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Outspoken Liberal cabinet minister Iona Campagnolo earned a reputation for getting things done – The Globe and Mail

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Iona Campagnolo waves to a group of chanting protesters prior to the Speech from the Throne at the B.C. Legislature in Victoria on Feb. 13, 2007.Deddeda Stemler/The Canadian Press

With her inexhaustible energy, captivating presence and scrappy demeanour, Iona Campagnolo cut a vivacious swath through Canadas often staid political landscape. A freewheeling cabinet minister in the administration of Pierre Elliott Trudeau and perhaps the most headline-grabbing president the federal Liberal Party ever had, she radiated a star quality that, at its peak in the 1980s, had many promoting her as the Liberals future political leader, entreaties she rejected. During a long career that began in the isolated West Coast outport city of Prince Rupert and ended with six high-profile years as lieutenant-governor of British Columbia, she earned a reputation for getting things done in every post she held. And she was never dull.

Her outspoken, no-holds-barred style wasnt always appreciated, leading some on Parliament Hill to brand her the Lady with the Hobnailed Boots, a nickname that delighted her. But once the political dust she raised had died down, she became known, appropriately, as the Woman of Firsts. Ms. Campagnolo was Canadas first minister of fitness and amateur sport, the first female president of a major political party, the founding and first chancellor of the University of Northern British Columbia, and the first woman to serve as B.C.s viceroy.

Despite this record of achievement, however, nothing attracted more national attention than the time Liberal Prime Minister John Turner gave the striking Ms. Campagnolo, then party president, a friendly pat on the posterior while on the campaign trail in 1984. Captured on camera, it was the bum pat felt around the country. Unoffended, Ms. Campagnolo quickly returned the gesture, saying it was womano a mano, and Mr. Turner blustered afterward that it was just like slapping a guy on the back. But the damage had been done. At a time when feminism was on the rise, the highly publicized incident reinforced a perception that Mr. Turner, newly returned to politics, was out of touch. It exacerbated the Liberals cascading fortunes that led to the landslide victory by Brian Mulroney and the Progressive Conservatives.

The event was unfortunate for Ms. Campagnolo, as well. The resulting notoriety, which had nothing to do with her, was demeaning for someone who had championed feminism and blazed a trail for women in politics. It also detracted from her own extraordinary story.

A single mother with Grade 12 education and a stopgap Liberal candidate in the 1974 federal candidate, she upset the NDPs venerable Frank Howard, who had held the Skeena riding in north-west B.C. for 17 years. They thought I was from Mars, Ms. Campagnolo recalled of coming from a riding as remote from the corridors of power as any in Canada. Two years later, the rookie MP found herself in cabinet. Mr. Trudeau had taken a shine to Ms. Campagnolo for her moxie in expressing views on controversial issues that did not adhere to government policy. She was an ardent supporter of a womans right to choose, while opposing the abolition of capital punishment and a proposed gun-control measure.

Iona Campagnolo in Montreal in June, 1985. Ms. Campagnolo was Canadas first minister of fitness and amateur sport, the first female president of a major political party, the founding and first chancellor of the University of Northern British Columbia, and the first woman to serve as B.C.s viceroy.Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press

Her potential had also been spotted by no less than former prime minister John Diefenbaker, who noted her capabilities at a treaty signing in Saskatchewan. She was there in her initial government role as parliament secretary to the Minister of Indian Affairs. Mr. Diefenbaker told those assembled: It wont be long before shes a minister.

Though she had never even been to a hockey game, Ms. Campagnolo, who died April 4 at the age of 91, was appointed Minister of State for Fitness and Amateur Sport in the fall of 1976. It was considered a minor post, but she approached the new portfolio with characteristic gusto. Taking dead aim at the proverbial 60-year-old Swede, famously reputed to be more fit than the vast majority of Canadians, she toured the country, preaching the gospel of physical fitness, startling one citizens group, by proclaiming: I cant give you pablum. Ive come to provoke you!

She also increased government funding for amateur sport, charging sports organizations with producing elite athletes to improve Canadas performance in international competition, before professional athletes were allowed.

Calgary organizers considered her early support and government financial help key to the citys successful bid for the 1988 Winter Olympics. When Ms. Campagnolo visited a winter training camp for Canadian athletes in Cuba, a bemused Fidel Castro showed up, boasting of his own athletic prowess. Ms. Campagnolo invited him to the West Coast for a spot of salmon fishing.

Dazzled by her looks, stylish wardrobe and refreshing candour, male reporters couldnt stop objectifying and writing about her. The unfortunate fact has been that she is a good-looking woman in a glamour-starved House of Commons, one columnist reflected.

Her meteoric rise came crashing down in 1979, when Ms. Campagnolo lost Skeena to the NDPs Jim Fulton and the Liberals lost power, nationally. She returned to politics three years later with a bold run for presidency of the Liberal Party, pledging to reform the party by bringing its affairs out of smoke-filled back rooms and into the open.

Touring virtually every riding in the country, Ms. Campagnolo became one of the best-known political figures in Canada. But she couldnt stem the tide of public opinion running against the Liberals, who had recaptured government in 1980. After Mr. Trudeau resigned, Ms. Campagnolo presided over a raucous leadership convention, famously declaring candidate Jean Chrtien first in our hearts, before announcing John Turner as the winner.

