Libertarian Party of New York: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 18:40, 10 July 2017
Libertarian Party of New York | |
General Information | |
Chartered: | April 1, 1973 |
Region: | 5 - North |
Officers | |
Chair: | Mark E. Glogowski |
Vice-Chair: | Brian Waddell Jim Rosenbeck |
Secretary: | Blay Tarnoff |
Treasurer: | Michael Dowden |
Contact | |
Phone: | (866) 336-3120 |
Address: | P.O. Box 98 Hamlin, NY 14464 |
Website: | Website |
Social Media | |
Facebook: | |
The Libertarian Party of New York was one of the first Libertarian parties to organize and run candidates in the US. It was originally named the "Free Libertarian Party" to prevent confusion with New York's Liberal Party. Its first state chair was Ed Clark.
You can now register to vote as a member of the Libertarian Party in New York. About enrolling as a Libertarian in NY
To find out about local meetings near you in NY, please see the LPNY Chapter Meetings page
The Libertarian Party holds an annual convention, where its five officers and five At-Large board members are elected. Those 10 people, the immediate past chair (if any), plus one representative from each recognized affiliate, comprise the LPNY State Committee. The LPNY State Committee conducts business on the lpny_committee mailing list, which every LPNY member is encouraged to join (read-only for non-committee members).
History
1971—1973: Beginnings
The Libertarian Party was established in 1971 and soonafter many states started to work to form state parties. In New York, the party became known as the "Free Libertarian Libertarian." In the June—July 1972 edition of The Libertarian Forum, Murray Rothbard reported that he joined the Academic Advisory Board for the party. Founding members of the party include Edward and Alicia Clark and Jerome J. Klasman. Clark served as the Temporary State Chairman as early as April 1972, when Guy Riggs was running for State Assembly, as one of the first Libertarian candidates in the state. Two other Libertarians ran as candidates in 1972: Walter Block for State Assembly and Gary Greenberg for U.S. House.
In late October, Riggs suspended his campaign after he received only 900 out of the required 1,500 petition signatures to get on the ballot. It was reported that his campaign received nationwide attention including a network radio commentary. Riggs' campaign committee went on to form the Mid Hudson Libertarian Club. The first meeting of the Mid Hudson Libertarian Club was held in late September 1972. By this time, Jerome J. Klasman was Temporary State Chair and was guest speaker to the club's first meeting. From this club, Sanford Cohen announced in candidacy for U.S. House for the 25th congressional district in January 1973. The club continued to hold regular meetings throughout the early-to-mid 1970s.
1973: Founding Convention
The Free Libertarian Party held its founding convention on the weekend of March 29—April 1, 1973 at the Williams Club in Manhattan. Rothbard gives an account of the convention in the April 1973 edition of The Libertarian Forum. The following is an excerpt describing his observations of the people, reporting that there were about 95 in attendence:
"To end the suspense, dear reader. I entered the Williams Club a hopeful skeptic and emerged, exhausted but enthusiastic, forty-eight hours later a celebrant. To my joyful surprise, here was a group of men and women almost all intelligent, dedicated, and knowledgeable about liberty. Here, despite a predictably wide spectrum of temperaments and ideologies, despite occasional emotional hassles, yes despite a twelve (or was it thirteen) hour session on amending the by-laws, here was a group of attractive and intelligent young people who almost literally exuded a spirit of warmth, love, and respect for each other and for the common cause. It was truly a sight to behold. At the risk of being maudlin, I affirm that it was indeed a privilege to be present at the creation of the Free Libertarian Party of New York.
As we shall see further below, the “instincts” of this rather large group of people (approximately 95) were remarkably sound: a blend of high libertarian principle and good common sense and mutual respect that is all too rare in or out of the Movement. And these were Real People; gone was the old predominance of hophead kids, stoned out of their minds and mumbling about “freedom”. These were young people with feet on the ground, who do things, who work in the world: scholars, engineers, television people, advertising men, civil servants. I would say that the typical FLP member is an ex-Objectivist with none of the unfortunate personality traits of the latter, who has been moving rapidly into, or on the edge of, anarcho-capitalism. But both the anarcho-capitalists and the sizable minority of limited archists (or “minarchists”, to use the happy phrase of Sam Konkin), showed a happy willingness to work together for the large spectrum of common ends.
