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This is a list of the candidates for the offices of president of the United States and vice president of the United States of the Libertarian Party. Opponents who received over one percent of the popular vote or ran an official campaign that received Electoral College votes are listed. Offices held prior to Election Day are included, and those held on Election Day have an italicized end date.
List of Libertarian presidential tickets
edit1972
editPresidential nominee |
1972 (lost) | Vice presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
John Hospers of CA (1918–2011) |
|
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Tonie Nathan of OR (1923–2014) |
Opponent(s) Richard Nixon (Republican) George McGovern (Democratic) John Schmitz (American Independent) |
|
Opponent(s) Spiro Agnew (Republican) Sargent Shriver (Democratic) Thomas Anderson (American Independent) |
1976
editPresidential nominee |
1976 (lost) | Vice presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Roger MacBride of VT (1929–1995) |
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|
David Bergland of CA (1935–2019) |
Opponent(s) Jimmy Carter (Democratic) Gerald Ford (Republican) |
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Opponent(s) Walter Mondale (Democratic) Bob Dole (Republican) |
1980
editPresidential nominee |
1980 (lost) | Vice presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Ed Clark of CA (born 1930) |
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|
David Koch of KS (1940–2019) |
Opponent(s) Ronald Reagan (Republican) Jimmy Carter (Democratic) John B. Anderson (Independent) |
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Opponent(s) George H. W. Bush (Republican) Walter Mondale (Democratic) Patrick Lucey (Independent) |
1984
editPresidential nominee |
1984 (lost) | Vice presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
David Bergland of CA (1935–2019) |
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|
Jim Lewis of CT (1933–1997) |
Opponent(s) Ronald Reagan (Republican) Walter Mondale (Democratic) |
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Opponent(s) George H. W. Bush (Republican) Geraldine Ferraro (Democratic) |
1988
editPresidential nominee |
1988 (lost) | Vice presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Ron Paul of TX (born 1935) |
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|
Andre Marrou of AK (born 1938) |
Opponent(s) George H. W. Bush (Republican) Michael Dukakis (Democratic) |
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Opponent(s) Dan Quayle (Republican) Lloyd Bentsen (Democratic) |
1992
editPresidential nominee |
1992 (lost) | Vice presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Andre Marrou of AK (born 1938) |
|
|
Nancy Lord of NV (1952–2022) |
Opponent(s) Bill Clinton (Democratic) George H. W. Bush (Republican) Ross Perot (Independent) |
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Opponent(s) Al Gore (Democratic) Dan Quayle (Republican) James Stockdale (Independent) |
1996, 2000
editPresidential nominee |
1996 (lost), 2000 (lost) | Vice presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Harry Browne of TN (1933–2006) |
|
|
Jo Jorgensen of SC (born 1957) (1996) |
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Art Olivier of CA (born 1957) (2000) | ||
Opponent(s) Bill Clinton (Democratic) Bob Dole (Republican) Ross Perot (Reform) |
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Opponent(s) Al Gore (Democratic) Jack Kemp (Republican) Pat Choate (Reform) | |
Opponent(s) George W. Bush (Republican) Al Gore (Democratic) Ralph Nader (Green) |
|
Opponent(s) Dick Cheney (Republican) Joe Lieberman (Democratic) Winona LaDuke (Green) |
2004
editPresidential nominee |
2004 (lost) | Vice presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Michael Badnarik of TX (1954-2022) |
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|
Richard Campagna of IA (born 1960) |
Opponent(s) George W. Bush (Republican) John Kerry (Democratic) |
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Opponent(s) Dick Cheney (Republican) John Edwards (Democratic) |
2008
editPresidential nominee |
2008 (lost) | Vice presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Bob Barr of GA (born 1948) |
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|
Wayne Root of NV (born 1961) |
Opponent(s) Barack Obama (Democratic) John McCain (Republican) |
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Opponent(s) Joe Biden (Democratic) Sarah Palin (Republican) |
2012, 2016
editPresidential nominee |
2012 (lost), 2016 (lost) | Vice presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Gary Johnson of NM (born 1953) |
|
|
Jim Gray of CA (born 1945) (2012) |
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Bill Weld of MA (born 1945) (2016) | ||
Opponent(s) Barack Obama (Democratic) Mitt Romney (Republican) |
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Opponent(s) Joe Biden (Democratic) Paul Ryan (Republican) | |
Opponent(s) Donald Trump (Republican) Hillary Clinton (Democratic) Jill Stein (Green) |
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Opponent(s) Mike Pence (Republican) Tim Kaine (Democratic) Ajamu Baraka (Green) |
2020
editPresidential nominee |
2020 (lost) | Vice presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Jo Jorgensen of SC (born 1957) |
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|
Spike Cohen of SC (born 1982) |
Opponent(s) Joe Biden (Democratic) Donald Trump (Republican) |
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Opponent(s) Kamala Harris (Democratic) Mike Pence (Republican) |
2024
editPresidential nominee |
2024 (pending) | Vice presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Chase Oliver of GA (born 1985) |
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|
Mike ter Maat of VA (born 1961) |
Opponent(s) |
|
Opponent(s)
J. D. Vance (Republican) |
Vote percentages Map
edit-
2016 United States presidential election results by county, shaded according to percentage of the vote for Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson
-
2020 United States presidential election, Jo Jorgensen's state-by-state performance across the nation. Percentage shades are rough increments of 0.25%.
See also
editNotes
editReferences
edit- ^ a b If not for a faithless elector, Nixon and Agnew would have won 521 (96.8%) Electoral College votes.
- ^ If not for a faithless elector, Ford would have won 241 (44.8%) votes.
- ^ a b A faithless elector swapped their votes for president and vice president in the Electoral College, otherwise the Dukakis/Bentsen ticket would have won 112 (20.8%) votes.
- ^ A faithless elector voted Edwards for president and vice president in the Electoral College, otherwise Kerry would have won 252 (46.8%) votes.
- ^ If not for faithless electors, Trump and Pence would have won 306 Electoral College votes each, while Clinton and Kaine would have won 232 votes.
- ^ a b "Official 2020 presidential general election results" (PDF). Federal Election Commission. 1 February 2021. Retrieved 6 February 2021.