Iona Victoria Hardy was born in Vancouver on Oct. 18, 1932, but spent her childhood on Galiano Island in the Straight of Georgia, where her ancestors first settled in 1882. Her father, Kenneth Hardy, was a maintenance foreman at North Pacific Cannery on the Skeena River. He returned south to his family when the fishing season ended. Her mother, Rosamond, inspired Iona at an early age to forge her own path, regardless of what was expected from women in those conservative times.

After a few years, the family moved up north to the string of fish canneries outside Prince Rupert known as Cannery Row. Ionas playmates were Indigenous and Japanese-Canadian children, whose parents worked in the canneries. The experience implanted in her a strong sense of anti-racism and respect for Indigenous rights she maintained throughout her life.

As a young teenager, Iona began working summers in the canneries, earning 42 cents an hour gutting fish. After the family moved into Prince Rupert, she quickly immersed herself in community activities. As a high-schooler, she fundraised for the Red Cross, standing outside the local movie theatre and imploring patrons to donate. She was secretary of the Haida chapter of the charitable organization IODE, senior class president and an eager participant in a junior citizens program that allowed students to learn the workings of city hall.

Ms. Campagnolo returned to the public eye in 2001 as B.C.s lieutenant-governor, putting her personal stamp on yet another public position.RICHARD LAM/The Canadian Press

Also passionate about theatre, she became a driving force behind the Prince Rupert Little Theatre, designing costumes for most of their productions and winning a best actress award in British Columbias yearly one-act play festival.

Her poise and good looks did not go unnoticed. She modelled swimsuits, and was chosen as high school prom queen, Miss Prince Rupert and the citys contestant for the crown of Miss PNE at the annual Pacific National Exhibition in Vancouver. A few months shy of her 20th birthday, she married local fisherman Louis Campagnolo. The couple had two children. They drifted apart and eventually divorced as Ms. Campagnolo became increasingly embroiled in politics.

In 1967, she spearheaded a group of women known as the Marching Mothers who confronted union picket lines with fierce protests during a bitter, complicated strike by the United Fishermen and Allied Workers Union. The women preferred a local union over the UFAWU and denounced its Communist Party-affiliated leadership. In his memoir, union president Homer Stevens said he had never seen such looks of hatred in all his years in the labour movement. In the end, the UFAWU was decertified at the local fishermens co-op.

Ms. Campagnolo was first elected as a school trustee in Prince Rupert in 1966. She spent the next six years as chair of the school board. In 1972, she won a seat on city council for the first time, and two years later found herself in Ottawa as MP for Skeena.

Before that, she had been working as a broadcaster on the citys private radio station, CHTK, hosting a popular current affairs show, selling ads and devising station promotions. In 1973, she was recognized as B.C. Broadcaster of the Year. The same year, before her foray into federal politics, her ongoing community activism resulted in her appointment as a member of the Order of Canada for wide-ranging services in organizing, promoting and conducting community projects in Prince Rupert.

Ms. Campagnolos surprise election victory in 1974 did not come without a cost. The grind of commuting 10,000 kilometres virtually every weekend to go home to Prince Rupert then back to Ottawa and her punishing work habits had friends concerned. Yet nothing seemed to slow her down, not even three broken ribs and a cracked vertebra, suffered when her car flipped over three times after hitting an icy patch on a dark mountain road in 1975. She kept her speaking engagement the next day. Forced by the accident to curtail her jogging, she took up weightlifting, wowing reporters by bench-pressing 85 kilograms.

She acknowledged she could play it tough when she had to, once confessing admiration for the fight-prone hockey player Tiger Williams. He plays hockey like I play politics.

When her political career was over, Ms. Campagnolo wasted little time tacking in different directions. She resumed broadcasting for a time with the CBC, fundraised, consulted and travelled abroad for Third World development agencies such as CUSO and CIDA, and, during her six years as the first chancellor of University of Northern British Columbia, she played a formative role establishing the fledgling school. Mr. Trudeaus historic Dear Iona letter to Ms. Campagnolo as Liberal Party president announcing his resignation, is now in the UNBC archives.

Ms. Campagnolo returned to the public eye in 2001 as B.C.s lieutenant-governor, putting her personal stamp on yet another public position. She visited every nook of the province, from tea in tiny Vavenby to glittering banquets in Vancouver. She maintained her strong support and respect for Indigenous people, and did not shy from expressing her views. In a passionate speech on International Womens Day in 2003, she denounced the rollback of womens rights by the Taliban in Afghanistan, and decried the lack of women in political leadership. Determine for yourself the dimension of a civilization making decisions day after day affecting the lives of women for their children all around the world, without womens participation, all done in the name of sweetest democracy!

She was promoted to officer of the Order of Canada in 2008.

In 2014, Ms. Campagnolo broke her neck in a horrendous fall at her home on Vancouver Island, leaving her a partial quadriplegic, physically confined to a wheelchair. She adapted beautifully, said her daughter Jennifer Campagnolo, as she did with so much that happened in her life.

