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Independence Party of Minnesota

The Independence Party of Minnesota (often abbreviated IPM, MNIP or IP), formerly the Reform Party of Minnesota, is a political party in the U.S. state of Minnesota. It was the party of former Minnesota governor Jesse Ventura when he left the Reform Party.

Independence Party of Minnesota
ChairmanPhilip Fuehrer
Founded1992; 31 years ago (1992)
IdeologyClassical liberalism
Radical centrism
Political positionCenter
National affiliationAlliance Party
ColorsOrange
State Senate
0 / 67
State House
0 / 134
U.S. Senate
0 / 2
U.S. House
0 / 8
Website
www.mnip.org

Originally an affiliate of the Reform Party, the IPM was later affiliated with the Independence Party of America and for a time had no national affiliation. But since 2019, he has joined the Alliance Party. The party has fielded candidates for most state-wide races and was considered a major party by the state from 1994 to 2014.[1] It lost that status when none of its state-wide candidates won 5% of the vote in the 2014 gubernatorial election.

The party, which was represented in the U.S. Senate by Dean Barkley in 2002–2003, nominated former U.S. Representative Tim Penny as its candidate in the 2002 gubernatorial election, Peter Hutchinson in 2006 and Tom Horner in 2010.

Despite its name, the IPM does not advocate secession from the United States.

History edit

The party was formed in 1992 by Minnesota supporters of Ross Perot, and fielded Dean Barkley that year as a candidate for a seat in the US House of Representatives. Other supporters led by Don Dow, State Director, and Victoria Staten, Assistant State Director and Ross Perot's spokesperson on NAFTA, worked as part of United We Stand America, and some eventually found their way to the Independence Party after the elections. Over the following years, the party began to field candidates in other state races. In 1995 the IPM affiliated with the national Reform Party and renamed itself the Reform Party of Minnesota on June 22, 1996.

The state party carried that name until it disaffiliated from the national party in 2000 due to factional dissent and the increasing influence of Pat Buchanan within the party. The party immediately changed its name back to Independence Party on March 4, 2000.[2] After his most influential opponents left the party, Buchanan went on to become the Reform Party's candidate for president.

 
Independence Party of Minnesota's 2006 convention at Midway Stadium.

On 2004's Super Tuesday, March 2, the party held caucuses around the state along with Minnesota's other three parties. Since the organization had no national party affiliation, it merely ran a straw poll to gauge the opinions of members with regard to the available presidential candidates in the 2004 election. For the poll, the group used instant-runoff voting, a voting method that has been gaining interest in the state. Additionally, the party had several fairly progressive agenda items to vote on. For a bit of levity, there was also a vote on the mascot to use for the party. Three top possibilities were the bison, hawk, and white buffalo. Technology was also involved in the IPM's caucusing, as it used the Internet to conduct a two-day online "virtual caucus" for people who were unable to attend the evening of Super Tuesday.

On March 5, 2004, the party announced that the presidential winner was John Edwards, who had privately circulated his decision to withdraw shortly before IP members voted. The Super Tuesday ballot was probably the first statewide experiment in instant-runoff voting. The Bison, to be named Indy, won the mascot vote, out-polling the nearest competitors by a 19% margin.

In May 2005, Peter Hutchinson, who was Minnesota Finance Commissioner in the Rudy Perpich administration, announced that he was planning to seek the Independence Party's nomination for governor in the 2006 election. Hutchinson finished 3rd of 6 earning 141,735 votes for 6.4% of the total vote.[3]

As of 2006, the party has had two members in the Minnesota Senate. Bob Lessard of International Falls, joined the party in 2001 after he was re-elected to the Senate as an independent with 54.3% of the vote.[4] He did not seek re-election in 2002. Also in the 2002 election, Sheila Kiscaden of Rochester was turned down for endorsement for re-election to the Minnesota Senate by the Republican Party. She joined the IP and won re-election, giving the Independence Party its first victory in a Minnesota legislative election. She joined the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party in January 2006. There have been no members of the IPM in the Minnesota House of Representatives.