And then, wonder of wonders to a veteran of the New York movement, there was actually a sizable number of girls at the Convention, ranging moreover from attractive to ravishing (and if this be Male Chauvinism, then make the most of it!) It was also a standing wry joke in the New York movement that the proportion of females ranged from zero to somewhere around one per cent: surely this new quantum leap is a fine omen for the growth and success of the movement. Furthermore, I had personally met no more than a dozen of the delegates before — and this in a movement whose members for a long while barely spilled over the confines of a small living room!"
The party went on to adopt a set of bylaws and then discussed adopting a party platform. The platform committee was presented with what Rothbard referred to as a "Randian archist platform" by Paul Hodgson. To offset this, the anarchists submitted a minority platform. However, neither platform gained any traction and it was decided to move forward with no state platform. The following day, April 1, 1973, state officers were elected. Andrea Millen, a TV producer, was elected Chair. Howard Rich, a candidate in Rockland County was elected Vice Chair along with Dr. Raymond Strong, leader in the Brooklyn party. Mike Nichols was elected Secretary and Jerome J. Klasman was elected Treasurer. There were also three At-Large positions, and those elected were Gary Greenberg, an attorney, Samuel Edward Konkin III, Editor of New Libertarian Notes, and Joe Castrovinci.
The following candidates were chosen to run for the 1973 local elections in New York City: Fran Youngstein for Mayor, Bill Lawry for City Council President, Tom Avery for Comptroller, Louis Sicilia for Manhatton Borough President, Paul Streitz for City Council At-Large, Ray Goldfield for City Council, and Spencer Pinney for City Council.
1973—1974
In 1973, it ran a slate of candidates in the New York City municipal elections including Fran Youngstein for mayor and Gary Greenberg for Manhattan district attorney. The LPNY has run statewide candidates regularly since 1974 when its candidate for governor was Jerome Tuccille.
"It is a measure of the state of the Free Libertarian Party of New York that our marathon annual convention (March 29-31) was scarcely enough to finish the Party business. This despite a preceding Special Convention at which we wrangled over the party logo and chose delegates to the National Convention in Dallas in June, and despite the fact that the Convention began every morning promptly at 10:00 A. M. and lasted through special caucuses and post-mortems until after the bars closed at 3:00 A. M. Yet we concluded with no resolutions on issues and no platform. these being put back to yet another mini-convention at the end of April. Three conventions in two months begins to resemble the unfortunate and frenetic Peace and Freedom Party of 1968, which reached a crescendo of almost continuous conventioneering before its rapid demise."
— The Libertarian Forum, April 1974
"Meanwhile. New York's Free Libertarian Party has had its annual spring convention. Your editor is living in California for the spring, and so was not able to attend, but from all reports the convention was almost remarkably smooth and harmonious, free of the factionalism and of the barely suppressed hysteria of the year before. In a personal triumph, the able but formerly widely attacked Gary Greenberg has been elected state chairman."
— The Libertarian Forum, April 1975
1987—present
In 1987, a new publication, Free New York, was created as a newsletter for the party.
In 1994, Howard Stern sought the Libertarian Party nomination for Governor of New York and won the nomination at the State Convention. However, he later dropped from the ticket.
The 1998 State Convention was held in Poughkeepsie, where Christopher Garvey and Donald Silberger were nominated to head the governor / lt. governor's ticket. Conti and Goodman also ran for statewide offices. Bill McMillen and Ambassador Alan Keyes are candidates for U.S. Senate, and McMillen is given the nomination. Among the noted speakers at the convention included Sharon Harris, Michael Cloud, John Cushman, Ron Crickenberger, and Muni Savynon. Jim Harris was voted as the new state chair.