Ms. Campagnolo was predeceased by her brother Harold; sister, Marion; and ex-husband. She leaves her brother John; daughters, Giana (Jan) Logan and Jennifer Campagnolo; three grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.

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Outspoken Liberal cabinet minister Iona Campagnolo earned a reputation for getting things done - The Globe and Mail

Liberals force banks to identify carbon rebates by name in direct deposits – True North

The Liberals will force Canadian banks to identify the carbon rebate by name when issuing direct deposits to Canadians.

Finance Minister Chrystia Freelands federal budget contains various amendments to the Financial Administration Act.

In Budget 2024, the government proposes to amend the Financial Administration Act to provide regulation-making authority to prescribe labelling requirements by financial institutions for government payments accepted for deposit in customer account statements and online banking records, reads the budget.

Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault said that about 80% of Canadians receive their rebates through direct deposits, the other 20% of whom receive it via mail.

Were working with financial institutions to make sure that its labelled properly so that people actually know what it is, he said. In many cases, it was very difficult for people to actually see that they were getting it.

True North previously reported that the Liberals rebranded what was previously known as the Climate Action Incentive Program to the Canada Carbon Rebate in February.

The name change was only that, with no changes to the federal carbon pricing scheme or size of rebates.

Federal director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation Franco Terrazzano called the rebrand putting lipstick on a pig.

Trudeaus real problem isnt that Canadians dont know what his government is doing; Trudeaus real problem is that Canadians know his carbon tax is making life more expensive, he said in a statement.

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith said the rebrand would not save the Liberals from its dwindling poll numbers.

Canadians will see it for what it is: a tax on the fuel they use to drive their kids to school, a tax on the food they buy, a tax on the businesses that they run, a tax on everything, said Smith.

Conservative MP Shannon Stubbs echoed Smiths concerns in a post to X.

No matter what they call it, Canadians know that the carbon tax is just that another tax, she said.

She added that the Parliamentary Budget Officer showed that Albertans pay $1,000 more than they receive in rebates.

The Department of Environment and Climate Change Canada has been disputing with banks for the past two years about how carbon rebates are labelled when they are deposited into users accounts.

The fact that they havent been doing it now for many years led us to take this position, said Guilbeault. I think we took it for granted that since people were receiving it, people knew they were receiving it, he added.

Weve come to discover over the last few months that it wasnt the case, in part because the way it was labelled, or mislabelled, I should say, by most financial institutions, said Guilbeault according to the Canadian Press.

Some banks have already changed the rebate label to Canada Carbon Rebate, whereas otherbanks have yet to implement any changes.

True North previously reported that the Conservatives passed a non-binding motion, compelling Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to convene an emergency meeting with Canadas premiers to discuss the carbon tax.

The motion followed 70% of Canadians and 70% of provincial premiers asking Trudeau to spike the hike.

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Liberals force banks to identify carbon rebates by name in direct deposits - True North

Bitcoin’s halving is a major spectacle that’s the whole point – Blockworks

The Bitcoin halving is imminent.

But even if you know what it is, you may not know why it is.

In our view, the halving exists to make bitcoin interesting and interesting things attract attention. Bitcoins pseudonymous inventor, Satoshi Nakamoto, could have chosen a boring issuance schedule. Instead, he imbued bitcoin with a seasonal fireworks display, commanding attention from an increasingly wide and diverse group of bitcoin users.

Bitcoin famously has a supply cap of 21 million, 1.3 million of which remain unminted.The network will mint these coins through the year 2140 in the same way bitcoins have always been minted.

Satoshi designed the system himself to reward miners who publish new blocks. He could have designed those rewards to hold steady over time with a constant amount per block, say 10. Or he might have designed the rewards to decrease steadily at a constant rate.

Read more: Why is 2140 the end of bitcoin inflation?

Satoshi instead chose halvings. Every 210,000 blocks, the block reward suddenly drops by half. The first 210,000 blocks each yielded 50 new bitcoin to the miner; the next 210,000 blocks yielded 25; and so on. Tomorrow, and for the next four years, each block will yield 3.125 bitcoin.

By their very nature, halvings bring an economic shock, especially to miners. Block 840,0001 will appear roughly ten minutes after block 840,000. But the miner of block 840,000 will earn $400,000 worth of new bitcoin, while the miner of block 840,001 will earn only $200,000 worth of bitcoin at todays prices, anyway.

Bitcoins volatility owes, in part, to its halving schedule. If demand remains relatively constant despite a sudden drop in newly available bitcoin, bitcoins price will likely increase. At least, thats what has happened historically.

The dollar price of bitcoin increased 5,000% between the first and second halving, from $12.53 in November 2012 to $640 in July 2016; 1,300% between the second and third halving, from $640 in July 2016 to $9,000 in May 2020; and 700% between the third and fourth halving, from $9,000 in May 2020 to $70,000 in April 2024. Of course, bitcoins price has also crashed many times during those periods. Like the weather, demand is a fickle thing.

Read more from our opinion section: Bitcoins most promising, least dramatic halving is almost here

Halvings also spark discussions about bitcoins price volatility in the short term and price trajectory in the long term. Each halving brings up the same inevitable question, especially considering past wild post-halving price swings: What will we see this time? For weeks now, TV networks have been interviewing CEOs and bitcoin thought leaders about the potential impact that the halving might have on bitcoins price.

