Access

    Current State-by-State Ballot Status

    Candidate Results 2008

    Operation ELECT-US

    BALLOT ACCESS LAWSUIT UPDATES

    All of the lawsuits which we filed
    during the election season are still active, except for Ohio.
    Each one has two phases, injunctive relief and declaratory relief.
    None of these lawsuits should incur any significant future costs beyond
    the minor expenses of filing papers and possibly some travel for our
    attorney in each case if a personal appearance in court is required.
    There are no significant developments in these ongoing cases since the
    election. Below is a brief summation of where each case stands.

    Added to this list is our involvement
    in the Washington state “Top Two” litigation.

    Washington: The Libertarian
    Party of Washington’s lawsuit against I-872, aka “Top Two,” is
    at a critical juncture. I have been helping in the search for
    a new attorney and am recommending the LNC pick up the cost of this
    new attorney, not to exceed $15,000 over the remaining course of the
    lawsuit. The LNC would not become a named party in this case.

    The LPWa has been represented until
    now by Richard Shepard. Shepard has been wanting to be released
    from the case since April. The state party has essentially expended
    and burnt out all the resources they have to continue this case.

    The case currently is back in US
    District Court after having been heard by the US Supreme Court.
    The Supreme Court ruled in favor of I-872 early in the year, but kept
    the case open for various issues and said they may hear the case again
    once the Top Two system has had a chance to work and an “as applied”
    challenge could be developed.

    The Democratic and Republican parties
    in Washington are co-plaintiffs. The Washington Grange Association,
    which has joined the defendant’s side in favor of I-872, has filed
    to have the case dismissed. This is easily overcome, but a response
    is required by Monday 12/8/08. Shepard has agreed to file both
    a formal request to be removed from the case and a motion to delay further
    proceedings pending new counsel. This is probably a foregone conclusion
    as the original judge in the case very recently recused himself because
    his wife now represents the state in other legal matters, which creates
    a conflict of interest.

    LPWa Chair Scott Lindsley and Krist
    Novolselic, the new Chair of FairVote and a resident of Washington,
    are working to raise money to pay Shepard’s remaining expenses.

    While this is not yet fully confirmed,
    I have been in contact with Oregon attorney Orrin Grover to take over
    from Shepard. Grover was the attorney for the Barr campaign in
    our Texas case. By the time of the meeting I hope to have an agreement
    between Shepard and Grover about the transfer of the case. If
    this doesn’t work out I will continue to search for a new attorney
    to replace Shepard.

    This case, and the LP’s involvement
    in it, is vitally important for three significant reasons. The
    LP is the only plaintiff who can bring the trademark issue, as we are
    the only party to have trademarked our name and logo, and the rights
    to keep and defend our trademark are obliterated by I-872, which invests
    the sole power of party identification with the candidates. Clearly,
    the Top Two system discriminates against us and other third parties
    by eliminating most of our candidates from the general election ballot.
    This leads to the reason why it is in the LNC’s interests to continue
    the case to the end, because if this system is allowed to survive in
    Washington it could very easily spread to Oregon and California, and
    from there across the country. It has to be killed now before
    it becomes a national problem.

    The estimate of no more than $15,000
    over the remaining course of the lawsuit comes from discussions with
    Grover and several others involved in ballot access litigation, and
    is in line with fee structures from previous cases. These funds
    would only pay for new representation. Any costs generated by
    Shepard would be covered by Lindsley’s and Noveselic’s efforts.

    Massachusetts: The
    state has appealed our victory over substitution of our stand-in candidate
    on the petition with the candidate nominated in convention. While
    the main issue is now moot as Barr/Root was on the Massachusetts ballot,
    the Secretary of State desires guidance from the court on the details
    of substitution going forward. Our attorneys in this case and
    all plaintiffs (LNC, LPMa, Barr/Root) all agree that while we need to
    keep defending ourselves and preserve this victory, the state is in
    the wrong venue and really needs to take this question to the legislature.

    We continue to be very ably represented
    by the firm of Foley Hoag in Boston, who were recruited by the Massachusetts
    ACLU. The LNC is only responsible for minor filing fees.

    Louisiana, Connecticut, Maine,
    and New Hampshire
    : In Louisiana we are represented by Mark
    Brown, while in the three New England cases we continue to be represented
    by Gary Sinawski. They will be filing motions to begin the declaratory
    relief phase of each lawsuit this month. We lost on injunctive
    relief in all four states.

    As previously reported, the issues
    in Maine and Connecticut are over the legal responsibilities of the
    Secretary of State and the town clerks in receiving and processing our
    petition signatures, while in New Hampshire the issue is substitution
    and in Louisiana, the filing of elector paperwork during a period of
    natural disaster. The relevant state party is a co-plaintiff in
    each case.

    In all four cases, we are seeking
    the relevant state laws be struck down. (This is a rather extensive
    request in Maine and Connecticut.) In Connecticut and Maine we
    will also be requesting the court place us on the ballot for the rest
    of the current election cycle. In these two states and Louisiana,
    we will also be asking for significant financial compensation reflecting
    the costs and ongoing value of ballot access in each state.

    Oklahoma: Mentioned
    here although the LNC is not directly involved in this case, but may
    wish to be in the future. The Barr/Root campaign’s lawsuit is
    still alive for declaratory relief and will continue into 2009.
    Our side is represented here by Jim Linger. This case merits continued
    monitoring in case, like Washington state, someone needs to step in
    to ensure the case continues.

    Besides these cases, state parties
    are waging some of their own cases, including Tennessee and North Carolina.
    Overall, I am cautiously optimistic that most of these cases will eventually
    be successful, if not all of them. They are all strong cases but
    you never know what the judges will say.

    We have been able to engage in
    all this legal activity at very little cost. As with our list
    of petitioners, we have been able to develop a list of good, experienced
    election law attorneys who will work for reasonable rates plus expenses.

    Richard Winger has been an invaluable
    resource in every aspect of this. He is always ready to offer
    expert testimony and excellent ideas on how to structure and execute
    a lawsuit. He is now sending me his notes on laws that deserve
    a challenge. (I am not without my own ideas on this, as I can
    think of some ballot access law in every state I would want to strike
    down.)

    One reason to pursue such an aggressive
    legal strategy is to create openings for our lobbying efforts.
    State legislators often remain blissfully ignorant of ballot access
    laws until they have a compelling reason to pay attention to them.
    Having their laws struck down in court is obviously quite compelling,
    but even filing a lawsuit will help to get their attention.

    I am currently working with several
    state parties to line up legislators who will introduce positive reform
    bills for us, as well as identifying bills which we may wish to support
    or oppose. Once these legislatures begin in January, that work
    will shift to helping the states maximize their lobbying efforts to
    get the bills we want passed.

    *

    LESSONS OF 2008 BALLOT ACCESS

    The current LNC approach to ballot
    access uncovered several vulnerabilities which cost us access in some
    states and nearly did in others in 2008. I would like to change
    the paradigm so that ballot access is an ongoing concern of the LNC,
    and not only addressed during the Presidential election.

    The main areas which need to be
    addressed to eliminate these vulnerabilities are:

    1) Our commitment to 50 state ballot
    access so we can take advantage of every opportunity;

    2) Spreading out the work over
    the course of the whole election cycle until waiting until the end of
    the cycle;

    3) Spreading out the costs of ballot
    access so they don’t cripple our resources during the height of the
    election cycle;

    4) Taking over as much responsibility
    as possible for ballot access and the filing of state-level paperwork
    to secure it;

    5) Ensuring the vitality of each
    state party so it can be an effective partner in ballot access; and,

    6) The use of stand-in candidates
    on petitions begun pre-nomination.

    We also made some very positive
    advancements in how we hire and manage petitioners, which will also
    be mentioned briefly at the end of this section.

    Commitment to 50 state ballot
    access

    The term “50 state ballot access”
    is a bit of a misnomer since it includes DC and Guam as well.
    For 2008, we adopted a strategy of 48 state ballot access, deferring
    the three most difficult drives in OK, WV and DC to a later decision.
    We found that once we had nominated a candidate who was nationally known,
    we desired ballot access in these states after all. The Barr/Root
    campaign took responsibility for all three, but unfortunately we started
    on each so late that the attempts to get on the ballot via meeting signature
    requirements and then filing a lawsuit when unsuccessful all failed
    (although the Oklahoma case is still ongoing, see the Lawsuit Update
    elsewhere in this report).

    Ballot access remains job #1 for
    the Libertarian Party. Without it, we cannot run candidates and
    give voters a Libertarian choice, which is the essence of our existence
    as a political party.

    We need to recognize that it is
    likely once we have nominated our ticket in convention and know who
    our candidate will be, we will be more motivated to get those people
    on every ballot. By starting early enough in every state we can
    meet the signature requirements, no matter how onerous. In the
    most difficult states, an effective petitioning strategy can be the
    foundation for any legal or legislative efforts to change the laws and
    lower the requirements going forward.

    Past experiences prove that ballot
    access even in Oklahoma and West Virginia is achievable with an early
    start, but out of reach if we only decide to try after the national
    convention. The Barr/Root campaign’s decision to tackle these
    most difficult states post-convention eventually only resulted in spending
    vast resources which could have gone into direct campaigning.
    While these were not LNC resources, we found this year that expecting
    the Presidential campaign to take responsibility for any ballot access
    results in an overwhelming obstacle to the campaign.

    Spreading out the work of ballot
    access

    Our habit has been to defer most
    of the effort for ballot access to the end of the cycle, work frantically
    to meet deadlines, and then ignore it until it becomes critical again
    towards the end of the next cycle.

    This resulted in an incredibly
    intense 4-5 month period where all of our attention had to be on ballot
    access exclusively, to the detriment of any support we might give to
    our other candidates. By the end of that period in September,
    we are not in much of a position to effectively assist these campaigns.
    It also meant that we had no margin for error in these ballot drives,
    and were not in a position to recover if any major obstacles arise.

    During this time I came to the
    conclusion that I would not wish these ballot access requirements on
    anyone, not even the people who wrote these laws. It was a very
    miserable period of time which could be avoided by not leaving all the
    signature gathering to the end.

    There are two separate components
    to this perspective, staff resources and financial costs. Staff
    resources includes the ability to hire and manage contractors to meet
    all the deadlines.

    The first week of August is the
    most critical deadline week. In that time we had to turn in our
    signatures in Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire and South Dakota.
    All of these are substantial ballot drives, and as we found this year,
    having difficulties in one of these states can have a cascading effect
    on the rest, as well as those which have later deadlines. In 2008,
    this dynamic resulted in us failing to gain ballot access in Maine and
    Connecticut and just barely making it in South Dakota.

    By spreading out the work over
    the whole cycle, we can pace ourselves and get everything done in a
    timely manner. We can also manage our efforts far more effectively
    by being able to hire fewer petitioners overall, concentrating on hiring
    those who have a better track record of productivity and avoiding hiring
    ones who are unproductive and/or cause us other problems. This
    will in turn allow us to have the resources available to handle any
    last minute ballot access crisis, as well as resources to continue to
    assist our candidates during this critical stage of their campaigns.

    Spreading out the cost of ballot
    access

    This turns out to be even more
    critical than the staff resources. The encumbrance system employed
    in 2008 was a reaction to how ballot access was conducted in 2004, and
    yet had the same failures as the previous system. Spreading out
    the costs of ballot access over the course of the four year cycle instead
    of saving them all to the end will allow us to establish realistic budgets
    for these efforts with an appropriate level of LNC oversight.

    The major problem under the current
    system was that I was given a choice in every state to either spend
    beyond what was encumbered and probably succeed, or stay within encumbrances
    and probably fail. This resulted in the worst of both worlds.
    We ended up spending our reserves (although that was foreseen by our
    previous Executive Director) and whatever other money we could raise
    on ballot access, while being prevented by limited resources and an
    attempt to honor the will of the Executive Committee to put in all the
    resources necessary to ensure success.

    By starting as soon as possible
    and by committing to 50 state ballot access in advance, it becomes far
    easier to plan and manage ballot access funding. Whether it is
    in the core budget or considered a separate project, or some combination
    of the two, the first positive result of starting early is that we can
    afford to stop if the money is not there.

    When the deadlines are two or four
    years away, it is far easier to live within our means. We would
    know how much will be available for upcoming work and if the money runs
    out, we can afford to slow down or even suspend our efforts until we
    have put enough back in the bank to resume at full speed. When
    the deadlines are two or four weeks away, we do not have that luxury.

    By spreading out the costs, we
    will also save a very large portion of these funds through travel and
    lodging expenses for our petitioners. Instead of flying in a larger
    group of people for a short amount of time, we can hire fewer people
    who can stay in one place for an extended period. We also gain
    the ability to lodge petitioners in longer term accommodations instead
    of paying daily or weekly hotel rates during peak vacation times of
    the summer. Finally, by working during slower times in the petitioning
    industry, we take advantage of supply and demand factors in pricing
    and can more easily resist demands for an increase in per signature
    rates at critical times.

    Taking greater responsibility
    for state-level paperwork

    In most states, the State Chair
    and/or Executive Committee is the only legal authority able to submit
    all the necessary papers to ensure our nominees are placed on the ballot.
    For the first time since 1988, we had a state fail in these duties which
    cost us ballot access in that state (Louisiana). We also had a
    near miss in Mississippi, which was only averted thanks to a courtesy
    call from that state’s Secretary of State’s office informing us
    of missing elector paperwork on the morning of the deadline.

    We thought we had done our due
    diligence as a national party on this, but clearly we had not done enough.
    Mark, an intern in our office made two passes of phone calls to all
    the states to ensure they had all the paperwork they required, and Jennifer
    with the Barr/Root campaign also made her own set of calls to every
    state. We also contacted every State Chair (or their designee)
    at least once to make sure they were aware of their responsibilities
    and intended to carry them out. Despite all these communications,
    these two states still become last minute problems.

    The first solution, which goes
    beyond ballot access and will be addressed below, is to work with the
    state party organizations to build them up and make them vital enough
    to be effective partners in ballot access and able to carry out their
    own responsibilities.

    One other measure we can take is
    to prepare and bring to the national convention as much of this paperwork
    as possible so that it can be completed on site and filed immediately
    thereafter. In the case of Presidential electors, we can encourage
    states to name them in their state conventions, or failing that choose
    the electors from the delegates in attendance so they will be present
    to complete the necessary forms.

    Instead of simply trusting our
    state Chairs to understand and carry out these duties, we need to get
    receipts whenever possible from states confirming all necessary paperwork
    is filed.

    In any case, we need to do what
    we can to take care of this bureaucracy before we are at a critical
    juncture in ballot access petitioning so that none of these become problems
    that must be handled at the last minute.

    Ensuring the vitality of state
    parties

    As mentioned, this has much broader
    implications than just ballot access. Since we are a grassroots
    party and our authority to determine to composition of our state parties
    organizations is appropriately limited by our bylaws, there is only
    so far we can go with this. However those strictures still allow
    us a lot of ability we are not currently exercising to shore up our
    affiliates when necessary.

    The first step is simply to work
    with the State Chairs directly and through the LSLA (the current State
    Chairs’ association) to support them as much as we can in matters
    of national importance such as ballot access. This includes impressing
    upon them that the title comes with responsibilities, and making it
    as easy as possible for them to carry them out. The paperwork
    issues described above are a great example of how we can step up or
    support of them without encroaching upon their own authority under state
    and national bylaws. I hope to discuss these matters in greater
    detail with the State Chairs at he Charleston conference in February,
    and am working with Steve Gordon (the current Chair of the LSLA) towards
    that end.

    Another step we should consider
    is to take a direct hand in organizing state parties which are not functioning.
    Obviously, if a state party is in compliance with its own bylaws then
    we cannot make any changes short of disaffiliating the entire state
    organization, which is a very extreme measure that should be avoided
    in almost any set of circumstances.

    But there are instances when a
    state party fails to follow its own bylaws, or falls into that condition
    through lack of people to carry them out. In such cases we should
    be willing to declare that state party as no longer existing and take
    direct action to form a new one.

    That’s one extreme with clear
    lines of authority. There are more examples of states which have
    properly followed their own procedures and continue to legally exist,
    and yet for whatever reason do not have people in place who are able
    to fulfill all the responsibilities of the state party. In these
    cases, we should be willing to tactically support the people we have
    to make sure these responsibilities are carried out.

    In any case, any action taken on
    behalf of the LNC in these matters must be carried out with a deference
    to the state party leadership where it exists, and with an awareness
    of state laws, which generally give all authority to a state party and
    consider the national party pretty much a figment of the state party’s
    imagination with no legal standing.