In July 1998, delegates from New York attended the national convention in Washington, D.C. David Bergland served as chair and Muni Savyon as Regional Representative. In August 1998, the LPNY handed over 27,862 signatures in Albany to get the statewide candidates on the ballot.
In 2015, there began a rapid growth of forming new county chapters.
In May 2017, the LPNY adopted a Divisional Structure, which divided the committees into five categories.
Leadership
- Mark E. Glogowski, Chair (elected April 2015)
- Jim Rosenbeck, Vice Chair (elected April 2015)
- Brian Waddell, Vice Chair (elected April 2016)
- Blay Tarnoff, Secretary (elected April 2011)
- Michael Dowden, Treasurer (elected April 2016)
- Mark Potwora, At-Large Committee Member (elected April 2016)
- Michael McDermott, At-Large Committee Member (elected April 2016)
- Aaron Commey, At-Large Committee Member (elected April 2016)
- Shawn Hannon, At-Large Committee Member (elected April 29, 2017)
- Tony D'Orazio, At-Large Committee Member (elected April 29, 2017)
Appointed positions
- M Carling, Parliamentarian
- Christopher Edes, Webmaster (appointed August 2, 2009)
- Mark Glogowski, Administrative Director (appointed May 7, 2017)
- Andrew Martin Kolstee, Communications Director (appointed May 7, 2017)
- Brian Waddell, Political Director (appointed May 7, 2017)
- Gregg Fort, Finance Director (appointed May 7, 2017)
- Shawn Hannon, Outreach Director (appointed July 2, 2017)
Committees
- Administrative Division
- IT Committee (December 4, 2016)
- Christopher Edes, Chair (December 4, 2016—June 4, 2017)
- Michael Dowden, Chair (June 4, 2017—present)
- Strategic Planning Committee (February 12, 2017)
- Andrew Martin Kolstee, Chair (February 12, 2017—present)
- Historical Committee (June 4, 2017)
- Andrew Martin Kolstee, Co-Chair (June 4, 2017—present)
- Jim Rosenbeck, Co-Chair (June 4, 2017—present)
- Political Division
- Ballot Access & Petitioning Committee
- Candidate Recruitment Committee
- Candidate Support Committee
- Communications Division
- Communications Committee (December 4, 2016)
- Andrew Martin Kolstee, Chair (December 4, 2016—present)
- Outreach Division
- Chapter Development Committee (April 25, 2015)
- Phil Ricci, Chair (April 25, 2015—August 2015)
- Jim Rosenbeck, Chair (August 2015—present)
- Youth Outreach Committee (June 4, 2017)
- Shawn Hannon, Chair (June 4, 2017—July 2, 2017)
- Nate Dinet, Chair (July 2, 2017—present)
- Finance Division
- Budget Committee (February 12, 2017)
- Jim Harris, Chair (February 12, 2017—present)
- Fundraising Committee (February 12, 2017)
- Gregg Fort, Chair (February 12, 2017—present)
Former appointed positions and committees
Main: Leadership of the Libertarian Party of New York
See also: Libertarian Party of New York State Committee
See also: List of Chairs of the Libertarian Party of New York
Conventions
Main: List of Libertarian Party of New York State Conventions
Elections
See: Libertarian Party of New York Historical Election Results
Size and Influence
Year | Minimum Unique Voters |
Registered Voters (Oct/Nov) |
Signature Members (Dec) |
LNC Total Donors 2004 - 2016 Or Active Members 1972 - 2003 (Dec) |
---|---|---|---|---|
2016 | 176,296 | 7,128 | 5,468 | 902 |
2015 | 5,011 | 517 | ||
2014 | 26,583 | 5,376 | 4,913 | 561 |
2013 | 4,808 | 626 | ||