We think Satoshi anticipated the potential for this kind of frenzy, and deliberately chose the four-year halving cycle to attract attention to bitcoin.

Satoshi was familiar with the idea of global spectacles that happen every four years. The World Cup and the Olympics garner massive attention especially from people who otherwise rarely watch sports! Would you watch the Olympics annually? Monthly? Not likely. These events garner interest partly because of their rarity. The interval allows for hype, and interest, to build. Networks run specials on the athletes expected to make a splash. Magazines run photo spreads. And when the opening ceremonies finally broadcast, three billion people watch worldwide.

Satoshi was a master promoter. He designed logos, built chat forums and schemed with users on those forums about how to stir up interest in bitcoin. He also designed a system to capture interest by being interesting.

Compare bitcoin to gold. Gold has a global brand earned over millennia. But whens the last time gold mining caught major headlines? If we mined an asteroid for gold or discovered that we had mined every last nugget that would capture attention. As things stand, however, gold mining is steady, predictable and unremarkable. Bitcoin is predictable, too. Yet it is predictably unsteady, especially with halvings thrown in, and thus remarkable.

Bitcoin is much younger than gold, with just 15 years since its creation. Yet bitcoins quadrennial halving events and corresponding price fluctuations garner headlines worldwide. Interest has snowballed with every halving, as have new users. Thats the goal.

Bitcoin halvings are spectacles, by design. And the design seems to be working. After all, it brought you to this article.

The authors are co-authors of the forthcoming academic book Resistance Money: A Philosophical Case for Bitcoin (Routledge Press).

Andrew M. Bailey is an interdisciplinary teacher and scholar whose work spans philosophy, politics, and economics. He is Associate Professor of Humanities at Yale-NUS College (Singapore).

Bradley Rettler is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Wyoming, and has published peer-reviewed academic articles on metaphysics, philosophy of religion, epistemology, and cryptocurrency

Craig Warmke researches money at the intersection of philosophy, economics, and computer science. He is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Northern Illinois University.

Start your day with top crypto insights from David Canellis and Katherine Ross. Subscribe to the Empire newsletter.

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Bitcoin's halving is a major spectacle that's the whole point - Blockworks

From Satoshi to Slots: A Beginner’s Guide to Bitcoin Casinos and Their Advantages – Eye On Annapolis

The advent of Bitcoin in 2009 by an individual or group under the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto revolutionized financial transactions with its decentralized, peer-to-peer technology.

This groundbreaking innovation has since permeated various sectors, including online gambling. Bitcoin casinos represent a significant shift from traditional online casinos by leveraging blockchain technology to offer unique security, privacy, and flexibility advantages.

This article delves into the essential aspects of Bitcoin casinos, providing a foundational understanding for beginners and highlighting their unique benefits.

Bitcoin casinos operate primarily on blockchain technology, which ensures a transparent and immutable record of transactions. This fundamental difference differentiates them from conventional online casinos, which rely on centralized servers. At the heart of Bitcoin casinos is using cryptocurrencies for deposits, withdrawals, and gameplay, with Bitcoin being the most popular choice.

Bitcoin casinos offer several distinct advantages over their traditional counterparts, contributing to their growing popularity among online gamblers.

For those new to Bitcoin casinos, starting can seem daunting. However, the process is straightforward once you understand the basics.

Bitcoin casinos boast many games, similar to what you would find in traditional online casinos. These range from classic table games like blackjack and roulette to a vast selection of slots and live dealer games. The use of provably fair technology is a notable feature in Bitcoin casinos, allowing players to verify the fairness of each game outcome.

Bitcoin casinos represent a significant evolution in the online gambling industry, offering advantages catering to the modern players security, privacy, and efficiency needs.

From their inception following Satoshi Nakamotos blockchain innovation to their diverse and engaging gaming experiences, Bitcoin casinos have established themselves as a formidable presence in the online gambling world.

As this industry continues to grow and evolve, it presents an exciting frontier for players seeking a more secure, private, and innovative online gambling experience. Whether you are new to online gambling or looking to explore the benefits of Bitcoin casinos, the journey from Satoshi to slots is one filled with potential and excitement.

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From Satoshi to Slots: A Beginner's Guide to Bitcoin Casinos and Their Advantages - Eye On Annapolis

The Spectacular Implosion of the Libertarian Party Mother Jones – Mother Jones

Frustrated by the two-party system? Polling shows youre not alone, with more Americans than ever supporting the idea of a third party. But the winner of Novembers presidential election will be either Biden or Trump, and voters weighing other candidates need to consider if a protest vote to end the duopoly might instead help end our democracy. In the May+June 2024 issue, we examine the past and present of third-party outsiders, and how they could upend this years race. You can read all the pieces here.

The war for control of the Libertarian Party of New Hampshire began to escalate in the spring of 2021, when Jeremy Kauffman got the keys to the Twitter account. Kauffman, a tech entrepreneur, had arrived in the state a few years earlier as part of the Free State Project, which proposed to transform New Hampshire by convincing liberty-minded activists to move there en masse. The state was a small-l libertarian success story. It had legalized raw milk, slashed budgets, and elected dozens of Free Staters to the legislatureincluding the House majority leader. But the state and national Libertarian parties, Kauffman felt, were too passive and too left-wing. They were trying to fit in, instead of trying to stand out.

