Libertarian Party of New Hampshire

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Libertarian_Party_of_New_Hampshire an entity of type: Thing

The Libertarian Party of New Hampshire (LPNH) is the New Hampshire affiliate of the national Libertarian Party (LP). Active since its foundation in 1972, it is the third-largest political party in the state having had multiple members elected to the New Hampshire House of Representatives as well as being ballot-qualified multiple times. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Libertarian Party of New Hampshire
rdf:langString Libertarian Party of New Hampshire
rdf:langString Libertarian Party of New Hampshire
rdf:langString Gov. Gary Johnson
rdf:langString Libertarian Party NH
xsd:integer 6041435
xsd:integer 1120790086
rdf:langString live
rdf:langString dead
rdf:langString yes
rdf:langString LPNH
rdf:langString GovGaryJohnson
rdf:langString LPNH
rdf:langString left
rdf:langString Jeremy Kauffman sitting for an interview
rdf:langString Portrait photo of Jilletta Jarvis
rdf:langString Jeremy Kauffman in May 2022
rdf:langString LPNH Chair Jilletta Jarvis
rdf:langString Nolan Pelletier
rdf:langString United States
xsd:date 2021-06-07
rdf:langString vertical
xsd:date 1974-08-04
xsd:decimal 1401991776030887936
xsd:decimal 1401994925982597120
rdf:langString Jeremy Kauffman in May 2022.png
rdf:langString Jilletta Jarvis, 2018 .jpg
rdf:langString LP New Hampshire logo.png
xsd:integer 250
rdf:langString I'm sorry, but no. This isn't what libertarianism means to millions of Americans – pushing a disturbing and out of touch stance on child labor is entirely detached from what people need in America today. This does not advance liberty, or help change people's opinions.
rdf:langString Legalize child labor. Children will learn more on a job site than in public school.
rdf:langString Voter registration
rdf:langString Electoral performance
rdf:langString left
xsd:integer 150 250
rdf:langString The Libertarian Party of New Hampshire (LPNH) is the New Hampshire affiliate of the national Libertarian Party (LP). Active since its foundation in 1972, it is the third-largest political party in the state having had multiple members elected to the New Hampshire House of Representatives as well as being ballot-qualified multiple times. The party became ballot-qualified after receiving over three percent of the popular vote in the 1990 gubernatorial election and maintained that status in the 1992 and 1994 elections. The party elected multiple members to the state house with the use of electoral fusion with the two major parties. The party's caucus in the state house was officially recognized from 1992 to 1995, and Representative Don Gorman served as the party's first state house leader. The party lost its ballot status after the 1996 gubernatorial election. The party regained its ballot-qualified status after Max Abramson received enough support in the 2016 gubernatorial election. The party caucus in the state house was re-recognized in 2017, after Caleb Q. Dyer, Joseph Stallcop, and Brandon Phinney changed their political affiliations to Libertarian. However, the party lost its ballot-qualified status after the 2018 gubernatorial election and all of its members in the state house lost reelection in the 2018 state house elections. Jiletta Jarvis, a former gubernatorial candidate, attempted to form a new affiliate in 2021, and claimed to have support from Joe Bishop-Henchman, the chair of the national Libertarian Party, but Bishop-Henchman denied supporting her. Bishop-Henchman resigned after an unsuccessful vote to disaffiliate the existing New Hampshire Libertarian Party and Jarvis handed control of party materials back to the existing affiliate. Since 2020 the party has been subjected to controversy due to its Twitter account.
xsd:date 2021-06-07
xsd:integer 2021
rdf:langString LPNH
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 91629
xsd:date 1974-08-04
xsd:gYear 1974

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