    The use of stand-in candidates

    If there is just one thing I could
    change about how we conduct ballot access, it is who we use as stand-ins
    on petitions which begin before we know who will be our nominee.
    These people must be neutral and committed to stepping aside when it
    is time to submit the names of the real nominees.

    In three states (New Hampshire,
    Connecticut and Massachusetts), the name of George Phillies was used
    as the stand-in for President, with various people chosen by Phillies
    as the stand in for Vice President. Meanwhile, in other states
    we used either native sons or daughters, or past national party figures,
    with little incident and no negative repercussions.

    The use of the Phillies name resulted
    a critical delay in starting petitioning in Connecticut, which is one
    of the main reasons why both the Connecticut and Maine drives failed.
    The Barr/Root campaign was adamant in their insistence that work not
    begin on a petition bearing the Phillies name until we had all legal
    assurances that we could substitute the Barr name without complications.
    While that on the surface was a reasonable request, and we honored it
    in all cases, if we had been able to resolve this earlier we would not
    have spent so many resources in a frantic attempt to finish Connecticut.
    Frankly, if we had been able to start work in Connecticut just two or
    three days earlier, we would have been able to pull enough people from
    that state to complete Maine on time.

    The use of the Phillies name is
    also the reason why we had two candidates on the ballot for President
    in New Hampshire and has undermined our lawsuit there. Phillies
    persisted in his desire to actively campaign, citing the LPNH’s use
    of his name as the stand-in candidate as his justification for doing
    so. If we had used someone who was not actively seeking the nomination,
    we would have had a far more cooperative person in that position who
    would most likely now be a co-plaintiff in our lawsuit over substitution,
    instead of someone who is actively attempting to thwart our effort for
    substitution rights in New Hampshire in order to advance his own personal
    goals which run counter to the party’s.

    Again, this is an issue where the
    states have all the legal authority and the national party cannot take
    a heavy handed approach. However after this experience, we have
    the ability to work with state parties from the very beginning of the
    petitioning process and help them avoid the problems which arose this
    year.

    Ability to hire and manage petitioners

    One way we vastly improved our
    ballot access operations this year was developing and retaining a long
    list of top quality petitioners (both independent contractors and petitioning
    companies). This has already been addressed in previous reports,
    but the highlights merit being included in this document.

    Our fundamental problem is that
    we cannot afford to match the rates offered to petitioners by initiative
    groups, which often reach $3 per signature or more. We were able
    to compete in the marketplace for petitioners through offering superior
    customer service. The Libertarian Party has developed a reputation
    among petitioners by our recent conduct that while we may not pay the
    most, we do pay on time and without hassles, and are able to offer more
    steady employment. Because of this, when our petitioners received
    offers to go to California or Nevada for a brief stint at double what
    we were paying or more, far more of them chose to stick with us.

    Through this process we have been
    able to develop a list of petitioners who have proven their reliability
    and with whom we have excellent relationships. Expanding this
    list and maintaining our current relationships will allow us far greater
    ability to choose who we want to work for us now and in the future.

    I am also near completion of a
    document which goes into greater detail of the successes and problems
    of each state’s petitioning efforts in 2008. It contains a lot
    of sensitive information and is intended more as an historical record
    to capture and preserve institutional knowledge. While it will
    not be a part of this report and will not be intended for broader publication,
    I will be happy to send a copy to individual LNC members upon request.

    *

    CURRENT STATE-BY-STATE BALLOT
    STATUS

    In hopes that the LNC agrees to
    change the paradigm to spread out ballot access work over the entire
    election cycle until saving it to the end, this report begins with the
    states which merit our attention in the next two years. In some
    of these states we are already on the ballot but must take some action
    to maintain that status.

    This is also written with the assumption
    that ballot access will continue to be outside the core budget, meaning
    dedicated funds will need to be raised for these projects. To
    that end I would like to have Scott Kohlhaas working for us on ballot
    access telemarketing. It will also require working closely with
    other fundraising operations of the national party to ensure they all
    aren’t getting in each other’s way. The prime example of this
    is the ability to use email blasts dedicated to ballot access which
    fit in with the schedule of other email-based fundraising.

    I will have a more detailed funding
    plan for these states where our action is required in time for the February
    LNC meeting.

    OFF THE BALLOT (or close
    to it)

    LNC action recommended in 2009

    Alaska – Full party status
    with 9,752 registrations (est) as of 6/5/10.

    We currently have 6,972 registrations,
    meaning we need to collect another 2,800 (est). The threshold
    represents 3% of total votes cast for US Senate. The numbers are
    estimated because the vote has yet to be certified. There is the
    possibility of legislative reform that would change this number to a
    flat 5,000 registrations, but we can’t count on that.

    Maryland – Full party
    status with 10,000 valid signatures by 8/2/10.

    We can maintain ballot access with
    1% of the vote for Governor. We can start now and should knock
    this out of the way as soon as possible.

    Nebraska – Full party
    status with 5,921 valid signatures by 8/1/10.

    We can maintain ballot access with
    5% of the vote for any statewide office. There are six such offices
    available in 2010. Note that the signatures must meet a strict
    distribution requirement of at least 1% of the number of votes for Governor
    in each of the three Congressional districts. There is also a
    residency requirement for circulators. The Secretary of State
    has suggested legislative relief and continues to do so, but we can’t
    count on the legislature following his advice.

    New Hampshire – Statewide
    candidate with 3,000 valid signatures by 8/4/10.

    Full party status can be gained
    with 4% of the vote for US Senate, which is on the ballot in 2010.
    We should run a strong candidate and attempt to gain full party status
    in New Hampshire. The alternative is a full party petition, which
    would require an estimated 21,590 valid signatures.

    New Mexico – Full party
    status with 4,151 valid signatures by 4/1/10.

    Ballot status is retained with
    5% of the vote for President or Governor. This petition would
    be good for the following four years.

    North Dakota – Full party
    status with 7,000 valid signatures by 4/9/10.

    We can maintain ballot access with
    5% of the vote for any statewide office. There are two available
    in 2010, Attorney General and Secretary of State.

    Oklahoma – Full party
    status with 73,134 valid signatures by 5/1/10.

    We should wait until the resolution
    of lawsuit currently in the US Court of Appeals over the legality of
    using out of state petitioners, which should be decided in the first
    half of 2009. If that ruling is favorable, we should start petitioning
    immediately. The number of signatures is based on the gubernatorial
    vote and will almost certainly rise after the 2010 elections.
    The petition would keep us on the ballot for 2012 if completed in time
    for 2010.

    South Dakota – Full party
    status with 8,389 valid signatures by 3/23/10.

    We already have 1,392 raw signatures
    in hand from our efforts in 2007-08. These are still good although
    they are getting stale. South Dakota has a residency requirement
    for petitioners, but it does not apply to party petitions due to a defect
    in the law. However, quite a number of professional petitioners
    happen to be South Dakota residents.

    LNC action may be recommended
    sometime in 2009

    Alabama – Full party status
    with 37,513 valid signatures by 6/1/10.

    The state party has a plan to raise
    the funds and conduct this drive on their own. Unfortunately,
    they have entered into a contract with at least one petitioner we would
    not hire. This contract has performance metrics which may allow
    the state party to eventually get out of it. That would allow
    for national support of this drive.

    Arizona – Full party status
    with 0.67% of voter registrations (20,015 est.) by 11/1/09.

    The number is estimated because
    voter registration counts will change by November. This is also
    the threshold for ballot access on a county by county basis. (In
    other words, we need to meet the threshold statewide to run statewide
    candidates, and in a county to run local candidates.) We have
    18,153 registered voters in Arizona as of 11/4/08.

    The county and state parties generally
    take care of this and have funds to do so. I am helping them with
    leads on petitioners and will continue to monitor their progress.

    District of Columbia
    Full party ballot access with 7,500 votes for Mayor or City Council
    at-large.

    This is conceivable considering
    parties may only run one candidate in the general election but you can
    vote for two. In 2006, that translated to 4.1% of the vote, which
    all balloted candidates received. This is a 2010 election.
    If a good candidate could start soon, they would be worth supporting.

    Maine – Full party status
    with 27,544 valid signatures by 12/11/09.

    There are several restrictions
    on who can sign this petition, most notably that only registered independents
    and Libertarians are eligible to sign, which makes it much more difficult.
    If the state party were organized to the point where it could run a
    full slate, this option might be worthwhile. Otherwise we can
    continue to place our Presidential ticket on the ballot as an independent
    with 4,000 valid signatures in 2012. One significant advantage
    of simply notifying the state that we intend to conduct the full party
    petition is we would then be able to register to vote as Libertarians
    in Maine, ostensibly so that we could increase the pool of eligible
    petition signers.

    Virginia – Statewide candidate
    with 10,000 valid signatures by 8/21/09.

    Elections for Governor and state
    legislature are in 2009, with separate petitioning requirements for
    each office. If the LPVa can be induced to run a larger slate
    then it may be in our interest to assist them.

    LNC action not recommended in
    2009

    Arkansas – Full party
    status with 10,000 valid signatures by 6/1/10.

    Retention can be had with 3% of
    the vote for Governor. This is only worth doing if we have a strong
    candidate for Governor and/or an organized state party. Until
    either happens, our other option is a petition of 1,000 valid signatures
    for our Presidential ticket.

    Connecticut – No full
    party status available, petitioning per candidate only.

    Retention for each office can be
    maintained with 1% of the vote in the previous election. Otherwise
    each candidate must petition separately. We can start petitioning
    for Governor on 4/28/10. Our current court case may have great
    bearing on these procedures, as we are asking the whole petitioning
    process be struck down.

    Illinois – Statewide slate
    with 25,000 valid signatures by 6/21/10.

    Illinois has a 90 day window to
    collect signatures, which in 2010 will begin on 3/23/10. Full
    party ballot access can be won with 5% of the vote for any statewide
    office. In 2010 there will be seven statewide offices, including
    US Senate. We need to run a full slate in 2010 and attempt to
    avoid a petition drive in 2012.

    Iowa – Candidate for Governor
    with 1,500 valid signatures by 8/13/10.

    We can gain full party status with
    a 2% vote for President or Governor. We will need to run a strong
    candidate for Governor in 2010 who can get us 2%. In 2006, Kevin
    Litton received 0.5% for Governor.

    Kentucky – Statewide slate
    with 5,000 valid signatures in 2011.

    The next gubernatorial election
    is in 2011. Full party status can only be gained by 2% of the
    vote for President.

    Minnesota – Each statewide
    candidate needs 2,000 valid signatures by 9/7/10.

    Full party status can be gained
    with 5% of the vote for any statewide office, of which there are five
    available in 2010. A petition for full party ballot access is
    a ridiculous number of signatures (110,150 valid in 2008). We
    should run a full slate and attempt to gain ballot access in 2010 for
    2012.

    New York – Each statewide
    candidate needs 15,000 valid signatures by 8/17/10.

    Full party status can be gained
    with 50,000 votes for Governor. Although that is a taller order
    in New York than most states, we should try to run a strong candidate
    and meet that threshold. Petitioning only takes place in a six
    week period which will begin on 7/6/10.

    Pennsylvania – Statewide
    slate with 24,666 valid signatures (estimated) by 8/1/10.

    In 2010, the statewide offices
    are Governor, Lt. Governor and US Senate. The number is from 2008.
    The new signature requirement will be calculated in December 2009.
    Full party status requires 15% of the registered voters.

    Rhode Island – Full party
    status with 23,489 valid signatures by 5/28/10.

    Retention can be had with 5% of
    the vote for Governor. This is only worth doing if we have a strong
    candidate for Governor and/or a stronger state party. Until either
    happens, our other option is a petition of 1,000 valid signatures for
    our Presidential ticket.

    Tennessee – Full party
    status with 45,254 valid signatures (estimated).

    The deadline is currently up in
    the air due to an ongoing lawsuit, with plaintiffs including the LP
    of Tennessee and represented by Jim Linger. Considering how high
    the petitioning barrier is and the strength of our case there, this
    is one instance where I would recommend we simply wait to see what we
    can get from the courts.

    Washington – Each statewide
    candidate needs 1000 valid signatures by 8/17/10.

    Full party status can be gained
    with 5% in any statewide election. The only statewide office on
    the ballot in 2010 is US Senate.

    West Virginia – Statewide
    candidate with 15,118 valid signatures (estimated) by 8/1/12.

    Retention is won with 1% of the
    vote for Governor. The next gubernatorial election is in 2012.

    ON THE BALLOT

    California – Full party
    status with 1% of last vote or 2% in any statewide election.

    We had several candidates who received
    over 2% of the vote in statewide races in 2006, and this is achievable
    again with a full slate. If we somehow fail to meet the vote test
    in 2010, to maintain ballot status via party registration requires 88,991
    registrations (est) by 1/27/12. We currently have 83,574.
    The state party generally takes care of registrations although I would
    be willing to offer them assistance if needed.

    Colorado – Full party
    status with 1% in any statewide election or 1,000 vote registrations.

    There are five statewide offices
    in 2010. In 2006, we ran in three of these and won 1.5% for Governor/Lt.
    Governor, 4.2% in a three way race for Attorney General, and 3.5% for
    University of Colorado Regent at-large. We have 10,950 registered
    Libertarians in Colorado as of 10/22/08.

    Delaware – Full party
    status with 0.05% of registered voters.

    The current number needed to maintain
    ballot access is 310 registered Libertarian voters. As of 11/4/08
    we had 756.

    Florida – Full party status
    by remaining organized.

    They make up for it by having high
    filing fees.

    Georgia – Can run statewide
    candidates if one received 1% in the previous election.

    Allen Buckley got 3.4% in this
    election. There are nine statewide races in Georgia in 2010, including
    Governor and US Senate. District candidates have to complete a
    petition equal to 5% of the registered voters in the district as of
    the last election. The only way to gain full party ballot access
    in Georgia is to get 20% of the vote for President or Governor.

    Hawaii – Full party status
    for 10 years by completing the petition three times in a row.

    The petition requirement is 0.1%
    of registered voters, which currently would be an estimated 692 signatures.
    There are a number of ways to meet thresholds for retention, which would
    require either a strong statewide candidate or a full slate for state
    legislature. Hawaii law allows for a 10 year grace period after
    a party has completed the petition requirements for three elections
    and continues to run candidates. Our current grace period runs
    through 2012.

    Idaho – Full party status
    is maintained by running at least three candidates for state or federal
    office every election.

    We ran five candidates in 2008.

    Indiana – Full party status
    with 2% of the vote for Secretary of State.

    The state party will be concentrating
    heavily on this race in 2010, as they did with Mike Kole in 2006.

    Kansas – Full party status
    with 1% in any statewide election.

    There are six statewide offices,
    including US Senate, on the ballot in 2010. The state party regularly
    runs a full slate and meets this threshold.

    Louisiana – Full party
    status with 1,000 registered voters.

    As of 11/4/08 we had 2669 registered
    Libertarians.

    Massachusetts – Full party
    status with 3% in any statewide election.

    Robert Underwood received 3.2%
    for US Senate in 2008. There are six statewide offices on the
    ballot in 2010. With major party status comes new signature requirements
    to get individual candidates on the ballot. I am working with
    new Massachusetts LP Chair David Blau on a lobbying strategy to change
    this law. Our successful lawsuit over substitution in Massachusetts
    is helpful to start the conversation about ballot access reform, as
    the legislature will most likely have to act on that matter to comply
    with the court ruling.

    Michigan – Full party
    status with votes equal to 1% of the Secretary of State winner’s vote
    by any statewide candidate.

    The state party regularly runs
    a full slate and easily achieves this threshold.

    Missouri – Full party
    status with 2% in any statewide election in either of the last two elections.

    The state party did not achieve
    this in 2008 so it is critical we do so in 2010. There are two
    statewide offices available in 2010, US Senate and State Auditor.
    Candidates for both offices in 2006 exceeded the 2% threshold.

    Mississippi – Full party
    status by remaining organized.

    We do need to make sure we stay
    organized in this state, although the state’s rules on this are extremely
    flexible.

    Montana – Full party status
    with votes equal to 5% of the Governor winner’s vote by any statewide
    candidate in either of the last two elections.

    Stan Jones kept us on through 2012
    with 3% of the vote for Governor in 2008.

    North Carolina – Full
    party status with 2% for President or Governor.

    Mike Munger kept us on the ballot
    through 2012 with 2.9% for Governor in 2008.

    Nevada – Full party status
    with votes equal to 1% of the total votes for US House.

    Nathan Santucci kept us on the
    ballot with 22.3% in a two-way State Assembly race. That’s a
    pretty strong incentive to run a full slate in Nevada.