In the 2006 elections IP 5th district congressional candidate Tammy Lee received 51,456 votes for 21.01% of the total vote.[5] Lee's strong showing resulted in part from her unusually strong (for third parties) fundraising, Lee raised $228,938 [6] for her run.

In May 2008, a "Draft Dean Barkley" movement started to encourage the former senator to run again. He accepted, and finished third, winning a significant 15% of all votes cast. His candidacy had a significant impact on a race in which the eventual winner Al Franken and then-incumbent Senator Norm Coleman were separated by only 312 votes. Two other federal candidates, David Dillon in the 3rd congressional district and Bob Anderson in the 6th congressional district, received 10% of the vote in their races. 2008 is the high-water mark for the Minnesota Independence Party in both the number of federal candidates running and the percent of vote received—both key measures of the base of support.

In 2010 gubernatorial candidate Tom Horner, a former public relations executive and chief of staff to U.S. Senator David Durenberger received 12% of the vote,[7] nearly doubling the total of previous IP gubernatorial candidate Peter Hutchinson. Horner polled as high as 18% in the weeks leading up to the election,[8] but was significantly outspent by the GOP and DFL candidates and the third-party expenditure groups supporting their candidacies. Horner did receive endorsement from three of the state's five living ex-governors: Republicans Arne Carlson and Al Quie as well as Ventura. Former U.S. Senate candidate and prominent Minnesota attorney Mike Ciresi also endorsed Horner.[9] Most Minnesota newspapers including the Star Tribune, St. Paul Pioneer Press, St. Cloud Times, Duluth News Tribune, and Rochester Post-Bulletin, as well as North Dakota's Grand Forks Herald endorsed the IP candidate.[10]

In 2014, the Independence Party endorsed several candidates for state and national office: Hannah Nicollet for governor, Kevin Terrell for U.S. Senate, attorney Brandan Borgos for Minnesota Attorney General, whistleblower Pat Dean for state auditor, Bob Helland for secretary of state, John Denney for US congress CD-6, Paula Overby for US congress CD-2 and Iraq War veteran Dave Thomas for US congress CD-4.[11]

In 2016, the party endorsed Evan McMullin, a former CIA agent and former chief policy director for the House Republican Conference, for President.[12]

Platform edit

The Independence Party of Minnesota tends to lean conservative with regards to taxation and other fiscal matters. For example, "personal responsibility" is a core principle of the party as is a "[G]overnment that is fiscally responsible: equitable in its collection of taxes, careful in its spending, and honest in its financial reporting." Many IP candidates have campaigned for tax reform that produces more stable revenues for the state. The IP platform states, "We support government budgets that are structurally balanced and avoid shifting of expenses or borrowing to make them appear balanced."

In social policy the party tends to take more liberal-libertarian positions on issues such as abortion, gay marriage, and civil rights and liberties. One of its core principles is that "All citizens deserve equal rights, protection, and opportunity under the law. In our party and public affairs, we are ever vigilant to promote only those rules and laws which assure equity and freedom for all citizens." [1]

Jesse Ventura described the party, as well as his own personal philosophy, as "fiscally conservative and socially liberal."

At the party's state convention in 2012, delegates passed three new resolutions. One addressed the party's opposition to raiding dedicated state funds to balance general obligations. A second expressed frustration with the overuse of constitutional amendments. A third proposed eliminating legislative pay in the event of a state shutdown like the one that occurred in the summer of 2011. Party delegates also adopted two standing resolutions against both the marriage amendment and the voter ID amendment on the state ballot in November 2012.[13]

During the 2013 IP convention the body amended the party platform to support the legalization, taxation and regulation of marijuana.[14] Delegates also lifted the party's prohibition on receiving money from political action committees, citing the need to instead fight for transparency and accountability in Minnesota campaign spending in the aftermath of Citizens United.[15]

Partners edit

The Independence Party of Minnesota joined the Minnesotans United for All Families coalition in 2011 after chair Mark Jenkins announced the party's official opposition to the marriage amendment, citing the party's own platform in its opposition.[16]

The IP is also a longtime supporter of ranked choice voting (RCV) and FairVote Minnesota, which seeks to expand RCV throughout Minnesota. The party uses RCV to conduct intraparty endorsements including delegates' decision to "not endorse" for U.S. Senate in 2012.

