I’m a Libertarian, but I have no interest in this party, and I’m not the only one who feels that way, especially now that Chase Oliver is a 2024 presidential candidate.
Libertarian ideology is popular with the public, but the party has consistently alienated voters with its eccentric actions and unrealistic candidates, and this election is no exception.
The former Georgia Senate candidate’s left-leaning stance has been in the headlines since Oliver won the Libertarian Party primary late last month.
In the resurfaced footage, the 38-year-old Publicly advocate for reducing the police budget “Until then [they] “We will restore trust with the people.” Drag Queen Story Time Explained As “performance art” Advocating for open borders and Advocacy for gender-affirming care For trans kids, this is the status quo.
The basic principle of libertarianism is “respect for other people’s ways of life,” and there are certainly libertarians on both the political right and left who adhere to this ideology.
But picking a far-left-leaning libertarian whose values will alienate Republicans who may be looking for an alternative in 2024 would be a huge mistake for the party.
“The whole country is looking for something different than two old stalwarts and the same old one-party system,” Mark, a 42-year-old libertarian, told The Washington Post. “The movement came to a screeching halt when the party nominated another left-libertarian for president in 2024.”
For Mark, who works in IT in Dallas, Oliver’s nomination prompted him to get back on the voter rolls. Non-partisan: “I’ve wasted so many opportunities in the last 20 years. I’ve had enough.”
In fact, the party has repeatedly embarrassed itself by fielding candidates no one has ever heard of, like little-known professor Jo Jorgensen in 2020, or downright ridiculous, like Gary Johnson in 2016.
Former New Mexico Governor It peaked at 13% Trump, whose approval rating is low in the polls, was notorious for being unable to name a world leader he admired during an interview and, at the height of the Syrian refugee crisis, not knowing where Aleppo, Syria, was located — in fact, asking an MSNBC host, “What’s Aleppo?”
To Johnson’s credit, he was the only candidate in the 2016 Libertarian Party primary debate to answer “yes” to the question, “Do you need a government-issued license to drive a car?”
“Absolutely not,” his rivals replied, and then added: “Next, you’re saying you need a licence to toast bread in your own toaster?”
When most people think of libertarianism, they think of principles like freedom of speech, small government, religious freedom, and gun rights, but not the right to drive a car without a license and endanger the lives of others.
But the moment the story went viral was emblematic of the party’s radical ideological purity.
“A third party needs pragmatism first and foremost,” Sam, a 22-year-old disaffected libertarian who works in communications in New Jersey, told me. “Most people, myself included, associate libertarianism with social free will and free-market capitalism. We’re not puritans or philosophers.”
But the driver’s license furor wasn’t the craziest thing to happen at the Liberal convention.
Other big hits include party leadership candidates Stripping on stage Vermin Love Supreme, who served on the Libertarian Party’s Judiciary Committee despite constantly wearing a boot on his head during convention challenges;
“I switched to being an independent because I saw how disingenuous the party had become,” said the California financial expert. “It’s not a really effective or serious political party,” Greg, 34, told the Post.
This year’s presidential election should be a historic opportunity for libertarians: With two incumbent presidents facing record-low approval ratings, third-party candidates should become more viable than ever before.
Freedom, rights and self-determination are values that appeal to both the right and the left.
But the party, which has become an anarchic echo chamber insulated from real market pressures, botched it by selecting a candidate who instantly alienated many Americans.
Libertarian ideas should be taken seriously, but the Libertarian Party has repeatedly demonstrated that it cannot.





