Showing posts with label Nancy Theresa Lord. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nancy Theresa Lord. Show all posts

Monday, June 1, 2020

Joanne Marie Jorgensen









Joanne Marie Jorgensen, May 1, 1957 (Libertyville, Ill.) -

VP candidate for Libertarian Party (aka Independent) (1996)

Running mate with nominee: Harry Edson Browne (1933-2006)
Popular vote: 485,798 (0.50%)
Electoral vote: 0/538

The campaign:

In many ways the 1996 election had several historic landmarks for the Libertarians, starting with their Presidential nomination process. In this year they qualified for primary election status in more states than any other third party in US history up to that point. The clear winner in this chapter of election season was financial advisor and author Harry Browne. With a campaign committee that included past Presidential and VP nominees Hospers, Clark, Bergland, Nathan, and Lord, Harry Browne seemed to be the choice of the Party's establishment. There were charges that the Party itself, which is supposed to be neutral in such cases, engineered Browne's selection over more extreme, less desirable candidates in terms of appealing to mainstream voters. Accusation of conspiracies and unethical behavior by staff members were made. Although not as split as it had been in earlier years, the Libertarians went into the 1996 election bruised and battered from their own inner wars.

One of the distinguishing paradoxes about the Libertarians is that in spite of the fact the party is comprised of a vast array of individualists with conflicting concepts of ideological purity vs. political practice, the core of their official platform has changed little over the decades. Unlike the candidates from the Big Two  when I wonder where the Democratic and Republican  candidates fall in the Left/Right spectrum given the pandering and meandering vagueness of their political stances, with Libertarians on the ballot the nuances are different-- I want to find out if they are pure or practical, do they lean more toward economic, or, civil libertarianism?

Jo Jorgensen, a Party member who had run for Congress in 1992 as a Libertarian, actively campaigned for the Vice-Presidential nomination and did not appear to have any strong competition. She developed a stump speech that was repeated throughout the year: "Republican politicians give us the political equivalent of 1-900 phone sex. They tell us that we're special. They ask us what we really want— and tell us that they want it, too. Then they start breathing heavy and getting excited by what we want. They tell us their fantasy for us. They tease us and tempt us. They arouse our passions. They tell us how much they want it and how good it is going to be. When we hang up from the 1-900 Republican Tax Cut Fantasy Line, we realize three things: they cost us a lot of money, the real thing is a lot more satisfying, and they're never going to come over ... The Democrats want to increase annual spending by $55 billion. The Republicans want to up the total by $45 billion. That $10 billion dollar difference works out to 10.5 cents daily from every American. So whoever said there isn't a dime's worth of difference between Democrats and Republicans was wrong; there is a dime's difference. One dime!"

The Party wasted no time adjusting to the World Wide Web. Jorgensen kept a campaign diary that was posted on the Browne website. I found this particular entry to be insightful and of interest as it reveals a bit of the human side of campaigning and what life must be like for candidates in the same circumstances--

Thursday, October 10. I have one of my most rewarding experiences speaking before a high school class. There are two male students in the back of the room who keep asking me great questions -- questions of interest, not of skepticism.

Finally one of them, a large guy who looks like a football player (but isn't -- I asked), says, "So what you're saying is that you think that people should be able to do ANYthing they want, as long as they don't hurt anyone else?" I reply, "Yes, that's about it." He practically jumps out of his chair and exclaims, "Wow! THIS is the party for me!!"

-- (Political) Queen for a Day --
Later that evening. After my last talk in Virginia I go out to dinner with the local Libertarians and a few audience members who tag along. The menu includes both dinner and breakfast items. Even though it's dinnertime, I ask if I can order from the breakfast menu. (I rarely eat breakfast out, so I get breakfast food whenever I can .)

The waiter informs me that they only serve breakfast in the morning, so I tell him I'll be happy ordering from the dinner menu. Jokingly, the local Libertarians ask the waiter if he knows who I am and ask if he would turn down such a request from Jack Kemp. The waiter, after talking with the chef, returns and says they will be more than happy to make anything I want, anytime I want it.

I object, explaining that this is the kind of treatment I want taken away from the politicians, and that I am running to make government so small that people wouldn't have a reason to treat politicians so specially.

But the waiter insists and seems truly hurt, so I relent and order breakfast. Here is yet one more taste I get of how our elected representatives in Washington are treated like kings and queens. No wonder none of them want to leave office once elected! 


The Browne/Jorgensen ticket made the ballot in all 50 states + DC, a very impressive achievement. Ross Perot and his Reform Party plus Ralph Nader and the Green Party delegated the Libertarians to 5th place in the final results but even so the Party achieved some milestones. Browne was not a household name but he still finished with the second highest popular vote and percentage numbers in the history of the Party up that time. Jorgensen had the third highest of number of popular votes for any female third party candidate in US history, only behind Winona LaDuke of the Green Party in 1996 and 2000.

The Browne/Jorgensen ticket had their best showings in: Arizona 1.02%, Nevada 0.96%, Alaska 0.94%, New Hampshire 0.85%, Wyoming and Colorado 0.82% each, Massachusetts 0.80%, Georgia 0.78%, and Delaware 0.76%. These results were different in that they demonstrated a wider regional appeal than just the Far West as in the past.

