Now we all have someone to vote for on November 3rd https://reason.com/2020/05/23/jo-jorgensen-wins-libertarian-party-presidential-nomination/
I'm all for it. Libertarians tend to have an affinity towards Trump, so this would be an option for libertarians who want a less bombastic idiot to represent their libertarian views so this candidate should eat up some Trump votes hopefully.
Oh, and look who's back and liking Libertarian ludicrousness. Really great to see you back @Bobbythegreat Is Gary Johnson not running this time, guys? He's been so impressive before.
"Jo Jorgensen on Black Lives Matter: 'I Think We Should Support the Protesters'": https://reason.com/2020/08/07/jo-jo...ter-i-think-we-should-support-the-protesters/
If you are disgusted with Trump but just can't bring yourself to order the Joe Biden poo poo platter, then cast your vote for Jo Jorgensen!
"Americans Dislike Both Biden and Trump": https://reason.com/2020/08/19/americans-dislike-both-biden-and-trump/ Americans Dislike Both Biden and Trump Hostility to political opponents sustains what's left of the legacy parties. J.D. TUCCILLE | 8.19.2020 10:30 AM (Trump: CNP/AdMedia/SIPA/Newscom; Biden: Liu Jie Xinhua News Agency/Newscom) On the opening night of the Democratic National Convention, former First Lady Michelle Obama begged voters to resist the urge to refrain from voting or to vote for third-party candidates. "This is not the time to withhold our votes in protest or play games with candidates who have no chance of winning," the former first lady exhorted whatever audience, perhaps out of masochism, chose to tune in to the virtual convention. It was a fitting moment of desperation—and one that should be echoed at the Republican convention—given the disdain many Americans hold for the presidential candidates of both legacy parties. Once again, we're being asked to pick between candidates that just aren't up to the job. "As both political parties prepare for their conventions, one in four Americans do not think either of the major-party presidential candidates would be a good president," Gallup noted last week. "The current percentage saying neither candidate would make a good president is the highest on record." Unfortunately, one of those hopefuls is almost certain to win or retain power over a government that has too much say in our lives. It's no wonder that in 2016, millions of voters picked Libertarian Gary Johnson or Green Jill Stein or declined to vote at all rather than choose between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. That year, the Democratic and Republican nominees headed into Election Day "with the worst election-eve images of any major-party presidential candidates Gallup has measured back to 1956." The 2020 election represents an ongoing demonstration that America's governing apparatus is trapped in the embrace of the rotting corpses of once-dynamic political organizations. Democratic and Republican Party hearts and minds may have died, but they refuse to loosen their grip on political office—and on voters. And, out of habit or old lessons remembered too long, most Americans dutifully confine their choices to these two moldering options, no matter how unpleasant the task. The result, as The New York Times reported in June, is "the second straight presidential contest in which both candidates are viewed negatively by a majority of voters." How negatively? Both legacy party candidates are underwater, favorability-wise. According to Gallup, just 47 percent of Americans view Biden favorably and 42 percent view Trump favorably, With those kinds of numbers, non-party-loyalists who feel absolutely compelled to pick between the zombie Democrats and zombie Republicans are going more by who they oppose than by enthusiasm for the nominees themselves. "Half of the nation's electorate says they have ruled out voting for Donald Trump in November, while 4 in 10 say the same about Joe Biden," the Monmouth University Polling Institute found last month. "Overall, 21% of all registered voters do not have a favorable opinion of either party's nominee." That process of elimination doesn't mean that voters ruling out one legacy party nominee are binding themselves to the other. There are alternatives: Libertarian Party candidate Jo Jorgensen, a psychology lecturer, seems an apropos alternative as the high-profile candidates credibly accuse each other of senility; the Green Party's Howie Hawkins is neither Biden nor Trump; and millions of voters will completely take a pass on casting a ballot in-person, by mail, or in any other way. more at the link
"No, Donald Trump Did Not 'Shrink' Government": https://reason.com/2020/08/27/no-donald-trump-did-not-shrink-government/
I assume a major party platform plank is their complete outrage with the pre-existing rule for health insurance.