Following the party's official vote to oppose the 2012 voter ID amendment, the campaign seeking to defeat the amendment, "Our Vote, Our Future", announced former IP gubernatorial candidate Tim Penny as one of its campaign co-chairs.[17] Another former IP gubernatorial candidate, Tom Horner, was named as a member of the group's advisory committee.[18]

On May 4, 2019, the Independence Party of Minnesota merged with Alliance Party, joining other third parties including the Modern Whig Party, the American Party of South Carolina, and the American Moderates.[19]

Notable members edit

  • Jesse Ventura – Governor of Minnesota: 1999–2003.
  • Dean Barkley – U.S. Senator from Minnesota: 2002–2003 (Appointed by Gov. Ventura to fill a vacancy due to Sen. Paul Wellstone's death)
  • Mae Schunk – Lt. Governor of Minnesota: 1999–2003
  • Tim Penny – Former Democratic Congressman and 2002 Independence Party candidate for governor

Officers edit

  • Philip Fuehrer, State Chair [20]
  • Ben Thome, state director
  • Sally Paulsen, state treasurer
  • Jan Beliveau, state secretary

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Minnesota's Major & Minor Political Parties". Minnesota Office of the Secretary of State. Retrieved 2010-05-08.
  2. ^ "Reform Party votes to leave national group". Saint Paul Pioneer Press. 2000-03-05. Retrieved 2010-05-26.
  3. ^ . Minnesota Secretary of Stat. 2006-12-16. Archived from the original on 2010-05-14. Retrieved 2010-05-08.
  4. ^ Winger, Richard (2001-04-01), , Ballot Access News, 17 (1), archived from the original on 2002-01-27
  5. ^ . Minnesota Secretary of Stat. 2006-12-16. Archived from the original on May 13, 2010. Retrieved 2010-05-08.
  6. ^ Federal Election Commission (2006-12-31). "Candidate (H6MN05282) Summary Reports – 2005–2006 Cycle". Retrieved 2010-05-08.
  7. ^ "Election results: Minnesota: Governor". Minnesota Public Radio. 2010-11-03. Retrieved 2012-06-29.
  8. ^ "Dayton slumps, Horner surges in KSTP-TV poll". MinnPost. 2010-09-16. Retrieved 2012-06-29.
  9. ^ "Surprising poll results -- and a Ventura endorsement -- latest developments in governor's race". MinnPost. 2010-10-22. Retrieved 2012-06-29.
  10. ^ "Horner picks up flurry of newspaper endorsements". Politics in Minnesota. 2010-10-18. Retrieved 2012-06-29.
  11. ^ . The Republic. Associated Press. January 28, 2015. Archived from the original on February 5, 2015. Retrieved February 5, 2015.
  12. ^ Hellmann, Jessie (August 14, 2016). "Minnesota party picks McMullin as presidential nominee". The Hill. Retrieved September 5, 2016.
  13. ^ "Independence Party says no to voter ID and marriage amendments". Pioneer Press. 2012-06-23. Retrieved 2012-06-29.
  14. ^ "IP to push for the legalization of marijuana in Minnesota". Minnesota Public Radio. 2013-06-02. Retrieved 2013-06-02.
  15. ^ "Independence Party elects leaders, amends platform at state convention".
  16. ^ "Independence Party joining statewide coalition opposing state marriage amendment". MinnPost. 2011-08-23. Retrieved 2012-06-29.
  17. ^ "Voter ID factions gather supporters, devise strategies". Star Tribune. 2012-06-27. Retrieved 2012-06-29.
  18. ^ "Mondale, Carlson will lead anti-voter ID campaign". Politics in Minnesota. 2012-06-26. Retrieved 2012-06-29.
  19. ^ Twitter https://twitter.com/alliancepty/status/1125413303377899520. Retrieved 2020-07-26. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  20. ^ "Chairman of Minnesota Independence Party resigns". InForum News. 28 October 2015. Retrieved 28 October 2015.