    Ohio – There is no law.

    We have ballot status in Ohio thanks
    to our legal victory in 2008. The state legislature must replace
    ballot access laws which were previously struck down in court.
    The impact of our win in court is that the Secretary of State may not
    make up new rules to replace these laws. The LPO is very active
    in lobbying and will be working with state legislators to replace the
    laws, but until they do all we need to do is nominate our candidates
    in convention.

    Oregon – Full party status
    with votes equal to 1% of the total votes for US House in any statewide
    office.

    There are four statewide offices
    available in 2010, including US Senate. This is a bit of a concern
    because we had no statewide candidates in Oregon in 2008. We will
    need to make sure we run a full statewide slate in 2010.

    South Carolina – Full
    party status by remaining organized.

    There are very specific laws in
    SC mandating how to organize the state party, which the LPSC follows.

    Texas – Full party status
    with 5% in any statewide election or 2% for Governor.

    There are many statewide offices
    available in Texas and our state party there is renowned for filling
    the slate to take advantage of it. There is already one very active
    candidate for Governor, Jeff Daiell.

    Utah – Full party status
    with votes equal to 2% of the total votes for US House in any statewide
    office.

    Mike Stoddard kept us on the ballot
    with 6.1% for State Auditor in 2008.

    Vermont – Full party status
    by remaining organized.

    We need to remain organized in
    10 towns to stay on the ballot.

    Wisconsin – Full party
    status with 1% for any statewide office in either of the last two elections.

    There are seven statewide offices
    available in 2010, including US Senate. There were no statewide
    offices available in 2008, so it is imperative we run a full slate in
    2010.

    Wyoming – Full party status
    with 2% for US House, Governor or Secretary of State.

    David Herbert kept us on the ballot
    with 5% for US House in 2008.

    *

    CANDIDATE RESULTS 2008

    These are quite extensively covered
    in the most recent LP News, but I did want to highlight a few of these
    results.

    We had 21 winners on November 4,
    bringing our total for the year to 29 election victories:

    NOVEMBER WINNERS

    Arizona

    Peter Schmerl, Green Valley Continental
    School Board

    John Buttrick, Maricopa County
    Superior Court Judge

    California

    Tom Tryon, Calaveras County Supervisor,
    District 4

    Frank Manske, Mount Diablo Healthcare
    District

    John Inks, Mountain View City Council

    Norm Westwell, Ocean View School
    District Board of Trustees

    Brian Holtz, Purissima Hills Water
    District

    Kate O'Brien, Simi Valley Recreation
    and Parks District Supervisor

    Jonathan Hall, Tehachapi Cummings
    County Water District Supervisor

    Florida

    Bruce Reichert, Collier County
    Soil & Water Board, Seat 1

    J Adam Mitchell, Collier County
    Soil & Water Board, Seat 4

    Jeff Hunt, Duval County Soil &
    Water Board, Group 2

    Jack Tanner, Lee County Soil &
    Water Board, Seat 4

    Scott McPherson, New Port Richey
    Mayor

    Howard Horowitz, Palm Beach County
    Soil & Water Board, Group 4

    Tracy Lundquist, West Volusia County
    Hospital Authority, Group A, Seat 1

    Kansas

    Frederick Campbell, Anderson County
    Attorney (partisan)

    Maine

    Bob Mills, Biddeford City Council,
    at-large

    North Carolina

    Mike Helms, Cabarrus County Board
    of Education

    This brings our total number of
    elected Libertarians in office to 207. That number will slightly
    decrease in January as some terms end and the list undergoes an annual
    audit. With Operation ELECT-US, we hope to increase this number
    significantly.

    We also had candidates in 10 states
    who secured statewide ballot access with their results:

    BALLOT ACCESS WINNERS

    Georgia
    Allen Buckley, US Senate

    Kansas
    Randall Hodgkinson, US Senate

    Massachusetts
    Robert Underwood, US Senate

    Michigan
    Scotty Boman, US Senate

    Montana
    Stan Jones, Governor

    North Carolina
    Mike Munger, Governor

    Nevada
    Nathan Santucci, State Assembly, District 22

    Texas
    William Bryan Strange, Judge, Court of Criminal Appeals, Place
    9

    Utah
    Mike Stoddard, State Auditor

    Wyoming
    David Herbert, US House

    It sure is nice to see North Carolina
    on that list. Mike Munger’s example is one I hope to follow
    in a number of other states where we can gain statewide ballot access
    with 2% of the gubernatorial vote.

    Overall we know of 679 Libertarian
    candidates on the ballot in 2008, not including those who ran write-in
    campaigns or lost in primaries.

    OPERATION ELECT-US

    We are already starting to recruit
    candidates for 2009 and 2010. Beyond this pool of 679 candidates
    in 2008, as well as people who have run in prior elections, we have
    been running web ads which ask people to run for office. As of
    11/30/08, this has generated 734 good leads (after weeding out the jokes
    and the candidates for President).

    Every person who has filled out
    this form or contacted us some other way with an interest in running
    for office has received a personal reply from me, with a copy to the
    relevant state Chair or designee. This response is designed to
    make introductions and get the prospective candidate to become active
    in their local party as a way to get started running for office.

    Elections in 2009 are much more
    of a moving target. Filing has already begun in Maryland for local
    offices, and starts on Monday, December 8th, in Illinois. We already
    have a number of candidates who have started running, including a few
    incumbents in Illinois.

    Most filing periods however take
    place in the early spring with elections later in the year. There
    are also partisan state level races in a few states in 2009. I’ll
    be spending the vast majority of my time for the next few months working
    these leads, matching prospective candidates with races and getting
    them started, working with state parties to vet these candidates and
    get them active in state and local party building, and developing candidate
    support materials for local and district elections.

    I will also be sending out this
    month Thank You letters to our candidates as well as our Presidential
    electors.

    It continues to be an honor to
    serve the Libertarian Party in this role.

    Current
    State-by-State Ballot Status

    OFF THE BALLOT (or close to
    it)

    LNC action recommended in 2009:

    Alaska – Full party status
    with 9,752 registrations (est) as of 6/5/09.

    We currently have 6,972 registrations,
    meaning we need to collect another 2,800 (est). Thr threshold
    represents 3% of total cotes cast for US Senate. The numbers are
    estimated because the vote has yet to be certified.

    Hawaii – Full party status
    with 692 valid signatures (est) by 4/2/10.

    The petition requirement is 0.1%
    of registered voters. The estimate is based on the number as of
    11/4/08. There are a number of ways to meet thresholds for retention,
    which would require either a strong statewide candidate or a full slate
    for state legislature.

    ****Maine – Full party status
    with 27,544 valid signatures (est) by 12/14/09.

    This is under the old statute which
    has been repealed.

    Maryland – Full party status
    with 10,000 valid signatures by 8/2/10.

    We can maintain ballot access with
    1% of the vote for Governor. We can start now and should knock
    this out of the way as soon as possible.

    Nebraska – Full party status
    with 5,921 valid signatures by 8/1/10.

    We can mainatin ballot access with
    5% of the vote for any statewide office. There are six such offices
    available in 2010. Note that the signatures must meet a strict
    distribution requirement of at least 1% of the number of votes for Governor
    in each of the three Congressional districts. There is also a
    residency requirement for circulators.

    New Hampshire – Statewide
    candidate with 3,000 valid signatures by 8/4/10.

    Full party status can be gained with
    4% of the vote for US Senate, which is on the ballot in 2010.
    We should run a strong candidate and attempt to gain full party status
    in New Hampshire. The alternative is a full party petition, which
    would require an estimated 21,590 valid signatures.

    New Mexico – Full party
    status with 2,794 valid signatures by 4/1/10.

    Ballot status is retained with 5%
    of the vote for President or Governor. This petition would be
    good for the following four years.

    North Dakota – Full party
    status with 7,000 valid sigantures by 4/9/10.

    We can mainatin ballot access with
    5% of the vote for any statewide office. There are two available
    in 2010, Attorney General and Secretary of State.

    Oklahoma – Full party status
    with 46,324 valid signatures by 5/1/10.

    We should wait until the resolution
    of lawsuit currently in the US Court of Appeals over the legality of
    using out of state petitioners, which should be decided in the first
    half of 2009. If that ruling is favorable, we should start petitioning
    immediately. The number of signatures is based on the gubernatorial
    vote and will almost certainly rise after the 2010 elections.
    The petition would keep us on the ballot for 2012 if completed in time
    for 2010.

    South Dakota – Full party
    status with 8,389 valid signatures by 3/23/10.

    We already have 1,392 raw signatures
    in hand from our efforts in 2007-08. These are still good although
    they are getting stale. South Dakota has a residency requirement
    for petitioners, but it does not apply to party petitions due to a defect
    in the law. However, quite a number of professional petitioners
    happen to be South Dakota residents.

    LNC action may be recommended
    sometime in 2009
    :

    Alabama – Full party status
    with 37,513 valid signatures by 6/1/10.

    The state party has a plan to raise
    the funds and conduct this drive on their own. Unfortunately,
    they have enetered into a contract with at least one petitioner we would
    not hire. This contract has performance metrics which may allow
    the state party to eventually get out of it. That would allow
    for national support of this drive.

    Arizona – Full party status
    with 0.67% of voter registrations (20,015 est.) by 11/1/09.

    The number is estimated because voter
    registration counts will change by November. This is also the
    threshold for ballot access on a county by county basis. (In other
    words, we need to meet the threshold statewide to run statewide candidates,
    and in a county to run local candidates.) We have 18,153 registered
    voters in Arizona as of 11/4/08.

    The county and state parties generally
    take care of this and have funds to do so. I am helping them with
    leads on petitioners and will continue to monitor their progress.

    District of Columbia – Full
    party ballot access with 7,500 votes for Mayor or City Council at-large.

    This is conceivable considering parties
    may only run one candidate in the general election but you can vote
    for two. In 2006, that translated to 4.1% of the vote, which all
    balloted candidates received. This is a 2010 election. If
    a good candidate could start soon, they would be worth supporting.

    Virginia – Statewide candidate
    with 10,000 valid signatures by 8/21/09.

    Elections for Governor and state
    legislature are in 2009, with separate petitioning requirements for
    each office. If the LPVa can be induced to run a larger slate
    then it may be in our interest to assist them.

    LNC action not recommended in
    2009
    :

    Arkansas – Full party status
    with 10,000 valid signatures by 6/1/10.

    Retention can be had with 3% of the
    vote for Governor. This is only worth doing if we have a strong
    candidate for Governor and/or an organized state party. Until
    either happens, our other option is a petition of 1,000 valid signatures
    for our Presidential ticket.

    Connecticut – No full party
    status available, petitioning per candidate only.

    Retention for each office can be
    maintained with 1% of the vote in the previous election. Otherwise
    each candidate must petition separately. We can start petitioning
    for Governor on 4/28/10. Our current court case may have great
    bearing on these procedures, as we are asking the whole petitioning
    process be struck down.

    Illinois – Statewide slate
    with 25,000 valid signatures by 6/21/10.

    Illinois has a 90 day window to collect
    signatures, which in 2010 will begin on 3/23/10. Full party ballot
    access can be won with 5% of the vote for any statewide office.
    In 2010 there will be seven statewide offices, including US Senate.
    We need to run a full slate in 2010 and attempt to avoid a petition
    drive in 2012.

    Iowa – Candidate for Governor
    with 1,500 valid signatures by 8/13/10.

    We can gain full party status with
    a 2% vote for President or Governor. We will need to run a strong
    candidate for Governor in 2010 who can get us 2%. In 2006, Kevin
    Litton received 0.5% for Governor.

    Kentucky – Statewide slate
    with 5,000 valid signatures in 2011.

    The next gubernatorial election is
    in 2011. Full party status can only be gained by 2% of the vote
    for President.

    Minnesota – Each statewide
    candidate needs 2,000 valid signatures by 9/7/10.

    Full party status can be gained with
    5% of the vote for any statewide office, of which there are five avialable
    in 2010. A petition for full party ballot access is a ridiculous
    number of signatures (110,150 valid in 2008). We should run a
    full slate and attempt to gain ballot access in 2010 for 2012.

    New York – Each statewide
    candidate needs 15,000 valid signatures by 8/17/10.

    Full party status can be gained with
    50,000 votes for Governor. Although that is a taller order in
    New York than most states, we should try to run a strong candidate and
    meet that threshold. Petitioning only takes place in a six week
    period which will begin on 7/6/10.

    Pennsylvania – Statewide
    slate with 24,666 valid signatures (estimated) by 8/1/10.

    In 2010, the statewide offices are
    Governor, Lt. Governor and US Senate. The number is from 2008.
    The new signature requirement will be calculated in Decmeber 2009.
    Full party status requires 15% of the regsitered voters.

    Rhode Island – Full party
    status with 18,557 valid signatures (estimated) by 5/28/10.

    Retention can be had with 5% of the
    vote for Governor. This is only worth doing if we have a strong
    candidate for Governor and/or a stronger state party. Until either
    happens, our other option is a petition of 1,000 valid signatures for
    our Presidential ticket.

    ****Tennessee – Full party
    status with 45,254 valid signatures (estimated).

    The deadline is currently up in the
    air due to an ongoing lawsuit, with plaintiffs including the LP of Tennessee.

    Washington – Each statewide
    candidate needs 1000 valid signatures by 8/17/10.

    Full party status can be gained with
    5% in any statewide election. The only statewide office on the
    ballot in 2010 is US Senate.

    West Virginia – Statewide
    candidate with 15,118 valid signatures (estimated) by 8/1/12.

    Retention is won with 1% of the vote
    for Governor. The next gubernatorial election is in 2012.

    ON THE BALLOT

    California – Full party
    status with 1% of last vote or 2% in any statewide election.

    We had several candidates who received
    over 2% of the vote in statewide races in 2006, and this is achievable
    again with a full slate. To maintain ballot status via party registration
    requires 88,991 registrations (est) by 1/22/10. We currently have
    83,574. The state party generally takes care of registrations
    although I will be willing to offer them assistance if needed.

    Colorado – Full party status
    with 1% in any statewide election or 1,000 vote registrations.

    There are five statewide offices
    in 2010. In 2006, we ran in three of these and won 1.5% for Governor/Lt.
    Governor, 4.2% in a three way race for Attorney General, and 3.5% for
    University fo Colorado Regent at-large. We have 10,950 regsitered
    Libertarians in Colorado as of 10/22/08.

    Delaware – Full party status
    with 0.05% of registered voters.

    The current number needed to maintain
    ballot access is 302 registered Libertarian voters. As of 3/1/08
    we had 792. New numbers should be available in December.

    Florida – Full party status
    by remaining organized

    They make up for it by having high
    filing fees.

    Georgia – Can run statewide
    candidates if one received 1% in the previous election.

    Allen Buckley got 3.4% in this election.
    There are nine statewide races in Georgia in 2010, including Governor
    and US Senate. District candidates have to complete a petition
    equal to 5% of the registered voters in the district as of the last
    election. The only way to gain full party ballot access in Georgia
    is to get 20% of the vote for President or Governor.

    Idaho – Full party status
    is maintained by running at least three candidates for state or federal
    office every election.

    We ran five candidates in 2008.

    Indiana – Full party status
    with 2% of the vote for Secretary of State.

    The state party will be concentrating
    heavily on this race in 2010, as they did with Mike Kole in 2006.

    Kansas – Full party status
    with 1% in any statewide election.

    There are six statewide offices,
    including US Senate, on the ballot in 2010. The state party regularly
    runs a full slate and meets this threshold.

    Louisiana – Full party status
    with 1,000 registered voters.

    As of 3/1/08 we had 1975 registered
    Libertarians. New numbers should be made pblic in early December.

    Massachusetts – Full party
    status with 3% in any statewide election.

    Robert Underwood received 3.2% for
    US Senate in 2008. There are six statewide offices on the ballot
    in 2010. With major party status comes new signature requirements
    to get individual candidates on the ballot. I am working with
    new Massachusetts LP Chair David Blau on a lobbying strategy to chainge
    this law. Our successful lawsuit over substitution in Massachusetts
    is helpful to start the conversation about ballot access reform, as
    the legislature will most likely have to act on that matter to comply
    with the court ruling.

    Michigan – Full party status
    with votes equal to 1% of the Secretary of State winner’s vote by
    any statewide candidate.

    The state party regularly runs a
    full slate and easily achieves this threshold.

    Missouri – Full party status
    with 2% in any statewide election in either of the last two elections.