He and his allies made short work of that. In the months that followed, the LPNH account made national headlines with a run of deliberately provocative statements. The party tweeted that John McCains brain tumor saved more lives than Anthony Fauci. It called for child labor to be legalized and advocated repealing the Civil Rights Act to fight wokeness.

State party chair Jilletta Jarvis watched this shift with alarm. A group of right-wing activists was attempting a hostile take-over, she announced. Jarvis pointed her finger at a new and rapidly growing caucus within the state and national parties that was named for Ludwig von Mises, a 20th century Austrian free-market economist who was one of the intellectual forefathers of libertarianism and who is particularly revered by followers of the former presidential candidate Ron Paul. Their strategy is, frankly, designed to discredit the Libertarian Party in the state and in our nation, Jarvis warned.

So she and a group of like-minded party members staged a counterrevolution. They seized the Twitter account from Kauffman and his allies and created a new legal entity to house the partys assets. Then Jarvis made one more announcement: Out of respect for all of those who have been angered, threatened, or insulted by the Libertarian Party of New Hampshire, the partys social media accounts would be going on a brief hiatus.

Being the third-largest party in a duopoly can sometimes seem like a dubious distinction, like being the second-deadliest maritime disaster involving an iceberg. The Libertarians are big enough to be ubiquitous, but rarely substantial enough to stand out. For decades their nominees have oscillated between people youve never heard of and those you vaguely remember. The Libertarian Party is Americas weakest strong brand.

In 2016, the Libertarians had their best-ever presidential election showing by a factor of three. Dissatisfied by two unpopular major-party nominees, nearly 4.5 million people voted for the strange-but-plausible pairing of former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson and exMassachusetts Gov. Bill Weld. Running on a promise of socially liberal, fiscally conservative governance, they exceeded the margin of victory in 11 states and raised more than $11 million. It was the best performance by a third party in a presidential election since Ross Perot.

Gary Johnson greets supporters at his election-night party in 2016 in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Juan Labreche/AP

Then it all fell apart. Under the auspices of expanding the tent, some within the LPand a fair number outside of itbegan clamoring for a different kind of party: more aggressive, more offensive, and more right-wing. They werent interested in third-place showings; it wasnt entirely clear if they were interested in competing at all. Whats followed has been more than seven years of spectacularly messy infighting. New Hampshire was only one front of many. Across the country the Libertarian Party has been plagued by breakaway factions, leaked chatrooms and conspiracy theories, and bitter struggles over bank accounts and social media handles.

The current electoral climate is once again tailor-made for a Libertarian party crasher. From the militarized border to attacks on bodily autonomy, state power and individual liberty are at the foreground of the national debate. Faced with an unpopular incumbent and a challenger charged with 88 felonies, 63 percent of Americans say theyre ready for a third-party alternative. But the largest one bears little resemblance to the party that attracted so many disaffected voters in 2016. Instead, its mired in a tussle thats all too familiar, not just between its left and right flanks, but over the purpose of the party itself. The rise of Trump didnt just break the Republican Party. It reignited an identity crisis within the LP that has been smoldering since its creation.

The Libertarian Party was formed in the 1970s amid backlashes to imperial Republican governance and the Democratic Great Society. Members skirmished over the organizations purpose from the outset. There were arguments over Is the point of the Libertarian Party to have a platform to say what you think is true, or is it to actually try to win elections and put libertarians in office? and I dont know that that was ever really settled, says David Boaz, distinguished senior fellow at the libertarian Cato Institute, who has seen the movement evolve from its inception.

Those debates often manifested as fights over candidates. In 1980, some Libertarians accused their nominee, attorney Ed Clark, of watering down their message to win votes. His sin? Defining libertarianism in an interview as simply low-tax liberalism. Clark, whose running mate was the oil magnate David Koch (brother Charles co-founded Cato and bankrolled much of the early libertarian movement), won what was then a record number of votes, but the campaign also sparked infighting that led to an exodus from the party. Four years later, the Kochs backed a member of the Council on Foreign Relations for the nomination. When the party chose someone else, it was their turn to walk.

When there have been real serious schisms or fights within the party they have been within roughly the same lines as now, says Brian Doherty, a senior editor at the libertarian magazine Reason, whose book Radicals for Capitalism chronicled the movements rise. This is not how the Mises Caucus people would put it, but an objective outside observer might say its a war between normie pragmatiststhat would be the Gary Johnson sideand, you know, radical weirdos.

In 1988, the partys old guard threw their support behind Ron Paul, hoping that a former Republican congressman might make some noise nationally. Paul, who paid for his lifetime party membership with a gold coin, happened to be both a normie and a weirdo. Compared to his rival, former American Indian Movement leader Russell Means, he was a Beltway insider. But Pauls cultural conservatism and paranoid style were an imperfect fit. He was not a member of the Council on Foreign Relations; he spread conspiracies about the Council on Foreign Relations.

