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John Hospers Turns Ninety-One

John Hospers, the Libertarian Party’s first Presidential candidate, turned 91 yesterday. He is best known for winning one electoral vote (a “faithless elector”) in the election of 1972.

I know it’s late, but happy birthday, Mr. Hospers!

You can read the Ballot Access News article here.

10 Comments

  1. Third Party Revolution June 19, 2009

    If he were to get old enough to get media attention, then he could bring more attention on the LP.

  2. Jim Davidson June 13, 2009

    John Hospers has a low opinion of anarchists and radical libertarians. I therefore have a low opinion of him.

    Faithless is evidently not a trait that can be illustrated by a single act. The electorate doesn’t deserve faith, hasn’t earn faith, let alone trust.

  3. Richard Cooper June 10, 2009

    John Hospers wrote one of the first books I read on libertarianism and I still have it. Time to reread it.

  4. Gene Berkman June 10, 2009

    Happy Birthday, Dr John!

    I was at Denver in 1972 and voted to nominate John Hospers for President, and I did volunteer work on his campaign.

    Roger MacBride’s electoral vote for Hospers – and against Nixon – was a little bright spot after the horror of Nixon’s re-election.

  5. Richard Cooper June 10, 2009

    I think what is meant is faithless to the party that nominated them as electors.

  6. Morgan Brykein Post author | June 10, 2009

    The unbiased term is seen as “faithless” because they are not faithful to the electorate, although, the electoral college isn’t faithful to the people anyways, what with the “winner take all” system and all.

  7. Third Party Revolution June 10, 2009

    We here at Third Party Revolution would like to wish a Happy Birthday to John Hospers!

  8. libertariangirl June 10, 2009

    HAPPY BDAY HOSPERS!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  9. Jim Davidson June 10, 2009

    Given the alternative of casting his vote for the insidious evil Richard Nixon, the guy who came up with the “war on drugs,” ended the last tie to the gold standard, ruined the private railroads with Amtrak and Conrail, ramped up the Vietnam war with carpet bombing of Cambodia, and engaged in criminal conspiracies to obstruct justice, among his many other crimes, I think Roger MacBride did the right thing. Faithlessness isn’t how I’d describe his action.

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