    The state party did not achieve this
    in 2008 so it is critical we do so in 2010. There are two statewide
    offices available in 2010, US Senate and State Auditor. Candidates
    for both offices in 2006 exceeded the 2% threshold.

    ****Mississippi – Full party
    status by remaining organized.

    We do need to make sure we stay organized
    in this state.

    Montana – Full party status
    with votes equal to 5% of the Governor winner’s vote by any statewide
    candidate in either of the last two elections.

    Stan Jones kept us on through 2012
    with 3% of the vote for Governor in 2008.

    North Carolina – Full party
    status with 2% for President or Governor.

    Mike Munger kept us on the ballot
    through 2012 with 2.9% for Governor in 2008.

    Nevada – Full party status
    with votes equal to 1% of the total votes for US House.

    Nathan Santucci kept us on the ballot
    with 22.3% in a two-way State Assembly race. That’s a pretty
    strong incentive to run a full slate in Nevada.

    Ohio – There is no law.

    We have ballot status in Ohio thanks
    to our legal victory in 2008. The state legislature must replace
    ballot access laws which were previously struck down in court.
    The impact of our win in court is that the Secretary of State may not
    make up new rules to replace these laws. The LPO is very active
    in lobbying and will be working with state legislators to replace the
    laws, but until they do all we need to do is nominate our candidates
    in convention.

    Oregon – Full party status
    with votes equal to 1% of the total votes for US House in any statewide
    office.

    There are four statewide offices
    available in 2010, including US Senate. This is a bit of a concern
    because we had no statewide candidates in Oregon in 2008. We will
    need to make sure we run a full slatewide slate in 2010.

    South Carolina – Full party
    status by remaining organized.

    There are very specific laws in SC
    mandating how to organize the state party, which the LPSC follows.

    Texas – Full party status
    with 5% in any statewde election or 2% for Governor.

    There are many statewide offfices
    available in Texas and our state party there is renowed for filling
    the slate to take advantage of it. There is already one very active
    candidate for Governor, Jeff Daiell.

    Utah – Full party status
    with votes equal to 2% of the total votes for US House in any statewide
    office.

    Mike Stoddard kept us on the ballot
    with 6.1% for State Auditor in 2008.

    Vermont – Full party status
    by remaining organized.

    We need to remain organized in 10
    towns to stay on the ballot.

    Wisconsin – Full party status
    with 1% for any statewide office in either of the last two elections.

    There are seven statewide offices
    available in 2010, including US Seante. There were no statewide
    offices available in 2008, so it is imperative we run a full slate in
    2010.

    Wyoming – Full party status
    wth 2% for US House, Governor or Secretary of State.

    David Herbert kept us on the ballot
    with 5% for US House in 2008.

    State-by-State Ballot Access

State-by-State
Ballot Access
statestatusfull partyrequirements (estimated)deadlinenotesother retention
Alabamaoffyes37513 signatures6/1/2010state planfull party with 10% for Pres or Gov
Alaskaonyes9468 registered8/6/2009have 6972 as of 11/18/083% Senate vote
Arkansasoffyes10000 signatures6/1/20101000 per statewide candidate
Arizonaonyes20015 registered11/1/2009have 18153 as of 11/4/08.67% total reg
Californiaonyes88991 registered1/22/2010have 83574 as of 10/20/081% last Gov vote reg or 2% any statewide
Coloradoonyes1000 registeredsafehave 10950 as of 10/22/08
Connecticutoffno7500 sigs/candidate8/4/2010
District
of Columbia
offno3900 signatures (est)8/17/2010ballot access is per candidate7500 votes for Mayor or City Council
at-large
Delawareonyes302 registered8/12/2010have 729 as of 3/1/08
Floridaonyesbe organizedsafehigh filing fees
Georgiaonno1% any statewide7/8/2010ballot access is per candidatefull party with 20% for Pres or Gov
Hawaiioffyes692 signatures (est)4/2/2010several options wth full slate
Idahoonyesrun 3 candidatessafe
Illinoisoffno25000 signatures6/21/2010petition is for statewide slate5% any statewide
Indianaonyes2% for Sec Statesafe
Iowaoffyes1500 signatures8/13/2010petition is for statewide office2% for Pres or Gov
Kansasonyes1% any statewidesafe
Kentuckyoffno5000 signatures8/28/20122% for Pres
Louisianaonyes1000 registeredsafehave 1975 as of 3/1/08
Massachusettsonyes3% statewidesafe
Marylandoffyes10000 signatures8/2/20101% Gov
Maineoffyes27544 signatures12/14/2009law repealed, replaced with ????
Michiganonyes1% Sec State winner's votesafe
Missourionyes2% any statewidesafe
Minnesotaoffno2000 signatures9/7/2010sigs per statewide candidate5% any statewide
Mississippionyesbe organizedsafelaw repealed, replaced with ????
Montanaonyes5% Gov winner's votesafe
North
Carolina
onyes2% for Pres or Govsafe
North
Dakota
offyes7000 signatures4/9/20105% any statewide
Nebraskaoffyes5921 signatures8/1/20105% any statewide
New
Hampshire
offyes21590 signatures (est)8/6/20103000 per statewide candidate4% Gov or US Senate
New
Jersey
offno800 signatures7/30/2010petition is for statewide office10% statewide for State House
New
Mexico
offyes2794 signatures4/1/20105% Gov or Pres
New
York
offno15,000 signatures8/17/2010per candidate50K votes for Gov
Nevadaonyes1% US House votesafe
Ohioonyescourt ruling
Oklahomaoffyes46,324 signatures5/1/2010
Oregononyes1% US House votesafe
Pennsylvaniaoffno24,666 signatures (est)8/1/2010petition is for statewide office
Rhode
Island
offno18,557 signatures5/28/20101000 per statewide candidate5% for Gov
South
Carolina
onyesbe organizedsafe
South
Dakota
offyes8,389 signatures3/23/20101392 in hand2.5% for Gov
Tennesseeoffno45,254 signatures (est)in court5% statewide
Texasonyes43991safe5% statewide or 2% Gov
Utahonyes2,000 signaturessafe2% US House vote
Virginiaoffno10,000 signatures8/21/2009petition is for statewide office
Vermontonyesbe organizedsafe
Washingtonoffno1,000 signatures7/24/2010petition is for statewide office5% statewide
Wisconsinonyes10000safe1% statewide
West
Virginia
offno15,118 signatures (est)8/1/2012petition is for statewide office1% Gov
Wyoming onyes2% US House, Gov or Sec Statesafe

CAMPUS
ORGANIZING REPORT

    Submitted to: Libertarian National
    Committee, Nov. 21, 2008

    Submitted by: James W. Lark, III

    Region 5S Representative,
    Libertarian National Committee

    This
    report will provide information concerning efforts to build and support
    Libertarian campus organizations. I shall provide an updated report
    at the LNC meeting in San Diego should additional information become
    available.

    1) I continue to respond to
    inquiries from people who want information about the LP campus outreach
    effort. Due to the redesign of the LP website, I did not have
    the ability to access and update the webpage for several weeks.
    (Austin Petersen of LPHQ handled this task during much of this period.)
    Last week I reacquired the ability to update the campus organizations
    list.

    Since Election Day (Nov. 4) I have
    received several new requests for information from students (and a few
    professors) who wish to start or strengthen Libertarian campus groups.

    2) I continue to work with
    the Advocates for Self-Government to provide material (e.g., “Operation
    Politically Homeless” kits) to campus organizations. (I am a
    member of the Board of Directors of the Advocates.)

    3) I shall revise the “nuts
    and bolts of campus organizing” material that I distribute to those
    interested in campus outreach. I anticipate that the revised version
    will be available by the end of the year. In addition, a redesigned
    campus organizing website should be available at roughly the same time.

    4) I continue to work with
    various state and local LP organizations to assist their campus outreach
    efforts. In particular, I travel to various schools to give speeches
    and work with campus activists. This fall I gave an address at
    the University of Texas in Austin on Sept. 22, and at the College of
    William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia on Oct. 2. I anticipate
    that I shall give several lectures on college campuses during the Spring
    semester.

    5) I participated in a Students
    for Liberty teleconference on November 8. The teleconference brought
    together campus activists from colleges in the South. (I am a
    member of the Board of Advisors of SFL.) I am pleased to report
    that SFL continues to grow at a rapid pace. I have been invited
    to speak at the 2009 SFL national conference. (An article about
    SFL appeared in the October 2008 issue of LP News.)

    6) As mentioned in previous
    reports, several libertarian organizations (e.g., Cato, Reason Foundation,
    Institute for Humane Studies, Bureaucrash, International Society for
    Individual Liberty) are working to coordinate their student outreach
    programs. I am participating in meetings of representatives of
    these organizations. The most recent meeting took place on Nov.
    18 at the Institute for Humane Studies in Arlington, Virginia.

    Region One Report

    No report

    Region Two Report

    No report

    Region 3 Report for
    December 2008

    Submitted by: Rebecca Sink-Burris

    INDIANA

    Chair: Todd
    Singer

    Todd’s post election update to
    Indiana:

    Friends,

    The Libertarian Party of
    Indiana would like to thank all of those who ran as candidates. Their
    hard work has brought greater vote totals and legitimacy, and has grown
    the party significantly. We would also like to thank those who have
    helped our candidates. Running for office with no staff, little money,
    and few volunteers is a difficult task. When Libertarians stand up to
    help other Libertarians in their bid for office, it can be a richly
    rewarding experience for all. Thank you to those who gave their time
    and money to our candidates.

    Above all, thank you to
    all those who voted for any of the LPIN candidates. We hope you will
    continue to support liberty in this way.

    The LPIN had an impressive
    year in 2008. All corners of the state had significant gains despite
    the heaviest straight-ticket voting in recent memory. We competed and
    grew in an environment where the Big Two spent $5.3 billion to spread
    their messages. These numbers speak to the LPIN's significant growth,
    and the public's continuing desire for a third, liberty-minded option.
    Here is a snapshot of some of the LPIN's accomplishments in 2008 as
    of November 7, 2008 (numbers are still coming in, and may be higher
    when certified.):

    • All of the Libertarian
      Party of Indiana's Federal candidates won a total of 70,673 votes. This
      year, the LPIN had 6 candidates. In 2000, the LPIN fielded 11 Federal
      candidates, with a total of 59,188 votes (excluding that year's Senate
      race.)
    • This year, the LPIN
      had 14 State-level candidates. They received a total of 84,047 votes.
      In 2000, the LPIN fielded 37 candidates, with a vote total of 80,574.
      This is a tremendous number, and speaks to the need to field a record
      number of state-level candidates in 2010.
    • In 2000, Harry Browne
      won 15,530. In 2008, Bob Barr won 25,358 votes. Indiana is the ONLY
      state that gave over 1 percent of their vote to the Barr/Root ticket.
    • In 2000, Andy Horning
      earned 38,458 votes. In 2008, Andy won 47,257 votes.

    Now some numbers and facts
    from our individual campaigns:

    In 2002, Rex Bell was only
    the second person to win a precinct in the history of the Libertarian
    Party of Indiana. Wayne County has added some new names to that honor
    this year:

    • Rex Bell, District
      54 candidate, won 8 precincts, (6 in Wayne County, 2 in Henry County)
      polling as high as 64%. In the District 54 race, Wayne County percentages
      increased from 23% in 2006, to 37% this year. In the same race, Henry
      County percentages increased from 9% in 2006, to 32% this year. Overall,
      he took 33.5 percent of the vote in his race.
    • Cheryl Heacox, Wayne
      County Commissioner District 2 candidate, won a precinct, and finished
      second in 5 others.
    • Jon Bell, District
      56 candidate, won a precinct in a heavily gerrymandered Democratic district,
      and finished with over 20% of the vote.
    • Gayle Bond, Wayne
      County Commissioner District 3 candidate, made a strong showing, finishing
      with over 40% in 5 precincts.
    • Wayne County Council
      candidates Jim Mikesell and Marvin Heacox made a good showing, finishing
      in double digits in several precincts.
    • In Madison County,
      Robert Jozwiak ran an energetic for the House District 37, a heavily
      Gerrymandered Democratic district. A Libertarian has never run in the
      district, and Jozwiak earned 1,197 votes, or 4.42 percent of the vote.
    • Another first time
      candidate was Ryan Liedtky in Northern Indiana. Marshall is an unaffiliated
      county with three Libertarians that meet once a month. Liedtky is the
      first Libertarian to run in the Republican-run county. He knocked on
      over 500 doors in his bid for election to the Marshall County Council.
      He earned 1,762 votes, or 3.59 percent of the vote against 3 Republicans
      and 3 Democrats.
    • In Hendricks County,
      both Michele Colson and I received over 19 percent of the vote in our
      bid for Hendricks County Commissioner.
    • In Southern Indiana,
      Eric Schansberg was in a highly contested race. Schansberg's opponent's
      both had a collective war chest of $3 million. Despite this, Schansberg
      increased his vote totals by 2,000 votes. Schansberg's campaign raised
      an impressive $30,000.
    • In Marion County,
      Ed Angleton ran a two way race with a beloved Democrat, and finished
      with 15.8 percent of the vote. Ed knocked on countless doors, talking
      with residents of the district one to two hours a night. Ed wore out
      a pair of shoes, and one of his knees. Ed raised $4,500 from friends
      and neighbors, and put out a mailer that impressed local Democrats,
      Republicans, and members of the media.
    • In State Senate
      District 30, Steve Keltner managed to make a 16-year incumbent work
      to earn votes for the first time. Steve ran an aggressive campaign for
      two years, that rivaled his opponents in the last days of the campaign.
      Steve raised over $10,000, and used $6,000 for TV ads the last few days
      of the campaign. Steve won 7.2 percent of the vote.
    • Even the LPIN paper
      candidates saw a dramatic increase, with most averaging 5 percent in
      their races.

    As you know, we have hired
    an Executive Director, Chris Spangle, within the last month. He has
    already begun to coordinate our 2010 elections. Our ballot access race
    is the Secretary of State race. If we achieve two-percent, we are considered
    a minor political party, which is our current status. We will remain
    on the ballot. BUT I believe our ideas deserve major party status, which
    is 10 percent. This is our aim in the coming 2 years.

    There are some ways you
    can help:

    1. Please join the 1994
    Society. It is a monthly donation program to the Libertarian Party of
    Indiana. The money will be used for preparation for the Secretary of
    State race and other Libertarian Candidates. These preparations include
    organizing county organizations, organizing College Libertarian groups,
    and recruiting candidates. These activities cost our new Executive Director
    a lot of gas money! Please support our 2010 campaigns by signing up
    today. There is no set bottom. We suggest $10, $20, or $30 a month.
    That is a dollar or less a day to support liberty in Indiana! One can
    sign up on
    www.lpin.org, or call Chris Spangle at (317) 920-1994.

    2. Join your county organization.
    Check
    www.lpin.org website for your county affiliate,
    contact them, and get involved! If there isn't someone in your county,
    please consider organizing one. Contact Chris Spangle at
    [email protected] if you need more information.

    3. Consider running for
    office. A successful, active campaign should start today. Contact Chris
    Spangle or myself if this is something you'd like to explore. It is
    not a coincidence that the areas that run consistent, active campaigns
    have the strongest county organizations. Statehouse candidates will
    also be instrumental in achieving a higher vote total in the Secretary
    of State race.

    Thank you for you support
    of the Libertarian Party of Indiana.

    Sincerely,

    Todd Singer

    State Chair

    Indiana Fares Best in National
    Election Results

Your browser may not support display of this image.INDIANAPOLIS,
IN — The State of Indiana fared best of the 50 states in the percentage
of votes cast for Bob Barr and Wayne Allyn Root.

With the final numbers tallied
and reported by the Secretary of State's office, Indiana topped 1% in
the Barr/Root race. According to the
LP
National website
,
Indiana was the only state to break that threshold.

    Among Indiana counties,
    three surprising counties topped the state's highest percentage of votes.
    Jennings, Fountain and Starke Counties each surpassed the 2% mark. Jennings
    captured the highest percentage of vote with 2.21%. Interestingly, none
    of the top three counties have state-affiliated county organizations.

    Of the organized counties,
    Rex Bell's coattails in the House 54 race provided for the highest percentage
    draw, coming up just short of 2% at 1.91%. While unorganized officially,
    Andy Horning's home county of Owen finished with a very strong 1.96%.

    In raw vote totals, northwest
    Indiana proved to be the strongest region. Lake, Porter, LaPorte and
    St. Joseph Counties each ranked in the top ten in total votes. Predictably,
    Marion County with its large population base topped all counties in
    raw votes with 2,942 for the Barr/Root ticket.