Jo Jorgensen is now the 2020 Presidential candidate for the Libertarian Party, finally breaking the glass ceiling of that party for the top spot.

Election history:
1992 - US House of Representatives (SC) (Libertarian Party) - defeated
2020 - US President (Libertarian Party) - pending

Other occupations: academic lecturer in psychology, computer systems business

Notes:
Was on a roller hockey team.
Can fly planes.
Grew up in a conservative Republican family.
Courted by conservative Democrats to run for Congress in 1998 but apparently it did not happen.

Saturday, April 25, 2020

Nancy Theresa Lord














Nancy Theresa Lord, February 8, 1952 (Silver Spring, Md.) -

VP candidate for Libertarian Party (aka Independent) (1992)

Running mate with nominee: Andre Verne Marrou (b. 1938)
Popular vote: 290,087 (0.28%)
Electoral vote: 0/538

The campaign:

In a contested convention, 1988 Libertarian VP Andre Morrou emerged as the 1992 Presidential nominee.

The nomination for running-mate was even more contested. Morrou's personal choice was passed up and after multiple ballots the Party selected Nancy Lord over more established figures. Raised in the Jewish faith (just like 1972 VP Tonie Nathan), Lord was impressively a lawyer with a medical degree. 1980 Libertarian Presidential candidate Ed Clark had backed Lord for the VP position. In 1992 she was a member of the National Rifle Association and the National Abortion Rights Action League-- that might seem like a strange combination for most members of the major parties, but perfectly in the groove for Libertarians.

By 1992 the Libertarian Party had been around for over two decades and even by then had emerged as America's most stable third party. They were not going to go away. In this election year they were a bit handicapped financially without a millionaire or household name on the ticket, nor did they seem to have any campaign investment angels. On top of that, Ross Perot was grabbing most of the voters who were discontented with the major parties, and 1988 Libertarian Presidential nominee Ron Paul endorsed Pat Buchanan in the 1992 Republican primaries.

Hopefully this won't insult my Libertarian friends, but the Marrou/Lord ticket superficially appeared to me to have a similar dynamic as the Clinton/Gore team. Marrou being the outgoing charmer with a sense of humor. But also the one to go on the attack. Lord being the more reserved policy wonk. In the course of shaking hands while on the street she was known to pay more attention to dogs the people were walking than the potential voters. That indicator would be foreshadowing her unfortunate dog legal experience a couple decades later.

Lord told reporter Hal Marcovitz the Libertarians will win the White House by 2000, or 2004 at most. "We want to be the governing party by the 21st century," said Lord. "If we're not, I would be concerned."

Reporters noted Lord's candid, honest comments and found her very quotable. Some examples:

Sometimes I get very tired of hearing myself talk. Campaigning is very tiring. Not being in control of where you sleep, or what you eat. It wears you out.

[After her car was broken into and robbed in Manhattan]: If Bill Clinton's car had gotten broken into it would have been on the national news. But my car gets broken into and it's just another larceny.

Every bad thing does not need a law against it. You don't make something illegal just because it's stupid.

We want the government out of our personal lives and out of our economic lives. When you centralize power, you attract people who like to wield it. They produce very benevolent reasons, but they are after power.


Marrou had apparently made some enemies within the Party and he was nearly removed from the ticket. There were serious charges against him involving unpaid child support, a contempt of court outstanding warrant, more multiple marriages than he originally claimed, spending campaign money without approval, and mismanagement of  personal finances. But rather than give him his day in Party court, they decided to allow him to remain on the ticket for fear of generating bad publicity.

The national ticket disappointing results dipping down to 0.28% would serve as one of their lower point elections, but their percentages have all been better than that ever since. But in the local results the Party enjoyed some actual wins, plus higher percentages. One idea was that Perot voters continued to vote for third parties as they went down-ballot and the Libertarians were the ones to get the most benefit.

On the Presidential ballot in all 50 states + DC for only the second time, the Libertarians had their best showings in: New Hampshire (0.66%), Colorado (0.55%), Alaska (0.53%), Arizona (0.46%), Pennsylvania ; California (0.43% each), and Wyoming (0.42%).

Election history:
1990 - Mayor of Washington, DC (Libertarian Party)- defeated
2010 - Nye County (Nev.) District Attorney (Republican) - primary - defeated
2012 - Nye County (Nev.) District Attorney (Republican) - primary - defeated
2012 - District Court Judge, District 5, Department 1 (Nev.) - defeated

Other occupations: attorney, board of directors for the National Association for the Reform of Marijuana Law (NORML), Abbott Laboratories employee, board of directors for the Fully Informed Jury Association

Notes:
Demonstrated against the Vietnam War before joining the Libertarians.
Also called Nancy Lord Johnson for awhile after marrying former militia figure James "J.J." Johnson
 ca1997.
Was embroiled in Nye County, Nev. court cases ca2012 regarding charges resulting from hoarding
 about 40 dogs.