Republican Liberty Caucus

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Republican Liberty Caucus
Founded 1991
Headquarters Washington, D.C., U.S.
Key people

Dave Nalle, Chairman
Eduardo J. Lopez-Reyes, Vice Chairman
Matthew Nye, Treasurer

Corie C. Whalen Secretary

The Republican Liberty Caucus (RLC) is a political action organization dedicated to promoting the ideals of individual liberty, limited government and free market economics within the Republican Party in the United States.[1] It is part of the libertarian wing of the Republican Party.[2] It also operates a political action committee, the RLC-USA PAC.[3]

The organization was founded in 1991 and has chapters in many states.[4] In 2011, the organization hosted its National Convention in Arlington, Virginia.[5] The 2013 convention was held in Austin, Texas and the 2015 National Convention will be hosted in Portland, Maine.

Issues

The RLC works within the Republican Party to influence the party to adopt the RLC's agenda.[6] As one activist put it, "We're trying to reintroduce the Republican platform to the Republican Party."[7]

The RLC favors individual freedom and limited government.[8] Specifically, the RLC favors reduced government intrusion, lower taxes, elimination of federal agencies, less regulation, a strong national defense with fewer military bases abroad, and no foreign aid.[9]

In 2010, the Republican Liberty Caucus of Texas denounced the new state Republican Party platform that supported criminalization of sodomy and making same-sex marriage a felony.[10]

Leadership

# Chairman Term State[11] Notes[12]
1Barbara Rittberg1991–1992Florida
2Roger MacBride1992–1995Florida
3Ron Paul1995–2000Texas
4Chuck Muth2000–2001Nevada
5Ron Paul2001–2002Texas (Honorary)
6Douglas Lorenz2002–2004California
7Bill Westmiller2004–2009California
8Dave Nalle2009–2013Texas
9Matthew Nye2013–PresentFlorida

Endorsements

Presidential endorsements

The Republican Liberty Caucus' process for endorsing presidential candidates is described in the organization's Bylaws and Rules:

A candidate for President of the United States may be endorsed by the Caucus by a 2/3 vote of the active and voting Chartered state’s executive committees. The national Secretary shall notify all Chartered states of a favorable national board proposal for endorsement and state executive officers shall inform the Secretary of the approval or denial by their executive committee within 60 days.[13]

Since the Caucus' founding in 1991, only two candidates have reached this level of support: Steve Forbes 1996 and Ron Paul in 2012. When Forbes ran again in 2000, the organization remained neutral in that primary and did not endorse another specific Republican candidate in any presidential primary until December 30, 2011 when the RLC endorsed Ron Paul for President.[14]

Notable 2012 endorsements

On November 2, 2011, the Republican Liberty Caucus announced its first two endorsements in the 2012 election: Barry Hinckley, ran in the Republican primary in Rhode Island, and Brian K. Hill, ran in the Republican primary in Connecticut.[15][16] The Republican nominee in Rhode Island challenged Democratic United States Senator Sheldon Whitehouse while the Republican nominee in Connecticut ran for an open seat being vacated by independent United States Senator Joseph Lieberman.[17]

Notable 2014 endorsements

See also

References

External links

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