2012 | 47,256 | 3,874 | 4,676 | 674 |
2011 | 4,473 | 640 | ||
2010 | 48,359 | 2,680 | 4,359 | 681 |
2009 | 4,241 | 682 | ||
2008 | 19,596 | 1,545 | 4,019 | 705 |
2007 | (Nov) 3,775 | (Nov) 570 | ||
2006 | 40,472 | 1,061 | 3,682 | 480 |
2005 | 3,410 | 635 | ||
2004 | 19,073 | 362 | (Aug) 770 | |
2003 | 647 | |||
2002 | 23,213 | 780 | ||
2001 | 966 | |||
2000 | 7,649 | 1,103 | ||
1999 | 1,093 | |||
1998 | 19,864 | 1,041 | ||
1997 | 932 | |||
1996 | 12,220 | 850 | ||
1995 | 564 | |||
1994 | 19,202 | 417 | ||
1993 | 403 | |||
1992 | 108,530 | 493 | ||
1991 | 376 | |||
1990 | 24,611 | 432 | ||
1989 | 384 | |||
1988 | 12,109 | 332 | ||
1987 | ||||
1986 | 988 | |||
1985 | ||||
1984 | 11,949 | |||
1983 | ||||
1982 | 24,925 | |||
1981 | ||||
1980 | 52,648 | |||
1979 | ||||
1978 | 18,990 | |||
1977 | ||||
1976 | 12,197 | |||
1975 | ||||
1974 | 10,535 | |||
1973 | ||||
1972 | 6 |
Local chapters
The Libertarian Party of New York contains 18 local chapters.
Chapter | Chartered | Notes |
---|---|---|
Brooklyn Libertarian Party | May 17, 2009 | Previous: October 16, 1999—June 23, 2001 |
Capital Region Libertarian Party | Before 1999 | |
Chautauqua County Libertarian Party | October 4, 2015 | |
Erie County Libertarian Party | September 13, 2015 | |
Genesee County Libertarian Party | June 8, 2013 | |
Hudson Valley Libertarian Party | Before 1999 | |
Livingston County Libertarian Party | April 3, 2016 | |
Manhattan Libertarian Party | August 31, 2000 | |
Monroe County Libertarian Party | April 1, 2007 | Previous: April 29, 2000—May 7, 2006 |
Nassau County Libertarian Party | Before 1999 | |
Onondaga County Libertarian Party | April 30, 2016 | |
Otsego County Libertarian Party | October 16, 2016 | |
Libertarian Party of Queens County | April 2, 2017 | Previous: ?—November 3, 2006 |
Staten Island Libertarian Party | April 4, 2010 | |
Suffolk County Libertarian Party | Before 1999 | |
Tioga County Libertarian Party | May 9, 2017 | |
Warren County Libertarian Party | 2016 | |
Westchester County Libertarian Party | February 12, 2017 |
Former
- Broome County Libertarian Party (c 1980—fl. 1985)
- Brooklyn Borough Libertarian Party (fl. 1973)
- Brooklyn-Queens Libertarian Party (February 4, 2007—?)
- Central New York Libertarian Party (November 20, 1999—?)
- Chemung County Libertarian Party (fl. 1989)
- Clinton County Libertarian Party (fl. 2005)
- Cortland County Libertarian Party (fl. 1982)
- Erie-Niagara Libertarian Party (December 2, 1999—?)
- Genesee Region Libertarian Party (fl. 1982—1994)
- Ithaca Libertarians (February 18, 2005—November 9, 2014)
- Mid Hudson Libertarian Club (established in September 1972; 1974)
- Monroe County Libertarian Party (fl. 2000)
- Niagara County Libertarian Party (September 13, 2015—June 4, 2017)
- North County Libertarians (fl. 2005)
- Queens County Libertarian Party (founded in 1994, later decharted and merged with Brooklyn; decharted and reformed, decharted again in 2016)
- Rochester Libertarian Party (fl. 1984)
- Saratoga Libertarian Party (December 7, 2014—2016)
- Southern Tier Libertarian Party (chartered June 23, 2001)
- Tompkins County Libertarian Party (fl. 1992–1994)
- Westchester-Putnam Libertarian Party (fl. 1981—1986)
References
External Links
State Organizations of the National Libertarian Party | ||
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