After a disappointing showing, Paul rejoined the GOP and the Libertarian Party fractured again. Two of his most vocal allies, Lew Rockwell (a former Paul chief of staff) and Murray Rothbard (a Cato co-founder who fell out with Charles Koch), retreated to a nonprofit Rockwell had set up called the Mises Institute, where they advocated for something called Paleolibertarianisma fusion of libertarian economics and proto-MAGA politics. In a 1992 essay lamenting former Klan leader David Dukes defeat in the Louisiana governors race, Rothbard outlined a platform of right-wing populism that included eliminating the welfare state, abolishing the Federal Reserve, and repealing civil rights laws. The seventh bullet point was America first. Still stewing from their LP experience, Rothbard and Rockwell argued that libertarians should abandon their woke cultural liberalism; a racist newsletter published by Paul, which listed Rockwell as an editor, had a recurring feature documenting crimes committed by Black people. It was called PC Watch.

The Paleo crowd was in the wilderness for a while. Pauls bids for the Republican presidential nomination in 2008 and 2012 changed that, introducing a new generation to his own strain of right-leaning libertarianism. He brought all sorts of political outsiders into the GOP, and exposed them to ideas, like abolishing the Fed or opposing the war on terror, that no one else in the party much talked about. When Paul supporters found their progress blocked in the GOP, they inevitably took a look at the Libertarian Party. In the decade following Pauls 2008 run, membership grew 92 percent. Paul was no Paleo, but his positions also placed him at odds with many traditional Libertarian tenets. He campaigned on ending birthright citizenship; the LP supported unrestricted movement of people and capital across national borders. He was a pro-life OB-GYN; the party believed the government should be kept out of the matter of abortion. He opposed LGBTQ equality; the LP had supported gay marriage since its inception.

Ron Paul following a GOP debate in 2007

Chris Fitzgerald/Candidate Photos/Newscom/Zuma

There was one more notable distinction: Paul wanted a revolution. The LP, by contrast, had developed a reputation in some circles as a rest home for Republicans who like pot, Doherty notes. Pragmatists believed that strong performances by reputable figureheads put pressure on the major parties to be more receptive to their views, boosted ballot access and fundraising, and supported candidates at the state and local level. (The party touted nearly 200 elected officials by 2018.) In 2012, four years after exGeorgia Rep. Bob Barr won a half-million votes, Johnson became the first Libertarian Party presidential candidate to crack a million.

When Johnson ran again in 2016, the conditions seemed ideal for a third party to attain the mythical 5 percentthe threshold at which a party qualifies for federal matching funds. As his running mate, Johnson chose Weld, a WASPs WASP who proclaimed that he wanted the government out of your pocketbook and out of your bedroom. It was hard to imagine either of them blowing up the system.

Not unlike what played out during the 1980 campaign, the self-appointed libertarian wing of the Libertarian Partythe sort of people who call Cato Stato and Reason tReasonblanched at the normies in their midst, and their sanitized message. Theres a video from the 2016 Libertarian Party convention that captures the challenges of rallying a party of individualists. A moderator asks the presidential candidates whether the government should require drivers licenses. Austin Petersen, a former FreedomWorks staffer, says, Hell no. Whats next, requiring a license to make toast in your own damn toaster? says Darryl Perry, an anarchist whose campaign conducted all its transactions in cryptocurrency and precious metals. Then it is Johnsons turn.

You know, Id like to see some competency exhibited by people before they drive, he says, holding up his hands in mock surrender.

The crowd boos.

On paper, Johnsons performance was a high-water mark, even if it fell short of the 5 percent target. But Weld, a former law-and-order champion, was a bridge too far for some. Late in the race, he told voters in swing states that Hillary Clinton should be their second choice. Some in the party believed the LP had sold out again.

The Trump era had a way of surfacing submerged tensions. While pragmatists saw an opportunity for the LP to build on their momentum by courting disaffected partisans, some Paul disciples were tugging in a more right-wing direction. In 2017, the then-head of the Mises Institute (yet another former Paul chief of staff) gave a speech stating that libertarians risked irrelevance unless they acknowledge that blood and soil and God and nation still matter to people. The phrase blood and soil, of course, matters to a very specific group of people; a few weeks later, white nationalist Richard Spencers mob chanted the Nazi slogan in Charlottesville.

The Unite the Right rally offered a glimpse of libertarianisms dark side. Multiple participants in the event had run for office as Libertarians, including Chris Cantwell, an organizer who claimed Rothbard as an influence. Spencer himself admired Paul and had previously spoken at an immigration conference organized by a Mises Institute scholar. The so-called alt-right was littered with people for whom libertarianism was less an ethos of non-aggression than a placeholder before admitting they were just white nationalists.

In the aftermath of the rally, the LPs executive director said there was no room for racists and bigots in the Libertarian Party. Nicholas Sarwark, the partys chairman between 2014 and 2020, went further; the Mises Institute, he tweeted, was the preferred choice of actual Nazis. It was a breaking point. Many Paul supporters already considered the pragmatists too woke. Targeting Pauls favorite think tank only proved their suspicions. That same day, a 28-year-old from the Philadelphia suburbs named Michael Heise started a Facebook group called the Libertarian Party Mises Caucus. By the next morning the group had 600 members. Were bringing libertarianism back, it announced over a meme of Paul walking away from an explosion.