    Fulton County holds the
    unique distinction of being the only Indiana county that has grown its
    presidential vote total five-fold since the 2000 election. In 2000,
    Fulton had just 27 votes casts for the LP ticket. In 2004, that number
    grew to 63. In 2008, it ballooned to 154. Fountain, Spencer and Jackson
    Counties grew vote totals four-fold since the 2000 election.

    In total, all 92 counties
    in Indiana increased the raw totals over the 2004 election. Only Lake
    County, with a high turnout to support Sen. Barack Obama, fell short
    of surpassing the percentage growth over 2004.

    Comment:

    Submitted by RWolff on Mon, 11/17/2008
    – 11:06.

    Would putting an animal
    on the ballot would get more votes and percentage of votes? It's sound
    a bit preposterous I know, but at only a 1-2% showing, the question
    should be considered.

    This continued lack of
    performance by the LP underlies the major issues that this party faces.
    Is it just a group of ideological persons just wanting to call themselves
    different or is it a party determined to get their beliefs, ideas, candidates
    and agenda across to fellow Americans. The "ALL or Nothing"

    attitude is not working for the LP and it's leadership must recognize
    and change its strategy. These are just a few of the factors that have
    prevented my joining the party and why Americans cannot take the LP
    serious.

    Argue and be un-phased
    by the facts, as many undoubtedly reading my comments will do, the Numbers
    and Votes speak for themselves. The LP party is not heading forward
    and should be embarrassed by its continued mediocrity.

    I truly believe a Donkey
    or other animal on the ballot would possibly get more votes.

    Ray
    La Porte, IN

    Hoosier Libertarian
    Blogs Ranked Among Top 100 in U.S.

    INDIANAPOLIS, IN — Hoosier
    bloggers are being recognized nationally by Sarah Scrafford, author
    of the blog
    Web
    Design Schools Guide
    .
    Indiana libertarian bloggers took nine of the top 100 positions on the
    top libertarian blogs in the country.

    Scrafford divided the libertarian
    blogs into several categories, including General, Local Libertarians,
    International Libertarians, The Issues, Group Bloggers, Philosophy,
    Economics, Government Criticism, News, Politicians

    and Organizations.

    MICHIGAN

    Chair: Bill Hall

    Libertarian Party of Michigan
    Report – November 18, 2008. By Bill Hall, State Chair

    The Libertarian Party of Michigan
    ran general election candidates for all statewide races (Supreme Court,
    educational boards, US Senate) and Congressional races (15), plus about
    one third of the state representative races (32) and many county-level
    races, for a total of 85 candidates. The LPM concentrated on providing
    support to its candidates: candidate training; template websites;
    a statewide candidate slate card; and video production and editing of
    stump speeches and Q & A sessions, with upload to youtube.

    Highlights (unofficial vote totals):

    • Barr/Root received 23,740
      votes, 0.4% and slightly more than would have been needed to preserve
      ballot access if Barr were the only statewide candidate, and third best
      historically, behind Clark (1980) and Browne (1996), with no state advertising
      and only one state visit.
    • Nonpartisan Supreme Court
      candidate (nominated in convention by the LPM) Bob Roddis received 421,091
      votes, 11% and greater than the difference between the winning Democrat
      and defeated (a surprise!) Republican Chief Justice (never before has
      a Michigan Supreme Court Justice been defeated in a re-election bid).
    • US Senate candidate Scotty
      Boman received 76,379 votes, 1.6% and the best showing since Jon Coon's
      race in 1994, and many more votes than the other 3 third party candidates.
      He focused considerable effort to draw the votes of Ron Paul supporters.
    • Statewide educational board
      races (8) ranged from a high of 147,736 votes received (Nicole Michalak
      – Wayne State Univ. Bd. Of Governors) to a low of 91,765 votes received,
      comparable to the last high water mark, in 1996.
    • Candidates in the 32 State
      Representative races drew percentages 50% to 100% higher than in recent
      elections, ranging from 1.3% to 4.5% in three-way races.
    • Some candidates in County
      level two-way races took between 20% and 30% of the vote.
    • Incumbent (she had been appointed
      to office) candidate for Augusta Township Trustee Krista Goodwin was
      defeated.
    • Two candidates (Tom Bagwell
      and Larry Johnson) were elected Ypsilanti Township Park Commissioners
      in uncontested races, except by write-in candidates.

    My biggest disappointment was that
    a greater push wasn't made to seriously contest entry-level races such
    as Township offices or County Commission seats (all of which are partisan
    in Michigan). I am also concerned that the Michigan Republican
    electoral disaster and resulting disarray is seen as an opportunity
    by some LPM activists to leave the LPM and attempt to seize control
    of their local county Republican parties.

    I expect the LPM's focus for 2009
    to be:

    • Recruiting and supporting
      a handful of serious candidates for nonpartisan 2009 city council races.
      Historically, these candidates have enjoyed considerable electoral success.
    • Affiliate creation, training,
      reorganization and communication.
    • Building party infrastructure
      – volunteer oversight, inquiry response, etc.

    I still think (see my last report)
    National could help by selecting and negotiating economies-of-scale
    use of national media blast fax lists, template websites, template campaign
    materials and email newsletter software for state affiliates, at affiliate
    cost. Also, National could stage regional affiliate party-building
    seminars in odd-numbered years.

    From September report:

    The LPM has included a few ways in
    which they would like to see National help state affiliates:

    1. Coordinate provision of
    template campaign materials, e.g., menu of Congressional issues, template
    websites, template yard signs, template graphics for campaign materials,
    websites and email newsletters.

    2. Select and negotiate
    economies-of-scale use of national media blast fax list for state affiliates,
    at their cost, with user-friendly access.

    3. Select and negotiate
    economies-of-scale use of email newsletter software for state affiliates,
    at their cost, with user-friendly access.

    4. Stage
    regional affiliate party-building seminars in odd-numbered years.

    The LPM is concentrating on providing
    support to its candidates. In March, candidate training was provided.
    Websites have been offered to all candidates, with template Congressional
    and State Representative websites constructed, which only require the
    contribution of a digital photo and short biography by the candidate.
    This had the added benefit of creating a menu of issues for Congressional
    and State Representative candidates to draw from in their campaigns.
    A statewide candidate slate card has been prepared and is available
    for download and printing from the LPM website. They are also
    offering interested candidates video production and editing of stump
    speeches and Q & A sessions, using professional cable access equipment
    and studios along with trained LPM volunteers. Template yard signs
    are being prepared along with a printing source for use by interested
    candidates.

    Michigan is upgrading volunteer/inquiry
    response and tracking to take advantage of the flow of volunteers/inquiries
    from lp.org and their website. They have moved to a monthly email
    newsletter, plus the traditional (longer/more comprehensive) bimonthly
    print/email newsletter.

    OHIO

    Chair:
    Kevin
    Knedler

    CHAIR REPORT—OHIO

    November 21, 2008

    Election review: Bob Barr
    visited Ohio five times in an eight week period. Three of those events
    were speaking engagements on a university campus. Each had 250 to 325
    people in attendance. With our growing organization and experience,
    each event was better than before. On October 30, Bob came to Cleveland
    for a debate with Nader and Baldwin.

    Our LPO candidates received 3 to
    8 % votes. We had candidates for 4 US Congressional seats; 1 Ohio Senate
    seat; and 3 Ohio House seats. We also endorsed two independent candidates:
    Robert Owens for Attorney General and David Krikorian for US Congress
    District 2 in Cincinnati area. David received 18% of the vote.
    In Ohio District 19, LPO Candidate Michael Johnston, took 3% of the
    vote and the GOP seat fell to a Democrat. At this time, we still don’t
    know the results of US Congressional District # 15. LPO Candidate Mark
    Noble, took 5 % of the vote and the difference between the GOP and Democrat
    candidate is about 150 votes at this time. Absentee ballots were challenged
    in court, but that was settled on November 20 and we will know soon.
    The seat was formally held by the GOP.

    The Ohio organization: We
    have seen a rush of interest since the election. In fact, we continue
    to fill positions in the LPO with “new blood”. We are in the
    interview process right now, but hope to fill Director-level positions
    for Political and Communication groups. Recently, as a result of the
    Barr campaign, we filled the Field Development Director position and
    also the Chief Field Liaison position. These were people that had previously
    handled the Barr campaign in Ohio. The transition has been fairly
    smooth.

    After 35 years, we have changed the
    organizational structure of the LPO into that which is outlined in the
    Ohio Revised Code for political parties. A Central Committee (up to
    36 people from Ohio Congressional Districts) was formally elected and
    they in turn elected a state Executive Committee (7 people). The
    Executive Committee will handle the day-to-day operations of the LPO.
    They in turn are finding qualified four (4) volunteers to become Directors
    to manage their respective silos of work: Political, Finance, Communication,
    and Field Development.

    Ohio had a 24 % increase in membership
    since April of 2008. Looking at the Sustaining membership (LNC) levels,
    Ohio retails the 4th largest membership in the nation. We
    aim to push for more people to join as LNC Sustaining members, so we
    can overtake Texas for the 3rd slot. We want at a minimum
    for 1,000 Ohio citizens to be Sustaining members of the national LP.

    We are also in midst of merging our
    state database with that of the national party. We want to do a better
    job of reaching out to the Ohio members and also fundraising. Merging
    into one useable list, instead of having two will help us.

    Details of my goals and the upcoming
    Strategic Planning Meeting are attached.

    LPO Executive retreat
    and strategic planning

    We have 36 people registered for
    this "invitation only" event, nearly 2/3’s of whom are new
    participants to the Ohio party! Kentucky Chair, Ken Moellman will also
    be participating. It is not a convention but a planning meeting to get
    us better focused and organized.

Libertarian
Party of Ohio Strategic Planning Meeting

    December
    6 & 7, 2008

    Mohican
    State Park and Resort

    The LPO
    will spend time at this beautiful retreat and create a strategic plan.

    The lodge
    is located Southeast of Mansfield, Ohio

    This
    will include political targeting of campaigns, candidate training and
    endorsements, fundraising, ballot access strategy, and establishing
    the organization to address these issues.

    We will
    also discuss communication, both internal and external. This will
    include our state web site, updating the state web site, our state newsletter
    and funding, my space opportunities, press releases, conference call
    opportunities, and establishing the organization to address these issues.

    YOU are
    invited to help us address the above issues and create a 2
    – 5 year plan

    Sat Dec 6: 10:30
    – 11:15 am General Session in Lookout Room

    11:15
    – 12:30 pm Break out sessions

    Politics : Led by Jeremiah
    Arn — Lookout

    Communication: Led by Ann Leech
    — # 204

    12:30
    – 1:15 pm Luncheon sponsored by LPO in Restaurant

    1:15
    – 2:30 pm Continue Break out sessions

    2:30
    – 3:30 pm Discuss Communication plan

    3:30
    – 3:45 pm Break time

    3:45
    – 5:15 pm Discuss Political plan

    5:15
    – 5:30 pm Wrap up for day

    6:45
    – 8:00 pm Dinner at Restaurant- individual pay

    8:00 – 2:00 am
    LPO Hospitality Room # 204 !

    Sun Dec 7: 8:30
    – 9:30 am Breakfast sponsored by LPO in Tribal Room

    9:30
    – 10:30 am Reconvene General Session in Tribal Room

    Chris Kalla discusses Finance group

    John Stewart discusses Field Development
    group

    10:30
    – 11:00 am Set the plan for the LPO future


    11:30 to 12:30 Excom meeting
    (gang of 7 )

    Libertarian Party of Ohio
    2009-2010 vision and goals of Kevin Knedler

    Build the Finance Silo

    More pledges and more frequent fundraising
    events

    Fill position of Fundraising Committee
    chair

    Find more people to join the Fundraising
    committee

    $$$ for Ballot Access and Legal challenges

    $$$ for Outreach equipment and events

    Fund local events, if there is a
    CDG in place, prep forms used, and support of Liaison

    Consider up to $150 a year for each
    CDG to pay for registration fees

    Consider putting banners and signs
    into qualified CDG

    $$$ for Candidate support

    Yard signs, literature brochures

    Build the Field Development Silo

    Find more people to be Regional Liaisons

    Build the Political Silo

    Find a Political DIRECTOR

    Find more people to join the Candidates
    & Campaigns committee

    More candidate training

    Target and focus specific races

    Determine which Assembly members
    will support Ballot Access

    Build the Communication Silo

    Find a Communication & Media
    DIRECTOR

    Improve newsletter and webmaster
    process

    Get ballot access laws changed in
    Ohio !

    Become FEC compliant

    KENTUCKY Chair: Ken Moullman

    Ken’s
    post-election update to his active district’s:

    Hello, everyone,

    Just to update you on what's happened since I last gave an update, and
    to get status from you guys on what's going on with your District.

    New Website

    Guys, we have to get the new website online ASAP.
    We had a huge jump in members in the last 3 months. We have to
    give people a better, organized way to communicate. Membership from
    national is up 45% (49 new members since April). Membership through
    our existing website is about 50 new members as well. We must help
    these people form local parties
    .

    Mark, the only thing we need to do is point the DNS entry at the new
    site. No contact changes required at this time. We can discuss the contact
    changes at the next LPKY Executive Committee meeting, but I'd really
    like to get the DNS for
    LPKY.ORG pointed at 69.72.237.230, and then we just need to let Harlen
    know when it's done. Please work with Harlen on this.

    What also makes this more important than ever is that my personal finances
    are being stretched. We need donations to come in, so we can fund activities
    which I currently fund out of my own pocket.

    If you need help getting this done, please let me know. We can do a
    conference call with GoDaddy.com technical support and have them make
    the change for us.

    District 3

    Dan Hill has resigned as District 3 Representative. In his stead, Ron
    Seiter, one of the leaders of the Uof L liberty group, has taken the
    ball and has run with it.

    Ron and his crew are regularly attending Louisville Metro Council meetings
    to create a dossier on who’s good, who's bad, and who's weak. We plan
    to use this intel to figure out who to target next election.

    Ron and his crew are currently putting together a District 3/Louisville
    Constitution and Bylaws, to form a very defined and official District/County
    party. Dan and I spoke with them on Sunday.

    We would like to put forth that the leader of the Louisville Group,
    as elected under the forth-coming Bylaws and Constitution, would be
    the District 3 Representative on the Executive Committee. We'll want
    to follow up after they get a rough draft together. They plan to get
    everything ready so that the Louisville group can vote on the bylaws,
    constitution, and local executive committee at their December meeting.

    Meanwhile, District 3 meetings continue to grow in attendance.

    District 5

    Lance Combs has also resigned from the Executive Committee, with no
    replacement to be found. District 5 is weak. We need to strengthen D1,
    and D5, and help D2 get organized more than they are today. More on
    this later on in the message.

    District 6

    Greater Lexington Executive Committee meetings continue to regularly
    have 10+ attendees. As we begin continue to organize, and begin getting
    people to attend the Lexington-Fayette Urban County meetings, we will
    continue to grow District 6.

    I've had a great relationship with the Ron Paul Campaign for Liberty
    people in Lexington. We continue to build a bridge between them and
    LPKY.

    Ballot access / Ed Martin

    Ballot access and Ed Martin. There's some heavy-duty stuff going on
    behind the scenes on this one, and we were asked to temporarily stand-down.
    I'm not real happy about that, but in the worst-case scenario, we will
    intentionally re-create the situation with a Louisville Metro Council
    race (which are partisan) on January 1st, 2010, and go from there.

    Basically, we have them by the gonads. The ruling from the Court of
    Appeals used to knock Ed off the ballot was Unconstitutional, based
    on 4 Supreme Court rulings, which were submitted on Ed's side of the
    case. The KY Court of Appeals chose to ignore these rulings. The goal
    is to get this case, if necessary, to US District Court, where LP Ohio
    has been very successful in knocking down bad ballot access laws in
    their state. I've been in communication with the lawyer for LPO and
    he's ready to help.

    We're going to be working on setting up a new set of proposed ballot
    access laws and see if we can get the KY General Assembly to take up
    these changes. I think we're going to go for 0.1% of registered voters
    registered as Libertarian to get ballot access, and 5% of registered
    voters to be entitled to a primary. This is based on existing law in
    other states.

    As this progresses, I will keep you informed. If you're interested in
    helping author this new proposal, please let me know.

    PS. They forgot to post signs at the polling places to NOT vote for
    Ed. Disenfranchised voters sought.

