David Koch: Difference between revisions

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|office = Vice-President
|office = Vice-President
|title = Candidate
|title = Candidate
|term-start = 1980
|term-end = 1980
|alongside = [[Edward Clark]]
|alongside = [[Edward Clark]]
|predecessor =  
|predecessor = [[David Bergland]]
|successor =  
|successor = [[Jim Lewis]]
|office2 =
|title2 =
|term-start2 =
|term-end2 =
|alongside2 =
|predecessor2 =
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|birth-date = 3 May 1940
|birth-date = 3 May 1940
|birth-place =  
|birth-place =  
|death-date = 23 August 2019
|death-date = 23 August 2019
|death-place =
|death-place =
|education =  
|education = Massachusetts Institute of Technology
|military =  
|military =  
|occupation =  
|occupation = Vice president of Koch Industries
|residence =  
|residence =  
|party = [[Libertarian Party]] [[Republican Party]]
|party = [[Libertarian Party]] [[Republican Party]]

Revision as of 04:21, 26 August 2019

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David Koch
David-Kock-profile.jpg
Candidate
Vice-President
with Edward Clark
Predecessor: David Bergland
Successor: Jim Lewis
Personal Details
Birth: 3 May 1940
Death: 23 August 2019
Education: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Occupation: Vice president of Koch Industries
Party: Libertarian Party Republican Party
view image gallery

David Koch (May 3, 1940 – August 23, 2019), was a businessman, Libertarian vice-presidential candidate, and member of the Koch family. Koch funded Ed Clark's 1980 presidential campaign and following his exit from the Libertarian Party in 1984 would finance political advocacy groups and further support libertarian and conservative causes.

Personal

Koch was born on May 3, 1940 in Wichita, Kansas along with his twin brother Bill and was the younger brother of Frederick and Charles. He graduated from the Deerfield Academy prep school in 1959 and later earned both bachelor's and master's degrees in chemical engineering at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Koch was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 1992 and despite treatment against it would continue suffering from it and die from it on August 23, 2019.

Politics

On September 8, 1979 Koch was nominated as the Libertarian Party's 1980 vice-presidential candidate at the national convention.[1] Koch had previously given Ed Clark a donation of $1,000, the maximum amount set by federal standards, and pledged $500,000 of his personal funds to the Libertarian campaign now that he was a candidate. The funding given to the campaign allowed it to become both the first third party campaign to gain ballot access in all 50 states as well as the first Libertarian campaign to do so as well. The ticket received over 900,000 votes nationwide for 1% of the popular vote and Koch surpassed his pledge and gave over $1 million to the campaign.

In 2018, the national LP published a tribute article David Koch, we owe you. Signed, Liberty.

Libertarian Views

Koch-Clark-1980.jpg

Though Koch left the Libertarian Party to support Republican candidates, he always identified as a libertarian. During a 2014 interview with Barbara Walters[2] the following discussion ensued:

  • BW - Describe your political point of view.
  • DK - I'm basically a libertarian and I'm a conservative on economic matters and I'm a social liberal.
  • BW - You support gay rights, you support a women's right to choose, but conservative candidates you support, many of them, do not have those views.
  • DK - Well, that's their problem. I do have those views. What I want these candidates to do is to support a balanced budget. I'm very worried if the budget isn't balanced inflation could occur and the economy of our country can suffer terribly.
  • BW - The candidates you support are because of their fiscal policies most importantly.
  • DK - That's exactly right, Barbara. I'm really focused intensely on economic and fiscal issues, because if those go bad, the country as a whole suffers terribly.

References


Preceded by:
David Bergland
Libertarian Party Vice Presidential candidate
1980
Succeeded by:
Jim Lewis