Heise was characteristic of the sort of young men drawn to Pauls revolution. A fan of Alex Jones and Infowars as a teenager, he became active in Pauls campaign and contributed to the movement by filming encounters with police and leading anti-Fed protests while holding a bullhorn with a sticker that said 9/11 was an inside job. After Paul left the political stage, Heise washed his hands of the GOP, but he also thought the LP was a joke and found Johnson uninspiring. He watched the Paul revolution fragmentsome followers went MAGA; others just dropped out.

Michael Heise

ReasonTV/Wikimedia

If we ever did get that back under the guise of an organization as opposed to a single campaign, it never has to die, he explained on a podcast in 2017, not long after forming the Mises Caucus. It can just keep going and going.

Heise disavowed the tiki torchers of CharlottesvilleCantwell, he said, had gone nutsand the Mises Caucus dismissed Trump as a tyrant. Later that year, the caucus declared that Anyone accusing us of being alt-right either knows nothing about us, or is intentionally spreading lies, and boasted that it had kicked more alt-right types from our FB group than any other.

But the alt-right and the Mises Caucus shared some common influences. The Mises Caucus adored Rothbard and pledged its opposition to not just political opportunists but identity hustlers. Another hero was a Mises Institute fellow named Hans-Hermann Hoppe, who advocated for major restrictions on non-white immigration. He said in 2017, Any promising libertarian strategy must, very much as the Alt-Right has recognized, first and foremost be tailored and addressed tothe most severely victimized people, which he identified as White married Christian couples with children. (Mises the economist, for what its worth, was a Jewish refugee from Nazism who believed that every person [has] the right to live wherever he wants.)

The insurgents felt the party had turned a cold shoulder to Paul and the sorts of outsiders he had welcomedhomeschoolers, medical freedom activists, and others on conservatisms fringe. Angela McArdle, a Los Angeles libertarian who would later run for party chair, argued that the party should consider targeting people who are into intellectual dark-web stuff. Everyone seemed to have a podcast. People attracted to this movement werent Trump supporters per se, although some werefuture Stop the Steal ringleader Patrick Byrne gave $5,000 in seed money to the Mises Caucus, and a former member of its advisory board ran a group called Libertarians for Trump.

The slate of Mises Caucus members running for key party leadership positions initially struggled to break through, but their anger was having an effect. Weld, who had planned on seeking the 2020 nomination, thought better of it. So did another ex-Republican (and ex-Democrat), Lincoln Chafee. Michigan Rep. Justin Amash, who quit the GOP over its descent into nationalism, started and then folded an exploratory committee. Amash, Heise warned in an email to members, reeks of the same thing [thats] been going on with this party for years now: a longtime duopoly member joining the party without putting any type of investment into it. The rest home was closed.

The party eventually settled on Clemson University psychology lecturer Jo Jorgensen, who made national headlines for being bitten by a bat. Jorgensenwhose 1.1 million votes were a fraction of Johnson and Welds 2016 total but still the partys third-highest tally everalso managed to offend the Mises crowd. They believed shed gone woke, pointing to her statement after the murder of George Floyd that we must be actively anti-racist. Worse still, they felt shed been too timid during Covid, embracing social distancing and masks even as she criticized lockdowns.

In the run-up to the 2022 Libertarian Party convention in Reno, the Mises Caucus raised nearly half a million dollars and planned for what it called The Takeover. Supporters began to wrest control of local and state parties. That summer the caucus slate routed their opponents. McArdle, a paralegal who led protests against vaccine mandates, was the new chair. The convention removed from the platform a long-standing plank condemning bigotry as irrational and repugnant, on the grounds that it wasnt the LPs job to police speech. The assertion that government should be kept out of the matter of abortion was jettisoned too. And amid right-wing rumblings about a National Divorcethe idea that the United States should resolve its divisive policy fights by splitting into smaller countriesthe party added a plank recognizing the right to political self-determination, including secession. The new LP announced that Paul supporters were welcome with open arms and name-checked his newsletter collaborator, Rockwell. Dissenters quit the party in droves.

If someone is in the pool and someone poops in the pool, says John Hudak, a libertarian who split with the Mises faction, a lot of people are just going to get out.

After Reno, the new LP got to work. Instead of an ex-Republican, some Mises Caucus members floated their own 2024 presidential candidateDave Smith, a comedian and frequent guest on Joe Rogans podcast. Although he did not identify as alt-right, Smith was comfortable in their company; he had invited both Cantwell and the white supremacist Nick Fuentes onto his own show.

This new LP was different not just in substance and strategy, but in style. Kauffmans activities in New Hampshire, where he and a few others were continuing to attract attention for, among other things, calling the Uyghur genocide fake and offering to send a Black Democrat to Africa, offered the extreme version of this shock-and-awe approach.

Every time people see New Hampshire and libertarian, thats good, Kauffman told me. People say, New Hampshire is full of crazy, insane libertariansthats good. Everything that reinforces that marketing perception that New Hampshire is the libertarian homeland, New Hampshire is full of libertarian craziesthat is everything that I want to happen.