External links edit

  • Independence Party of Minnesota

independence, party, minnesota, this, article, unclear, citation, style, references, used, made, clearer, with, different, consistent, style, citation, footnoting, february, 2020, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, often, abbreviated, mnip, formerly. This article has an unclear citation style The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation and footnoting February 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Independence Party of Minnesota often abbreviated IPM MNIP or IP formerly the Reform Party of Minnesota is a political party in the U S state of Minnesota It was the party of former Minnesota governor Jesse Ventura when he left the Reform Party Independence Party of MinnesotaChairmanPhilip FuehrerFounded1992 31 years ago 1992 IdeologyClassical liberalismRadical centrismPolitical positionCenterNational affiliationAlliance PartyColorsOrangeState Senate0 67State House0 134U S Senate0 2U S House0 8Websitewww wbr mnip wbr orgPolitics of MinnesotaPolitical partiesElectionsOriginally an affiliate of the Reform Party the IPM was later affiliated with the Independence Party of America and for a time had no national affiliation But since 2019 he has joined the Alliance Party The party has fielded candidates for most state wide races and was considered a major party by the state from 1994 to 2014 1 It lost that status when none of its state wide candidates won 5 of the vote in the 2014 gubernatorial election The party which was represented in the U S Senate by Dean Barkley in 2002 2003 nominated former U S Representative Tim Penny as its candidate in the 2002 gubernatorial election Peter Hutchinson in 2006 and Tom Horner in 2010 Despite its name the IPM does not advocate secession from the United States Contents 1 History 2 Platform 3 Partners 4 Notable members 5 Officers 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory editThe party was formed in 1992 by Minnesota supporters of Ross Perot and fielded Dean Barkley that year as a candidate for a seat in the US House of Representatives Other supporters led by Don Dow State Director and Victoria Staten Assistant State Director and Ross Perot s spokesperson on NAFTA worked as part of United We Stand America and some eventually found their way to the Independence Party after the elections Over the following years the party began to field candidates in other state races In 1995 the IPM affiliated with the national Reform Party and renamed itself the Reform Party of Minnesota on June 22 1996 The state party carried that name until it disaffiliated from the national party in 2000 due to factional dissent and the increasing influence of Pat Buchanan within the party The party immediately changed its name back to Independence Party on March 4 2000 2 After his most influential opponents left the party Buchanan went on to become the Reform Party s candidate for president nbsp Independence Party of Minnesota s 2006 convention at Midway Stadium On 2004 s Super Tuesday March 2 the party held caucuses around the state along with Minnesota s other three parties Since the organization had no national party affiliation it merely ran a straw poll to gauge the opinions of members with regard to the available presidential candidates in the 2004 election For the poll the group used instant runoff voting a voting method that has been gaining interest in the state Additionally the party had several fairly progressive agenda items to vote on For a bit of levity there was also a vote on the mascot to use for the party Three top possibilities were the bison hawk and white buffalo Technology was also involved in the IPM s caucusing as it used the Internet to conduct a two day online virtual caucus for people who were unable to attend the evening of Super Tuesday On March 5 2004 the party announced that the presidential winner was John Edwards who had privately circulated his decision to withdraw shortly before IP members voted The Super Tuesday ballot was probably the first statewide experiment in instant runoff voting The Bison to be named Indy won the mascot vote out polling the nearest competitors by a 19 margin In May 2005 Peter Hutchinson who was Minnesota Finance Commissioner in the Rudy Perpich administration announced that he was planning to seek the Independence Party s nomination for governor in the 2006 election Hutchinson finished 3rd of 6 earning 141 735 votes for 6 4 of the total vote 3 As of 2006 the party has had two members in the Minnesota Senate Bob Lessard of International Falls joined