Ted Brown: Difference between revisions

From LPedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(update a few things)
(Category merger Insurance Adjusters -> Insurance Industry Professionals)
Line 47: Line 47:
[[Category:California Party Activists]]
[[Category:California Party Activists]]
[[Category:California State Party Chairs]]
[[Category:California State Party Chairs]]
[[Category: Party Activists from the 1970s]]
[[Category:Party Activists from the 1970s]]
[[Category: Party Activists from the 1980s]]
[[Category:Party Activists from the 1980s]]
[[Category: Party Activists from the 1990s]]
[[Category:Party Activists from the 1990s]]
[[Category: Party Activists from the 2000s]]
[[Category:Party Activists from the 2000s]]
[[Category: Party Activists from the 2010s]]
[[Category:Party Activists from the 2010s]]
[[Category: Insurance Adjusters]]
[[Category:Insurance Industry Professionals]]
[[Category: Platform Committee Chairs]]
[[Category:Platform Committee Chairs]]
[[Category: California State Party Platform Committee Chairs]]
[[Category:California State Party Platform Committee Chairs]]

Revision as of 09:35, 2 December 2020

Ted Brown
Chair
Libertarian Party of California
May 2015—April 2018
Predecessor: Kevin Takenaga
Successor: Mimi Robson
Personal Details
Party: Libertarian Party
view image gallery

Ted Brown long served as the leading (unofficial) recruiter of Libertarian candidates to run for office in California. He is a former California state party chair and has also served as chair of the state Platform Committee on numerous occasions. He ran for office many times, most recently for Congress from his new home in Austin, Texas.

Biography

"Ted Brown was elected chair in May 2015 for a two year term. He has been active in the LP since 1979. He is an insurance claims adjuster and small business owner who lives in Pasadena with his wife Laura. They have an adult daughter named Katie. Ted has recruited Libertarian candidates for many years and has run 15 times himself. He has also written ballot arguments, and has served as Executive Committee member, newsletter editor, platform chair, county chair, local chair — and previously as state chair in 1988-1989."[1]

He recently moved to Austin, TX where in 2020 he ran for U.S. House, District 17.

References

This article is a biographical stub.
You can help LPedia by expanding it.