    Campbell County referendum successful

    LPKY members helped stop a 9.2% property tax increase from being automatic.
    4076 signatures were required in 45 days. LPKY members were responsible
    for at least 1200 of the 5500 signatures collected. A large number of
    signatures were thrown out because of the use of a shortened version
    of their first name (for instance, using "Bill" instead of
    "William"). However, we did get over the 4076 threshold, and
    the measure was successful.

    Boone Parks Tax defeated

    Boone County tried to introduce a new property tax. Depending on who
    you hear it from, this was something as innocuous as a simple fund to
    build a new park, to a part of UN Agenda 21. Regardless, new taxes are
    bad, especially in a down-turn economy. It was soundly defeated by voters,
    2 to 1.

    Good candidates get into local office

    Shawn Masters, supported by the NKY Libertarians, was elected to Covington
    City Commission, in Kenton County, Kentucky. This is a huge win. Shawn
    placed 5 of 8 in the field-race primary. Only the top 4 made the Commission
    in the general election. Shawn came in 4th of 8!

    Lloyd Rogers, former 1978 AIP Candidate for US Congress, former Republican
    Party of Campbell County Chair, head of the effort to stop the property
    tax in Campbell County, and all around good guy, was elected to Alexandria
    City Council in Campbell County, Kentucky. The top 8 candidates made
    the council. Lloyd placed 7th of 10.

    Smoking Bans

    Northern Kentucky appears to be on-track to defeating the smoking ban.
    I now have others calling me from around the state asking for help to
    defeat theirs.

    A number of counties have had the local Board of Health pass measures
    to ban smoking, rather than the Fiscal Courts. There is a lawsuit in
    one of these counties, stating (correctly) that the Board of Health
    does not have the authority to pass such bans; only the Fiscal
    Courts do.

    Lexington's smoking ban was just tightened; no more private clubs, and
    no more exemption for the Lexington Airport. Too bad. I liked flying
    out of LEX. I won't be, anymore.

    We do need to come up with an offense strategy on this stuff. A study
    in May shows that local smoking bans increase DUI fatalities in the
    communities which pass these bans; Lexington and Louisville were included
    in this study. Smoking bans kill people.
    There's the core of the strategy. I'm open to more or other ideas.

    CRM Software; maintain member contacts

    Eric Cranley and I have been working on a CRM (Customer Relationship
    Management) system to maintain contacts with our members, new and old.
    This software is used by major corporations to track their customers
    and vendors, and to maintain relationships with them; something LPKY
    has never been good at! This is a web-based system and District Reps
    would be able to see this information.

    I'd like to merge in the Voter Database along with this data. That way
    we have complete data for everyone LPKY, and can easily maintain registration
    information.

    Other legislation and stuff

    In Campbell County, the Fiscal Court has been violating current law.
    A lawsuit has been filed. In response, one of our legislators up here
    has pre-filed a new measure that allows counties with a population over
    70,000 to put county offices anywhere they want. This doesn't sound
    too bad, except that the Fiscal Court wants to move every office to
    the northern-most point in Campbell County.

    I'd like to work to stop this, and other stupid bills like it. I plan
    to reach out to Take Back Kentucky (TBK), and work with as many
    legislators as we can to keep this from becoming law.

    Also, I continue to grow our connection to the Ron Paul groups in Northern
    Kentucky, as well. However, this group's leadership wishes to remain
    in the Republican Party and work with TBK to get things done.

    LPKY State Convention 2009

    As we have discussed, the 2009 LPKY State Convention will be held
    in Clarksville, Indiana
    , in conjunction with the LPIN convention.
    Clarksville is a suburb of Louisville (without a smoking ban). Combining
    with LPIN should increase our ability to bring in speakers at a lower
    cost. We will have our own break-out room for the LPKY business meeting.
    I've been pressuring LPIN to give me the cost-per-person for the joint
    convention.

    I think that's everything. It's been crazy up here, and I'm just finally
    catching up on sleep. We are making progress! We must continue to grow.

    The
    Libertarian Temperament versus the Anarchist Temperament

    by John Hospers

    I want to distinguish the libertarian temperament from
    the anarchist
    temperament; and this distinction is quite important
    because there are many "anarchists" within the Libertarian
    Party. While anarchism as a theory may have a lot of arguments in its
    favor; I do not wish to question these here, or to raise the philosophical
    issue of anarchism here. I could even assume that all anarchist arguments
    are quite valid, and yet make the same point.

    I am concerned here only with
    psychological aspects of anarchism or, I should say, anarchists. In
    traveling here and there about the United States during the recent presidential
    campaign and since, I have come up against many an anarchist. And more
    than 90% of the poison pen letters I have received have come not from
    statists but from libertarian anarchists. I certainly do not want to
    be guilty of over-generalization, or to tar everyone with the same brush;
    but I have certainly noticed, as doubtless many of you have, a recurring
    personality pattern among those who label themselves anarchists.

    Part of it can certainly be called
    rebellion against authority; but this, to a libertarian, is quite all
    right if it means that no one else has the right to rule your life without
    your consent. This is indeed the basic principle of libertarianism.

    But there is more: there is a
    strong, usually I would say a neurotic, rebellion against all forms
    of discipline, especially self-discipline. There is a childish insistence
    on the obviousness of all points of anarchist doctrine, and of the evil
    and malevolence of anyone who makes an honest point against it. There
    is either an unwillingness to enter into calm sustained argument about
    it, or a childish frenzy in which they conduct argument, which makes
    it difficult for anyone to enter into it with them without being at
    the receiving end of name-calling and numerous personal slurs.

    I have seen this tendency reach
    the point of petulant screaming and stamping of feet, so that any impartial
    observer, regardless of whether or not he understood the arguments at
    issue, would exclaim, "These are a bunch of spoiled children!"
    Can it be that they have never grown up, that they love to dish it out
    but can't bear to take it the way they give it, because they really
    have no experience in the cultivation of rationality?

    Many of them take to anarchism
    because it seems to give them a theoretical justification for their
    own psychological tendencies: they can't really get along with anybody
    for a sustained period of time, and anarchism is the ultimate extreme
    in decentralization in one's relations with other human beings. One
    doesn't have to do anything he doesn't want to in relation to anyone,
    not even the state, since in the anarchist ideal "the state"
    of course is absent. Thus, it is not an accident, I think, that the
    unconscious formula that the typical anarchist projects is: "Go
    screw yourself!" The view provides a convenient intellectual camouflage
    for their psychological propensities. (Egoists vs. egotists.)

    Now, all this is very unfortunate
    from the standpoint of the Libertarian Party. It simply cannot grow
    as long as it is fractured into warring splinter groups, with the anarchists
    shouting from the housetops for all the world to hear what stupid idiots
    or fiendish devils all the other libertarians are. With a group so small
    to begin with, it is not difficult to imagine what picture the outside
    world will form of a party some of whose factions at least parade their
    differences as if they had no principles in common.

    Most people try to reduce everybody
    else to a slogan anyway, and the Libertarian Party is not

    accurately represented by any
    quick and easy slogans; the first impression people have of us from
    a couple of sentences in the daily paper is that we are a bunch of crackpots
    anyway, and this initial impression is only reinforced when they hear
    the anarchists berating the rest of us. They then feel that their initial
    impression of us is justified, and don't bother to go on to investigate
    our views further; they have already got us tagged, and the tag is as
    far as it goes in their subsequent attitude toward us. The result is
    that every time this happens we have lost a possible ally.

    Anarchism, as I see it, is an
    issue for the far future as far as practical application is concerned.
    If we get to the point where 9/10 of the present government functions
    are government functions no longer, then we can consider the question
    whether what remains is best performed by government or by private individuals
    and organizations. But it is virtually certain that we shall never reach
    that point if we do not present a united front to the world.

    What we should be working for
    together is the progressive limitation of the governmental

    apparatus, not its immediate
    elimination. On this point we can all unite against all the other political
    parties; and, moreover, millions of people are so fed up with big government
    that they will surely listen to us if we get a chance to speak to them.

    The principal way in which we
    ourselves stand in the way of this, I think, is not only the anarchist
    doctrine but the anarchist psychology. They will not listen to self-styled
    defenders of reason who simply rant and scream. They already have a
    big mental block to overcome in even entertaining the word "anarchism"
    with any sympathy since the word in most minds conjures up images of
    Trotskyites, bomb-throwers, and saboteurs. And they will surely be turned
    off totally by a person whose main attitude toward them seems to be
    that it would be somewhat preferable if they didn't exist.

    Libertarians can't do without
    creative disagreement and free discussion within their ranks, but they
    can jolly well do without the-attitudes of contentious and badly brought
    up children.

    Region Four Report

    No report

REGION
5S REPORT

    Submitted to: Libertarian National
    Committee, Nov. 21, 2008

    Submitted by: James W. Lark, III

    Region 5S Representative,
    Libertarian National Committee

    This
    report will provide information concerning activities of the Libertarian
    Party state affiliates in Region 5S since the LNC meeting on Sept. 6-7,
    2008. I shall provide an updated report at the LNC meeting in
    San Diego should additional information become available.

    Since
    the LNC meeting in September, I appeared in my capacity as an LNC member
    on WINA (1070 AM in Charlottesville, Virginia) on Constitution Day (Sept.
    17) to discuss Constitution Day from a libertarian perspective.
    Also, my op-ed on the LP’s presidential and U.S. Senate candidates
    in Virginia appeared in the Richmond Times-Dispatch on Oct. 29.
    (The Times-Dispatch requested submission of the op-ed.)

    Delaware

    Jim
    Rash ([email protected]), Libertarian Party of Delaware chairman, provided
    the following information:

    * We ran three candidates in addition
    to the Barr/Root ticket in the November election. That was the only
    election held in Delaware this year.

    Barr/Root, President/Vice President –
    1,108 (0.3%)

    Mark Anthony Parks, Representative
    in Congress – 3,583 (0.9%)

    Tyler Nixon, State Representative
    District 4 – 118 votes (1.2%) – Note: Nixon was a Republican fusion candidate,
    the votes shown here were cast as Libertarian votes

    Jesse Priester IV, State Representative
    District 23 – 125 votes (1.5%) – Note: Priester was a Republican fusion
    candidate, the votes shown here were cast as Libertarian votes

    * Ballot access status is unchanged.
    We have ballot access.

    * My plans for 2009 include
    continuing building party membership by doing Operation Politically
    Homeless events and holding meetings in all three counties. Currently
    we only meet in Kent and New Castle counties with poor attendance…typically
    5 or 6 in New Castle at best, and 4 or 5 at best in Kent. Sussex County
    hasn't had a meeting in a couple of years. I intend to explore speaking
    engagements at service organizations' meetings as well as at veteran's
    groups, e.g. American Legion. I would like to identify issues that affect
    our state and develop strategies that include working with members of
    our state legislature to get measures introduced that address those
    issues. This would help us identify those General Assembly members we
    can work with and those we can't. Either way, I see it as beneficial
    to the LPD in the next election cycle because we can focus on fielding
    candidates in the districts where we don't have elected officials who
    will help advance our agenda.

    District of Columbia

    Rob
    Kampia ([email protected]) is serving as the contact for the LPDC at this
    time. Peter Orvetti, a former LP employee who lives
    in DC, has informed me that he would like to help the LPDC in some manner.
    I contacted him to indicate my willingness to help him and the LPDC.

    Maryland

    Libertarian
    Party of Maryland chairman Bob Johnston ([email protected]) provided
    the following information:

    Election Results for our Libertarian
    Candidates:

    President/VP: Barr/Root 9,799 (0.4%)

    Congress

    1st: Richard Davis 8,873 (2.5%) [winner's
    margin = 2,852 votes]

    2nd: Lorenzo Gaztañaga 8,786 (3.2%)

    4th: Thibeaux Lincecum 3,284 (1.1%)

    5th: Darlene Nicholas 7,731 (2.3%)

    6th: Gary Hoover, Sr. 11,055 (3.3%)

    7th: Ronald Owens-Bey 5,214 (1.8%)

    8th: Ian Thomas 2,512 (0.8%)

    The local media was very good to
    our candidates. Two of them, Richard Davis and Gary Hoover, had 2 television
    interviews each on their local stations, and were invited to participate
    in several debates.

    At least 4 of the 8 candidates are
    interested in running again in 2010 for the same office. Further, I
    have 5 people lined up to run for local offices in 2010, and another
    6 possible. We have added 10 new members in the last 2 weeks, the state
    party membership now totaling 60. Still down from a couple of years
    ago, when it was over 100, but hopefully we're on our way back.

    We held an Executive Board meeting
    and post-election discussion at a restaurant in Reisterstown on Saturday,
    with 12 people present, including 5 new members. It went quite well,
    and we're planning on having another get-together in January. One of
    the new members, Rani Merryman, recently started up her own blog:
    http://revolution2010.wordpress.com/.

    Our ballot access standing was not
    affected by the recent elections. We are good until 12/31/09.

    Pennsylvania

    Libertarian
    Party of Pennsylvania chairman Mik Robertson ([email protected]) provided
    the following report:

    The election results from Pennsylvania
    were generally good, although the LP presidential candidate vote total
    was slightly lower than in 2004:

    OBAMA, BARACK (DEM) 3,234,949
    54.5%

    Runningmate: BIDEN, JOE

    MCCAIN, JOHN (REP) 2,634,115
    44.4%

    Runningmate: PALIN, SARAH

    NADER, RALPH (IND) 42,684
    0.7%

    Runningmate: GONZALEZ, MATT

    BARR, BOB (LIB) 19,739
    0.3%

    Runningmate: ROOT, WAYNE A.

    One reason for that may be that Ralph
    Nader was on the ballot in PA in 2008 and was not in 2004, drawing some
    of the anti-establishment vote.

    Otherwise, our other statewide candidates
    did very well, all of them getting enough votes to regain minor political
    party status for the Libertarian Party in Pennsylvania. Our three candidates
    for statewide office this year had the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th highest vote
    totals of any Libertarian Party candidates ever. The results in comparison
    to the top 21 vote totals in PA are as follows:

    Rank
    Candidate Year Office Total
    Percent

    —— ———– —— ——–
    ——- ———

    1. Jack Perry 1992 US Senate 219,319
    4.57%

    2. Betsy Summers 2008 Auditor General
    173,687 3.1%

    3. Berlie Etzel 2008 State Treasurer
    116,193 2.1%

    4. Marakay Rogers 2008 Attorney
    General 105,378 1.9%

    5. Sharon Shepps 1996 Auditor General
    103,234 2.45%

    6. Tim Collins 1996 Attorney General
    92,961 2.21%

    7. Betsy Summers 2004 US Senate
    79,263 1.43%

    8. Daryl Perry 2004 State Treasurer
    61,238 1.12%

    9. Don Ernsberger 1994 US Senate
    59,115 1.68%

    10. John Famularo 1996 State Treasurer
    56,602 1.33%

    11. Berlie Etzel 2004 Auditor General
    52,869 0.99%

    12. Jack Iannantuono 1998 US Senate
    46,103 1.56%

    13. John Featherman 2000 US Senate
    45,765 0.97%

    14. Jessica Morris 2000 Auditor
    General 41,967 0.9%

    15. Julian Heicklen 2000 Attorney
    General 41,519 0.9%

    16. Ken Krawchuk 2002 Governor 40,918
    1.14%

    17. Pat Fallon 1994 Governor 33,602
    1.06%

    18. Ken Krawchuk 1998 Governor 33,591
    1.10%

    19. John Famularo 2000 State Treasurer
    30,867 0.7%

    20. Henry Haller 1988 US Senate
    11,822 0.27%

    21. Richard Fuerle 1982 Governor
    10,252 0.28%

    It appears the Jack Perry 1992 campaign
    was run on a strong pro-life platform, and the LPPA board of directors
    withdrew its endorsement of Perry before the election. That campaign
    apparently resulted in the formation of the Constitution Party in PA.

    District candidates in Pennsylvania
    also had some bright spots, although we would like to do better. Results
    are as follows:

    State Representative:

    35th District

    GERGELY, MARC J. (DEM) 20,195
    88.9%

    POSIPANKA, DAVID (LIB) 2,530
    11.1%

    63rd District

    ELLENBERGER, MATTHEW (DEM)
    8,095 33.2%

    OBERLANDER, DONNA (REP) 15,737
    64.5%

    ROBERTSON, MICHAEL J. (LIB)
    556 2.3%

    64th District

    HUTCHINSON, SCOTT E. (REP)
    19,292 86.8%

    MAYS, VANCE H. (LIB) 2,943
    13.2%

    180th District

    CRUZ, ANGEL (DEM) 16,920
    98.2%

    SANCHEZ, ERIK (LIB) 317
    1.8%

    State Senate

    WHITE, MARY JO (REP) 73,472
    84.5%

    LUCAS, MARY LEA (LIB) 13,477
    15.5%

    US Congress

    MCCRACKEN, MARK B. (DEM) 109,315
    41.0%

    THOMPSON, GLENN W. (REP) 151,441
    56.8%

    FRYMAN, JAMES (LIB) 5,985
    2.2%

    Preliminary plans are under way for
    the 2010 elections, which will include Governor and US Senate in PA.
    Municipal elections in 2009 will be all local offices, and a number
    of Libertarian candidates have already expressed an interest in running.
    Legislation will be introduced in both legislative houses in PA in January
    to amend ballot access laws in Pennsylvania. We will be seeking additional
    legislative sponsors and are developing a volunteer network to focus
    on this and other legislation of particular interest.