the party in 2001 after he was re elected to the Senate as an independent with 54 3 of the vote 4 He did not seek re election in 2002 Also in the 2002 election Sheila Kiscaden of Rochester was turned down for endorsement for re election to the Minnesota Senate by the Republican Party She joined the IP and won re election giving the Independence Party its first victory in a Minnesota legislative election She joined the Democratic Farmer Labor Party in January 2006 There have been no members of the IPM in the Minnesota House of Representatives In the 2006 elections IP 5th district congressional candidate Tammy Lee received 51 456 votes for 21 01 of the total vote 5 Lee s strong showing resulted in part from her unusually strong for third parties fundraising Lee raised 228 938 6 for her run In May 2008 a Draft Dean Barkley movement started on the web to encourage the former senator to run again He accepted and finished third winning a significant 15 of all votes cast His candidacy had a significant impact on a race in which the eventual winner Al Franken and then incumbent Senator Norm Coleman were separated by only 312 votes Two other federal candidates David Dillon in the 3rd congressional district and Bob Anderson in the 6th congressional district received 10 of the vote in their races 2008 is the high water mark for the Minnesota Independence Party in both the number of federal candidates running and the percent of vote received both key measures of the base of support In 2010 gubernatorial candidate Tom Horner a former public relations executive and chief of staff to U S Senator David Durenberger received 12 of the vote 7 nearly doubling the total of previous IP gubernatorial candidate Peter Hutchinson Horner polled as high as 18 in the weeks leading up to the election 8 but was significantly outspent by the GOP and DFL candidates and the third party expenditure groups supporting their candidacies Horner did receive endorsement from three of the state s five living ex governors Republicans Arne Carlson and Al Quie as well as Ventura Former U S Senate candidate and prominent Minnesota attorney Mike Ciresi also endorsed Horner 9 Most Minnesota newspapers including the Star Tribune St Paul Pioneer Press St Cloud Times Duluth News Tribune and Rochester Post Bulletin as well as North Dakota s Grand Forks Herald endorsed the IP candidate 10 In 2014 the Independence Party endorsed several candidates for state and national office Hannah Nicollet for governor Kevin Terrell for U S Senate attorney Brandan Borgos for Minnesota Attorney General whistleblower Pat Dean for state auditor Bob Helland for secretary of state John Denney for US congress CD 6 Paula Overby for US congress CD 2 and Iraq War veteran Dave Thomas for US congress CD 4 11 In 2016 the party endorsed Evan McMullin a former CIA agent and former chief policy director for the House Republican Conference for President 12 Platform editThe Independence Party of Minnesota tends to lean conservative with regards to taxation and other fiscal matters For example personal responsibility is a core principle of the party as is a G overnment that is fiscally responsible equitable in its collection of taxes careful in its spending and honest in its financial reporting Many IP candidates have campaigned for tax reform that produces more stable revenues for the state The IP platform states We support government budgets that are structurally balanced and avoid shifting of expenses or borrowing to make them appear balanced In social policy the party tends to take more liberal libertarian positions on issues such as abortion gay marriage and civil rights and liberties One of its core principles is that All citizens deserve equal rights protection and opportunity under the law In our party and public affairs we are ever vigilant to promote only those rules and laws which assure equity and freedom for all citizens 1 Jesse Ventura described the party as well as his own personal philosophy as fiscally conservative and socially liberal At the party s state convention in 2012 delegates passed three new resolutions One addressed the party s opposition to raiding dedicated state funds to balance general obligations A second expressed frustration with the overuse of constitutional amendments A third proposed eliminating legislative pay in the event of a state shutdown like the one that occurred in the summer of 2011 2 Party delegates also adopted two standing resolutions against both the marriage amendment and the voter ID amendment on the state ballot in November 2012 13 During the 2013 IP