Indeed, thats more or less how things played out: Johnson and Amash condemned the attacks on McCain; the states Republican governor said the tweets should pretty much be the end of the Libertarian Party in New Hampshire. State party chair Jilletta Jarvis and her allies briefly wrested control of the Twitter feed, but their intervention was short-lived. Even the national Mises Caucus leadership, recognizing that endless news coverage of one state partys tasteless posts was not a great look, eventually urged the New Hampshire crew to tone it down, to no effect. While they shared a common frustrationwoke left-libertarianspeople like Kauffman werent interested in any national strategy. Starting a revolution, the Mises Caucus learned, was a lot easier than managing one.

A different sort of chaos was unfolding across the country as right-leaning factions clashed with more moderate ones. In Massachusetts, party leaders fought back and eventually started a new party after the state Mises affiliate called them rootless cosmopolitans. In Delaware, Idaho, Pennsylvania, and Michigan, Mises opponents either attempted to seize control of their parties or to form new organizations. The Virginia and New Mexico affiliates cut ties with the national party altogether. National Divorce was coming for the party that now officially advocated for it.

While the insurgents had railed against high-profile candidates who diluted the brand, the new management faced a series of campaign-trail embarrassments that inflamed suspicions of a not-so-secret MAGA bias. Its Pennsylvania gubernatorial candidate was a sex offender who was Rudy Giulianis star witness at the notorious Four Seasons Total Landscaping press conference following Trumps defeat. Arizonas libertarian Senate nominee dropped out in the final weeks to endorse the avowedly ex-libertarian Blake Masters. Last year, Jacob Chansley, a.k.a. the QAnon Shaman, announced he was running for Congress as a Libertarian. The national party, which has mocked the idea that January 6 was an attack on democracy, welcomed him with open arms.

The problems werent limited to schisms and candidates. A 2023 analysis from another LP group, the Classical Liberal Caucus, found that fundraising, adjusted for inflation, was the worst it had been in 30 years. One major donor announced he was removing the LP as the beneficiary of a $650,000 trust. Sustaining memberships had fallen, too. Around that same time, Hudak posted a trove of documents from a disgruntled Mises Caucus member detailing rampant infighting and low morale among party members.

The Takeover is turning into a disaster, McArdle wrote in one May 2023 memo. And there was more bad news to come. Mises members had counted on Smith to enter the presidential race in 2024, using his podcast audience to give the party a dynamic anti-Johnson.

Surprise! Dave Smith isnt running for President. He backed out and people are going to be really upset, McArdle wrote. No one is coming to save us.

They still arent. Heise, the Mises Caucus founder, predicted in October the presidential race would be a struggle for the party just to tread water. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was courting Libertarian voters for his independent campaign, and McArdle even suggested that an alliance between the two could be mutually beneficial. But the Mises Caucus rejected the idea; instead, the group was supporting Michael Rectenwald, a former New York University professor who backed Trump twice and has published three books in five years about cancel culture. Open borders, Rectenwald said at a candidate forum in December, plays into the globalist objective to erode the entire culture base of the United States. Plenty of voters share those views. They already have a candidate.

When we spoke in February, McArdle sounded more optimistic about the partys future. The fundraising and marketing strategies were now in sync. The battles for control of state parties, she said, were proof that the revolution was working.

I underestimated the hatred that people would have for me personally, and the interest that they would have in destroying their own organization, McArdle said. I think a lot of those people were not well grounded in reality and didnt have a lot of balance in their lives and it was extremely difficult for them and they acted in bad faith. Its like Solomons babytheyd rather split it down the middle.

But the fight over the LP is not just about tone or policy or friendships. Hovering over all of it is a question about the utility of third parties themselves. It is a variation of the debate thats roiled the LP since the days of Clark and Koch: What are they actually trying to do here?

In a statement last year saying he would not seek the partys presidential nomination (he is instead running for Senate as a Republican), Amash pointed to the LPs weakened prospects under its current leadership. If anything, my policy views align more closely with those who describe themselves as right-libertarians, he acknowledgedhe was, himself, an acolyte of Paul. But we just have a different philosophy about the role of parties. People who wanted to push a specific ideology, he said, should do so through activism. The point of the LP was to organize libertarian-minded people to win elections. It sounds simple when you put it like that. For the LP, though, it never has been.

I do think one of the problems is that some people called themselves libertarian when in fact what they really were was angry, alienated, contrarian, liking to shock people, says Boaz, the Cato eminence, who delivered a speech this year calling out blood and soil rhetoric as anti-libertarian.

The Libertarians are hardly the largest party to turn on democracy in the Trump era. But the LPs recent endorsement of a National Divorce is not just a radical turn, but a reflection of its own fractious nature. If schisms are endemic, perhaps the best course is to embrace them. Cant agree on abortion rights? National Divorce. Cant agree on gun control? National Divorce. Theres no problem that more factionalism cant solvenot even the plight of the perennial third wheel. There is potential for us to split into many different governments, McArdle wrote last year in Reason, maybe even a libertarian state.

On second thought, better make that two.

In May, Libertarian Party delegates will meet in DC to choose a presidential candidate, and maybe even a new direction. But the convention slogan, at least, is one policy proposal theyve already delivered on: Become Ungovernable.

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The Spectacular Implosion of the Libertarian Party Mother Jones - Mother Jones