    The 2009 convention of the Libertarian
    Party of Pennsylvania will be held on Saturday, May 2, 2009. Workshops
    will focus on campaigning for local office, with a tentative presentation
    by Robert Butler, author of a new book for 2009 called "18 Steps
    to Win a Local Election: A Candidate and Volunteer Handbook". Aaron
    Bolinger from Restore the Republic will be the evening speaker, talking
    about his organization’s efforts to promote Liberty, particularly
    focusing on efforts to defeat REAL ID in Pennsylvania.

    The Libertarian Party of Pennsylvania
    is proud to again be a sponsor of the 2nd Annual International Students
    For Liberty Conference to be held February 20-22 at George Washington
    University in Washington DC.

    Virginia

    I
    offer the following report on behalf of LPVa chairman Jeff Bowles ([email protected]).

    The Libertarian Party of Virginia
    had two candidates on statewide ballots this year: the LP presidential
    ticket of Bob Barr and Wayne A. Root, and U.S. Senate candidate (and
    LNC chairman) William Redpath. Mr. Barr made at least two visits
    to Virginia. This included a campaign swing in mid-October, which
    generated several media interviews and speeches at Lynchburg College
    (Lynchburg), Va. Tech (Blacksburg), and Christopher Newport University
    (Newport News). Mr. Redpath campaigned extensively throughout
    the Commonwealth, especially from Labor Day until Election Day.
    The Barr/Root ticket received 11,067 votes (.29 %, fourth-highest total
    out of six candidates); Mr. Redpath received 20,269 votes (.55%, fourth-highest
    total out of four candidates).

    Nathan Larson served as the LPVa
    candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives in the First District.
    (He was the first LPVa candidate in this district since 2000.)
    Mr. Larson received 5,265 votes (1.46%, third-highest total out of three
    candidates).

    West Virginia

    I
    am pleased to report that Libertarian Party of West Virginia chairman
    Matt Harris ([email protected]) has recently become active again,
    and that he is evidently working vigorously to build the LPWV.
    The party will hold a meeting in December to consider some proposed
    changes to its bylaws, and to plan activities for the coming year.
    I have been invited to participate; I hope to do so.

    On
    the evening of Nov. 15, Bill Redpath and I attended an organizational
    meeting of LPWV members in Ranson, West Virginia (in the “Eastern
    Panhandle” region). The meeting was arranged by Gordon Glorfield
    (LPWV) and Bill Wood (LPVa). The meeting drew about 15 people,
    including Mr. Harris who drove from Morgantown.

    Region 6 Report

    LNC
    Meeting – San Diego Dec. 6-7, 2008

    Submitted by Julie Fox

    November 30, 2008

    I have been involved in a number
    of activities since our last LNC meeting in September. I organized
    a debate on the IL Constitutional Convention on September 20.
    I attended the LPWI Executive Committee (ExCom) meeting in Tomah, WI
    on September 21. I attended the LPI state convention October
    4 & 5, where I announced my intention to run for IL State Comptroller
    in 2010. I attended and helped promote the End the Fed rally
    in Chicago on November 22. I provided updates on LNC activities
    at the LPWI ExComm meeting, at the LPI convention, and at two local
    LP party meetings. I continue to work with State Chairs and others
    in my region on getting more regular coverage of Region 6 activities
    in the LP News. Later today I will be promoting the newly formed
    McHenry County LP in the Woodstock, IL Holiday Parade.

    In addition to serving as Treasurer,
    I have also taken on the role of Organizer of our local Ron Paul meetup
    group. I continue to serve as Chair of the Fox Valley Libertarian
    Party and as the representative for that group on the LPI’s State
    Organizing Committee (SOC). I attended September and November
    LPI SOC teleconferences.

    Following are reports submitted by
    state chairs in Region 6, along with my notes (in italics) where reports
    are missing or where I feel additional information may be useful.

    Illinois

    This report will cover both October
    and November. LPI held their annual convention on October 3-5
    and we elected a new slate of officers:

    State Chair – Dave Brady

    Activism Chair – Val Vetter

    Campaigns Chair – Jan Stover

    Fundraising Chair – John Howell

    Legislative Chair – Eric Bresson

    Membership Chair – Damon Dillon

    Newsletter Editor – Daniel Nowlan

    Public Relations Chair – Kent McMillen

    Secretary – Crystal Jurczynski

    Treasurer – Debra Aaron

    Webmaster – Francine Brady

    The elections have come and gone.
    We ran two candidates: Bob Barr for President and Larry Stafford
    for U.S. Senate. Bob Barr received 19,061 votes and Larry Stafford
    received 48,663. Dan Druck, who ran for Congress, was removed
    from the ballot by the Illinois Board of Elections. His lawsuit
    is still moving up the legal chain. Eric Ferguson, who also ran
    for Congress, was not on the ballot and his information is unavailable.

    We have done a recruiting campaign
    to build the LPI. Upon me taking over as Chair we had seven county
    committees. With a few active members prior to the convention,
    we recruited key people to start their own county groups and talked
    with some older inactive groups to reorganize. I’m happy to
    report as this time that we have eight groups certified (McHenry County
    was started by my wife and I in July) and six groups actively meeting
    and organizing. We have 2 groups that will be completed reorganized
    (Lake and Will Counties). This will leave us going into 2009 with
    16 groups.

    Our membership numbers reflect that
    same increase as well. We had approximately 1200 active / inactive
    members prior to the convention and approximately 1400 active / inactive
    members presently.

    We sponsored the End The Fed rally
    yesterday in Chicago and expected about 100 people to turn out for this.
    The LPI picked it up from Campaign for Liberty on November 1st.
    Due to lack of participation they were canceling the event. We
    contacted the organizer and asked to take over the event. It was agreed.

    We had approximately 300 in attendance
    and a supportive police force. Horns blowing, cheering, nods of agreement,
    people asking how we can fix things, people asking for more information
    and people for a mile and half photoing. Our groups spread 3 city blocks.
    During our three pauses were speeches where we drew dozen of on-lookers.
    We had no negative attention or incidents.

    Respectfully Submitted,

    David A. Brady

    Chair, Libertarian Party Of Illinois

    November 21, 2008

    Julie’s Notes: LPI members
    voted at the convention business meeting to file a lawsuit to overturn
    Illinois’ particularly restrictive ballot access laws. Per advice
    from our attorney and others involved with third party ballot access
    issues, the LPI will start with a lawsuit against Congressional district
    requirements, with the anticipation that winning at the Congressional
    level will help lead the way to changing state-wide office requirements.
    We are looking for as many Congressional candidates as possible to include
    as injured parties in this lawsuit. The LPI plans to include other
    third party and independent candidates in the lawsuit. RP’s
    Campaign for Liberty is seeking third party and independent candidates
    to run for every Congressional district in 2010, which will help tremendously
    in finding candidates to join in this lawsuit.

    At this time there are two ongoing
    lawsuits in IL against ballot access requirements for Congressional
    districts in IL, Libertarian Dan Druck’s (as noted above) and
    independent candidate Allan Stevo.

    The Dekalb County LP organized
    an event at Northern IL University on October 25. The event featured
    U.S. Senate candidate Larry Stafford and Congressional candidate Dan
    Druck, along with newly-elected State Chair Dave Brady. The event
    was covered in several area newspapers. A campus group is
    now being organized at NIU, and the same group is in the process of
    becoming an official chapter of the LPI.

    Mike Fogelsanger, Chair of DeKalb
    County LP and organizer of the NIU event, announced his intention to
    run for Sycamore City Council in 2009. Mike has also been instrumental
    in organizing the student group and local LPI chapter at NIU.

    Wisconsin

    The next Executive Committee meeting
    is to be held at a site to be determined at
    Wisconsin
    Dells
    on Sunday, January 25th (last
    Sunday in January, no football that weekend) at a time to be determined.
    An effort will be made to hold the meeting at the same site as the convention
    so we can see the site before the convention.

    The convention will be held in the Dells area in the spring but details
    are TBA.

    Submitted by State Chair Jim Maas

    Julie’s Notes: From Sept.
    21 ExComm meeting – Chair Jim Maas invited by WI League of Women Voters
    to be a representative on “Voting 101” forum. Representatives
    from four political parties emphasize the importance of voting at the
    forum.

    The LPWI ran the following candidates
    in the November elections:

    Joe Kexel
    – 1
    st Congressional District

    Kevin Barrett
    – 3
    rd Congressional District

    Brad Sponholz
    – 7
    th State Assembly District

    Craig Mohn
    – 29
    th State Assembly District

    George Meyers
    – 61
    st State Assembly District

    Keith Deschler
    – 62
    nd State Assembly District

    Ted Burleson
    – 91
    st State Assembly District

    Tim Nerenz has announced his intention
    to run in 2010 in the 2
    nd Congressional District.

    Iowa

    From the Chair (for the upcoming
    LPIA newsletter),

    Happy Holidays!


    I am very thankful for all who voted, registered, joined LPIA, and

    advocated for Liberty this campaign season! We are growing and the
    message of liberty is catching on.


    Election season has passed and now we turn attention to families,
    friends, and gatherings to deal with outcomes and continue to build
    our
    party. Especially, I want to thank all who worked to get Libertarian
    candidates and ideas visible !! Our Iowa candidates, Eric Cooper (Iowa
    House #46) and Russ Gibson (Iowa House #60) worked hard and gained
    significant visibility and votes! We'll gather Candidates and Campaigners

    together in Ankeny on Sat. Dec. 6th to review what worked and what's
    next.
    In our first year with Iowa Voter registration access, we have grown
    significantly-our message of liberty is clearly catching on. We are
    hearing of continuing failures to properly register/re-register voters
    as Libertarian when the Iowa DOT system is used alongside drivers license
    renewals. If you know of any instance where DOT voter
    registration/re-registration as Libertarian has failed, please contact
    me
    or another LPIA ExCom member. I have been advised, by Counsel, to

    develop a list of Counties where failures to register occur.
    We have gained voter registration access, now we must defend it!
    I wish each of you the best holiday season, and that your hearts and
    hearths be warmed by the fires of liberty!


    Yours in liberty,
    Ed Wright
    Chair, LPIA

    Missouri

    Missouri Libertarian Party LNC Region
    Report November 24th, 2008

    Ron Paul Supporter Outreach

    —————————

    The Missouri LP State Chair and our
    8th Congressional District candidate

    spoke at a Ron Paul Campaign For
    Liberty BBQ in southern rural Missouri

    which 100 people attended.

    Missouri's 6th Congressional District
    candidate Dave Browning spoke at

    the End The Fed rally in Kansas City
    Nov. 22nd. The crowd of 150

    people was a mix of Ron Paul supporters
    and libertarians. Dave Browing

    received 3.7% of the vote in a three
    way race.

    Candidate Events

    —————-

    Missouri statewide candidates participated
    in a debate with the major

    party candidates hosted by the Missouri
    Press Association in September.

    In St. Louis a League of Women Voters
    debate for the three congressional

    districts in the area drew 6 candidates.
    Three Libertarians, one

    Republican, one Democrat and one
    Constitution Party candidate

    As is usual our statewide candidates
    and congressional candidates were

    not invited to most of the debates.
    Local and state legislative candidates

    had more opportunities to participate.

    Missouri 6th Congressional District
    candidate Dave Browning and Mike

    Ferguson from the Barr campaign both
    spoke at a large Rock the Vote

    concert in Kansas City.

    Media

    —–

    The Boone County LP Chair has been
    participating every other Friday

    from 5-6PM in a political round table
    on the radio with a Republican

    and Democrat. The political round
    table is hosted by Gary Nolan on

    The Eagle 93.9FM in Columbia.

    Missouri LP State Chair was interviewed
    again on KOPN, a community

    radio station in Columbia.

    Speaking Events

    —————

    Missouri LP State Chair Glenn Nielsen
    and our Secretary of State

    candidate Wes Upchurch (representing
    Missouri 18 To Drink) were

    two members of a 5 member panel at
    a Columbia High School debating

    whether Missouri should lower the
    legal age to drink to 18. Over

    200 high school students attended.
    The opening statements of the

    two libertarians were well received
    by the students. Video of

    the entire event is up on the Missouri
    LP You Tube channel at:

    Opening remarks by Glenn Nielsen
    and Wes Upchurch are in part 2.

    The Missouri 18 To Drink effort is
    lead by young libertarians in

    Missouri who now have a network of
    almost 10,000 supporters.

    2009 State Convention

    ———————

    Work has started to organize the
    Missouri 2008 State Convention.

    This will be a working convention
    focusing on candidates, county

    organization and campus libertarians.
    No firm date has been set

    yet but the convention will most
    likely be held in mid April.

    Elections

    ———

    The Missouri LP had a total of 25
    candidates for the 2008 election. The

    Presidential ticket of Barr/Root.
    Seven candidates for nine US House seats.

    Three candidates for five statewide
    seats. Three State Senate and eight State

    Representative candidates for the
    Missouri State House. Three candidates for

    County Commissioner/Council.

    Election Results:

    President, Barr/Root, .4%, 11,370
    (3rd out of 6 candidates)

    Governor, Finkenstadt, 1.1%, 28,902
    (3rd out of 6 candidates)

    Lt. Governor, Fleck, 1.8%, 49,718
    (3rd out of 4 candidates)

    Secretary of State, Upchurch, 1.4%,
    39,230 (3rd out of 4 candidates)

    U.S. House 1, Cunningham, 13.1%,
    36,615 (2nd out of 2 candidates)

    U.S. House 2, Knapp, 2.3%, 8,609
    (3rd out of 3 candidates)

    U.S. House 3, Babcock, 1.8%, 5,510
    (3rd out of 4 candidates)

    U.S. House 6, Browning, 3.7%, 12,258
    (3rd out of 3 candidates)

    U.S. House 7, Craig, 2.2%, 6,954
    (3rd out of 5 candidates)

    U.S. House 8, McCullough, 1.6%, 4,451
    (3rd out of 4 candidates)

    U.S. House 9, Millay, 2.5%, 8,100
    (3rd out of 3 candidates)

    State Senate 5, Christophel, 8.3%,
    5,225 (2nd out of 2 candidates)

    State Senate 13, Harris, 8.1%, 6,227
    (2nd out of 3 candidates, one of those a write in)

    State Senate 19, Dwyer, 4.7%, 4,281
    (3rd out of 3 candidates)

    State Rep 18, Alsup, 3.4%, 517 (3rd
    out of 3 candidates)

    State Rep 39, Weber, 17.1%, 2,856
    (2nd out of 2 candidates)

    State Rep 54, Foster, 3.0%, 626 (3rd
    out of 3 candidates)

    State Rep 55, Parr, 2.0%, 396 (3rd
    out of 3 candidates)

    State Rep 59, Peters, 9.2%, 1,076
    (2nd out of 2 candidates)

    State Rep 69, Stone, 2.3%, 327 (3rd
    out of 3 candidates)

    State Rep 154, Busby, 26.2%, 3,640
    (2nd out of 2 candidates)

    State Rep 158, Roland, 23.7%, 3,541
    (2nd out of 2 candidates)

    Adair County Commissioner Dist. 2,
    Salt 15% (3rd out of 4 candidates)

    Green County Commissioner Dist. 1,
    Jones 27% (2nd out of 2 candidates)

    St. Louis County Council Dist. 4,
    Brown 2.35% 1,700 (3rd out of 4 candidates)

    In all cases where there were both
    a Libertarian Party and a Constitution

    Party candidate the LP candidate
    had more votes.

    The Missouri LP failed to get 2%
    in a statewide race to extend our ballot

    access for another four years. We
    must now retain our ballot access by

    receiving 2% in the 2010 State Auditor
    or U.S. Senate races.

    Teddy Fleck for Lt. Governor got
    the closest with 1.8% of the vote

    in a four way race including a Constitution
    Party candidate.