convention the body amended the party platform to support the legalization taxation and regulation of marijuana 14 Delegates also lifted the party s prohibition on receiving money from political action committees citing the need to instead fight for transparency and accountability in Minnesota campaign spending in the aftermath of Citizens United 15 Partners editThe Independence Party of Minnesota joined the Minnesotans United for All Families coalition in 2011 after chair Mark Jenkins announced the party s official opposition to the marriage amendment citing the party s own platform in its opposition 16 The IP is also a longtime supporter of ranked choice voting RCV and FairVote Minnesota which seeks to expand RCV throughout Minnesota 3 The party uses RCV to conduct intraparty endorsements including delegates decision to not endorse for U S Senate in 2012 Following the party s official vote to oppose the 2012 voter ID amendment the campaign seeking to defeat the amendment Our Vote Our Future announced former IP gubernatorial candidate Tim Penny as one of its campaign co chairs 17 Another former IP gubernatorial candidate Tom Horner was named as a member of the group s advisory committee 18 On May 4 2019 the Independence Party of Minnesota merged with Alliance Party joining other third parties including the Modern Whig Party the American Party of South Carolina and the American Moderates 19 Notable members editJesse Ventura Governor of Minnesota 1999 2003 Dean Barkley U S Senator from Minnesota 2002 2003 Appointed by Gov Ventura to fill a vacancy due to Sen Paul Wellstone s death Mae Schunk Lt Governor of Minnesota 1999 2003 Tim Penny Former Democratic Congressman and 2002 Independence Party candidate for governorOfficers editPhilip Fuehrer State Chair 20 Ben Thome state director Sally Paulsen state treasurer Jan Beliveau state secretarySee also editPolitics of Minnesota List of political parties in MinnesotaReferences edit Minnesota s Major amp Minor Political Parties Minnesota Office of the Secretary of State Retrieved 2010 05 08 Reform Party votes to leave national group Saint Paul Pioneer Press 2000 03 05 Retrieved 2010 05 26 Official Results General Election Nov 7 2006 Statewide Results for Governor Minnesota Secretary of Stat 2006 12 16 Archived from the original on 2010 05 14 Retrieved 2010 05 08 Winger Richard 2001 04 01 Independents Elected Ballot Access News 17 1 archived from the original on 2002 01 27 Official Results General Election Nov 7 2006 Results from Congressional District 05 Minnesota Secretary of Stat 2006 12 16 Archived from the original on May 13 2010 Retrieved 2010 05 08 Federal Election Commission 2006 12 31 Candidate H6MN05282 Summary Reports 2005 2006 Cycle Retrieved 2010 05 08 Election results Minnesota Governor Minnesota Public Radio 2010 11 03 Retrieved 2012 06 29 Dayton slumps Horner surges in KSTP TV poll MinnPost 2010 09 16 Retrieved 2012 06 29 Surprising poll results and a Ventura endorsement latest developments in governor s race MinnPost 2010 10 22 Retrieved 2012 06 29 Horner picks up flurry of newspaper endorsements Politics in Minnesota 2010 10 18 Retrieved 2012 06 29 Ventura saddened over Independence Party s loss of major party status in Minnesota The Republic Associated Press January 28 2015 Archived from the original on February 5 2015 Retrieved February 5 2015 Hellmann Jessie August 14 2016 Minnesota party picks McMullin as presidential nominee The Hill Retrieved September 5 2016 Independence Party says no to voter ID and marriage amendments Pioneer Press 2012 06 23 Retrieved 2012 06 29 IP to push for the legalization of marijuana in Minnesota Minnesota Public Radio 2013 06 02 Retrieved 2013 06 02 Independence Party elects leaders amends platform at state convention Independence Party joining statewide coalition opposing state marriage amendment MinnPost 2011 08 23 Retrieved 2012 06 29 Voter ID factions gather supporters devise strategies Star Tribune 2012 06 27 Retrieved 2012 06 29 Mondale Carlson will lead anti voter ID campaign Politics in Minnesota 2012 06 26 Retrieved 2012 06 29 Twitter https twitter com alliancepty status 1125413303377899520 Retrieved 2020 07 26 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Chairman of Minnesota Independence Party resigns InForum News 28 October 2015 Retrieved 28 October 2015 External links editIndependence Party of Minnesota Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Independence Party of Minnesota amp oldid 1174065487, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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