    He received 49,718 votes. In 2006
    our U.S. Senate candidate Frank

    Gilmour received 2.2% of the vote
    with only 47,792 votes, almost 2,000

    less than Teddy.

    Two things impacted our receiving
    2% or greater in a statewide race.

    First, having a Constitution Party
    candidate in all of the statewide

    races where we had a candidate. Second,
    higher voter turnout due to

    the nature of the Presidential election.

    Missouri did extend its ballot access
    for another four years in five

    out of 9 congressional districts
    by receiving greater than 2% of the vote.

    The Constitution Party obtained ballot
    access by getting 2.4% of the vote

    in a three way race for State Treasurer
    where there was no Libertarian

    candidate.

    2009 Municipal Elections

    ————————

    So far the Missouri LP has two candidates
    for City Council for the

    Spring 2009 municipal elections.
    Tom Martz is running for the

    Springfield City Council in attempt
    to join libertarian Doug Burlison

    who was elected in 2007. The second
    candidate hasn't officially

    announced yet.

    Glenn Nielsen

    State Chair

    Missouri Libertarian Party

    Nebraska

    There isn't anything new to report
    this month. We haven't had a meeting since the Election. When
    the Nebraska Legislature meets next year, the Secretary of State hinted
    at resubmitting a bill to change the current ballot access Laws here
    in Nebraska.

    To bring you up to date in Nebraska, the ballot access laws require
    that a new political party submit enough valid signatures on petitions
    equal to one percent of the number of votes on either the Presidential
    election or the State Constitutional officers elections. That one percent
    must be in each of the Nebraska's Three Congressional
    Districts. We can't average them out. If one district is short by even
    one valid signature, that district doesn't qualify. As the law now stands
    any political party could qualify by Congressional District. We could,
    in effect be a recognized party in one district. Or even at the county
    level.

    Since the states Constitutional officers(Governor, Lt Governor, treasurer,
    Secretary of State,etc) are between the Presidential race, we would
    have to do petitioning every two years.

    To maintain our Ballot status we would have to get at least FIVE Percent
    of the vote in each of the three Congressional Districts.

    To show you what a job petitioning is in Nebraska, you can check out
    the Nebraska Congressional district maps at
    nationalatlas.gov/printable/congress.html#ne. Scroll down to printable maps list:Congressional
    Districts-110 Congress. Then click on ne. Then Click on Nebraska preview
    map. The third Congressional District covers 75 percent of the land
    area in Nebraska, which is also the least populated area.

    The change in the law the Secretary of State is recommending is to extend
    the length of time for a political party from two years to four years
    and get rid of the Congressional Districts, which would make it easier
    to petition.


    Neal Erickson, who is the Elections officer for the Secretary of State, has
    said that if the Legislature passes the bill into law the LP would be
    "grandfathered" in, which would mean we wouldn't have to petition
    next year and we could use our time to do grassroots organizing.

    This Bill was introduced several years ago, but it didn't make it out
    of the Legislative committee. The members of the Green Party were very
    vocal in their opposition to this bill. They wanted to keep the Congressional
    District requirement.

    I'll have to talk to Neal Erickson in December and find out for sure.

    At this time I have nothing else to report.

    If you have any questions or comments please call me at (402)270-1607.

    Jerry Kosch

    Chair,
    Nebraska L P

    Minnesota

    Goals at this point are lofty but
    not unrealistic.

    – Twenty candidates for partisan
    races, mostly MN House, in 2010. (In MN there is an advantage to this
    strategy.)

    – Set up class room training for
    candidates and to general members on selling.

    – Create affiliates at colleges,
    for congressional districts, and in the outer larger cities in MN.

    – Get a data base program for non-profits
    up and running.

    – Redo the pledging/membership/donation
    page of the LPMN website to increase donations and membership information.

    – Have an ongoing cable TV program
    produce by the LPMN and shown around MN.

    – Get an electronic newsletter up
    and running.

    – (Get me a car!)

    Bob Odden

    Chair LPMN

    North Dakota

    No report submitted, and no current
    website found, but I received the following e-mail from a ND LP member
    shortly after the November election:

    Hello,

    I am confident that the next Governor
    of North Dakota
    (elected in 2012) can
    be a
    Libertarian
    Party Candidate
    . The Republican Candidate
    was elected to a third term yesterday, and the
    Democratic
    Party
    staged a very inefficient campaign.
    A fourth term has never been attempted in
    North
    Dakota
    , and the Democratic Party
    will be expending resources on the Senate Campaigns.
    By organizing now, The
    Libertarian
    Party
    can field a competent candidate
    and build a foundation for in North Dakota.

    Thomas Passa

    South Dakota

    No report submitted.
    Last website update I found was made in 2006.

REGION 7 REPORT

Submitted to: Libertarian National
Committee, November 25, 2008.

    Submitted by: Rachel W. Hawkridge,
    Region 7 Representative, Libertarian National Committee

    This report will provide information
    concerning activities of the Libertarian Party state affiliates in Region
    7 since I last reported on September 1, 2008.

    Let me preface this report by saying
    that there are a lot of good people, working really hard to create a
    better world in Region 7. Thank you all!

    Florida

    Election results . . .

    Presidential

    LIB Bob Barr 17,218 0.2%

Bruce Reichert – Seat 1 (Unopposed)

J. Adam Mitchell – Seat 4 (Unopposed)

Jack Tanner – Seat 4 (Unopposed) – note: Jack has been running a petitioning
drive to stop funding mobile irrigation labs

Howard Horowitz – Group 4 (Unopposed!)

New Port Richey Mayor, Scott McPherson (WON!)

While many of the offices above
are non-partisan, all of these people are touching others with Libertarian
philosophy, and when elected they influence policy decisions.
They’re creating a more free society.

    State Chair Karl Dickey has got
    it goin’ on! Regular press releases from Florida LP included
    this . . . text available at http://tinyurl.com/FLBail

    Libertarian Party of Florida Officially Opposes Bailout

    Winter Park, Florida – The Libertarian Party of Florida (LPF) has passed
    a resolution against the federal government bailing out financial institutions.


    The resolution reads as follows: "Whereas the Libertarian Party
    of Florida recognizes that the current plan to bail out the financial
    institutions from the bad loans that they were forced to make by pressures
    from Congress and liberal organizations will damage the U. S. economy;
    and whereas it is clearly evident that the pressure groups knew in advance
    that the financial institutions would eventually fail, and that the
    public would be forced to foot the bill for the loans that should never
    have been approved. The Libertarian Party of Florida now condemns the
    plan of Congress and Executive Branch of the U. S. Government to use
    taxpayer money to bail out the financial institutions".

    Florida has an exciting, up-to-date
    website, regular events, and a very active presence.

    Contrary to his assertions that
    he was funneling votes to the LP and Barr/Root, the Objectivist Party
    Presidential candidate got 433 votes in Florida.

    Hawai’i

    I expect to submit a late report
    from Hawai’i, as they have an ExComm mtg on November 30th,
    and they will be deciding how to proceed. What there is of the
    LP there has gotten involved with Campaign for Liberty, apparently,
    and the LP is fairly defunct.

    Idaho

    State Chair Rob Oates is the finest
    kind of Libertarian. He writes articles, gets elected to office
    (City Councilman, Caldwell, ID) and is currently considering a run for
    US House of Representatives. Having served as a City Councilman,
    he has a reputation, a record, and some grassroots organization, all
    of which will serve him well. He may be our best bet to actually
    elect a Libertarian Congressman soon.

    “The September 26 issue of USA
    Today (Fri, Sat, Sun edition) had a story on page 6 about the Libertarian
    Party of Idaho and Libertarian presidential candidate Bob Barr. There
    were quotes from Chairman Rob and national convention delegates Harry
    McKinster and Dylon Starry and a nice picture of Dylon at the University
    of Idaho.

    It's rare for Idaho to be mentioned by the national media and almost
    unheard of for the Libertarian Party of Idaho to merit a (almost) half-page
    story. The reporter called me a couple of weeks ago to get the ball
    rolling.

    I certainly recommend the print edition, but the story is online, if
    that works better for you:
    http://tinyurl.com/ID-USA” read one of his eMails to me.

    He wrote this article and sent it to all the local papers . . .

Domestic Enemies

by Rob Oates, Chair,
Libertarian Party of Idaho

    “I’m mad as Hell and I’m
    not going to take this anymore!” said Peter Finch as newscaster Howard
    Beale in the 1976 movie “Network”. Are you that mad? You should
    be. 32 years ago “Network” documented many of the outrages and dangers
    we’re still facing.

    In the past couple of weeks we
    have seen the biggest slide down the road to serfdom in history. Never
    have such massive lies and half-truths been sold to the American people.
    Never have the perpetrators been so open and unrepentant in saying that
    what they’re doing to our country is for our own good. <snipped>
    The rest of Rob’s article is available at
    http://www.LNCRegion7.blogspot.com

    Rob just sent me this . . . “One
    update on the "Domestic Enemies" essay is that it was published
    by my county daily paper on Election Day… after the Opinion Page Editor
    emailed and told me that he was soliciting a similar length essay from
    the Republican and Democrat Chairman on why voters should elect their
    candidates… The three essays consumed the top of the opinion page that
    day!

    The Libertarian Philosophical Brunch
    monthly series is going well and we have about a dozen regular participants.”

    The Idaho party is close knit,
    active group; hard-working and wonderful people. Thank you, Idaho
    – for all you do!

    Official Election Results .
    . .

    Presidential –
    he did better than the national average here! :o)

    LIB Bob Barr 3,658 0.6%

    United States Senator

    LIB Kent A. Marmon 9,958 1.5%

    Legislative District 17

    State Representative A

    L – Mikel Hautzinger 3,298 23.3%!

    Legislative District 18

    State Representative B

    L – James L. Oyler
    837 4.5%

    Legislative District 20

    State Representative A

    L – Rex W Kerr 4,337 22.7%

    Oregon

    Here are the unofficial results
    from the state elections in Oregon . . .

    President

    Bob Barr / Wayne A Root (Libertarian)
    7,631
    0.42%


    1st Congressional District

    H Joe Tabor (Libertarian)
    10,992
    3.32%


    5th Congressional District

    Steve Milligan (Libertarian)
    4,814
    1.44%


    State Representative, 26th District

    Marc Delphine (Libertarian)
    1,503
    4.89%

    State Representative, 36th District

    Jay A Ellefson (Libertarian)
    1,162
    3.64%


    State Representative, 45th District

    Jim Karlock (Libertarian)
    2,932
    11.24%

    If you’ll notice, Jim Karlock
    got 11.24%, compared to Barr’s .4%, indicating that the down ticket
    is not necessarily tied to the Presidential ballot.

    Oregon continues to have regular
    meetings, and is sending out a newsletter. I intend to work with
    them to get their website updated ASAP.

    The Real Washington™

    In the “Top Two” primary case,
    the judge who had seemed sympathetic to our cause has recused himself,
    and our attorney is liable to have withdrawn by the time you read this.
    I am contacting LNC’s ExComm for help in funding or arguing this case.
    Defeating the Top Two is vital to third party access; and it infringes
    our right of association. If we don’t get rid of it, LP won’t
    ever even be on any ballots unless there is only one other candidate.

    Election results . . .

    Bob Barr / Wayne A. Root Libertarian
    Party 12,672 0.42 %

    Ruth Bennett (L) 37th
    District Legislative
    4,997 10.56 %

    We have done three high school outreach
    and education events. Two were Junior Statesmen of American events,
    and one was a talk to an elementary school. At all of the events,
    we were welcomed, and the young people were curious, interested, excited.
    (If I might insert a shameless bit of brag in here – our tables at
    the JSA events were the hit of the day!) We had Barr and LPWA
    signs, the Nolan chart and quizzes, and the good stuff – candy!
    The kids like candy, but they were all excited to take the quiz.
    Even the other campaign people took the quiz, and several scored libertarian,
    including one Democrat campaigner, and one Republican.)

    The first “LPWA News & Views”
    went out in late September, and included a donation form and envelope.
    The return percentage was low – but the donations received covered
    the costs of the issue. (Yay! That’s a success, in my
    book! I expect that the next will bring in more.) We also
    got several responses thanking us for getting it back up and running.

    One of our people, Lew Randall,
    is part of MedicareLawsuit.org. They’ve filed a lawsuit against
    the government to allow seniors to opt out of Medicare.

    Another, Alan Gottlieb of the Second
    Amendment Foundation, has won the court case to get New Orleans to return
    the guns that they stole from innocent and vulnerable people in the
    math of Hurricane Katrina.

    In January, our philosophy discussion
    group starts. Our first reading will be The Bases for Freedom
    in Society
    – James M. Buchanan, and we meet on January 7 to discuss
    it, drink white coffee and eat vegan pastry in the dark.

15 Comments

  1. LibertarianGirl December 12, 2008

    I find the following two votes interesting. Jingozian voted for the anti-Barr resolution; it appears Keaton and Ryan were the only other two who favored it.

    When compared with the ineptitude of the Badnarik campaign Jingo also had this to say:
    Badnarik ineptness was ust that it wasnt intentional like Barrs.

    anyone else remember that comment , I sorta loved it

  2. paulie cannoli Post author | December 12, 2008

    Yes, true…he is known for that. Interesting vote by Jingozian, though.

  3. chuckmoulton December 12, 2008

    Starr’s top-2 vote was probably just budget tightness.

  4. paulie cannoli Post author | December 12, 2008

    I updated the charts. New mail ballot chart available!

    http://www.chuckmoulton.org/libertarian/2010/voting/

    Thanks for the update!

    I find the following two votes interesting. Jingozian voted for the anti-Barr resolution; it appears Keaton and Ryan were the only other two who favored it.

    Aaron Starr was the only the committee member to vote against the Washington State lawsuit against top two.

  5. paulie cannoli Post author | December 12, 2008

    Draft minutes have mistakes. Those mistakes are generally are brought to the Secretary’s attention and corrected.

    I wouldn’t assume malice. I try to give people the benefit of the doubt until they have an opportunity to fix errors.

    Villifying the Secretary for mistakes in draft minutes rather than simply politely sending corrections gives more ammunition to those LNC members who want to keep draft minutes confidential.

    I agree. I would not assume or imply malice unless I had a high degree of confidence.

    I think making draft minutes public is important, along with the video as well as independent unofficial minutes (the twittering), and beneficial. It gives a larger set of people the opportunity to catch mistakes and thus makes it possible to create the most accurate record possible.

  6. JimDavidson December 12, 2008

    @7 Given the things Sullentrup has said about Tom Knapp, I would assume malice.

  7. LibertarianGirl December 12, 2008

    First off let me say I like Sullentrap , secondly i sat directly behind him and it was apparent he was bored by most of the proceedings as he played computer solataire the entire time unless there was a motion , then he took notes:)

  8. chuckmoulton December 12, 2008

    Draft minutes have mistakes. Those mistakes are generally are brought to the Secretary’s attention and corrected.

    I wouldn’t assume malice. I try to give people the benefit of the doubt until they have an opportunity to fix errors.

    Villifying the Secretary for mistakes in draft minutes rather than simply politely sending corrections gives more ammunition to those LNC members who want to keep draft minutes confidential.

  9. Michael Seebeck December 11, 2008

    Yep, that is a hefty typo, and inexcusable. LPCA worked against Prop 8 and the LPCA ExComm unanimously opposed it (I oughta know, I wrote the ballot analysis and recommendation and presented it to them!)

  10. Thomas M. Sipos December 11, 2008

    Fred: “Hefty typo there.”

    Not a typo, though a sloppy mistake.

    A typo is a purely mechanical error, caused by the finger hitting a key other than the one intended.

    Misspellings, and mistakes such as using the wrong word, are not typos.

  11. Michael Seebeck December 11, 2008

    I note the selective editing of the minutes by Mr. Sullentrup, as usual.

    What I ALSO told the LNC, which is what got the racuous ovation from the gallery, was that the taping created a open feedback loop between the LNC and the membership, which the membership wants. I also told them they rally couldn’t do a thing about it, and informed Kraus that insurance companies tend to care more about their payouts in liability rather than the LP’s interests, and that he should bear in mind.

    When reading these minutes, best to cross-reference the Tweet for the parts Mr. Sullentrup missed or decided to omit.

  12. paulie cannoli Post author | December 11, 2008

    This will have plenty of those. It’s a draft. This is why the official minutes take a while to release – to correct mistakes like this.

  13. Fred Church Ortiz December 11, 2008

    Other LP work in California included the LP’s support for Proposition 8, the measure that made same-sex marriages illegal.

    Hefty typo there.

Comments are closed.