Justice Party (United States)

The Justice Party USA is a political party in the United States. It was organized in November 2011 by a group of political activists including former mayor of Salt Lake City Rocky Anderson as an alternative to what he saw as a duopoly of the two major political parties. One of the major goals of the Justice Party is removing corporate influence and other concentrated wealth from politics.[4] In 2012 the party nominated Rocky Anderson for president and Luis J. Rodriguez for vice-president. As of May 2020, the party's website had gone inactive.

Justice Party
Co-chairLaura Bonham
Jonathan Ruga[1]
FounderRocky Anderson
FoundedNovember 2011 (2011-11)
Split fromDemocratic Party
IdeologyCivil libertarianism
Progressivism
Social democracy
Political positionLeft-wing[2]
Colors     Teal
Slogan"Economic, Environmental, and Social Justice for All"[3]
Seats in the Senate
0 / 100
Seats in the House
0 / 435
Governorships
0 / 50
State Upper Houses
0 / 1,972
State Lower Houses
0 / 5,411
Website
justicepartyusa.org
  • Politics of United States
  • Political parties
  • Elections

History

Former mayor of Salt Lake City Rocky Anderson is the founder of the Justice Party and the party's 2012 presidential candidate

In December 2011, it became a qualified party in Mississippi, the first state to recognize the party.[5] From a small beginning, 30 persons at the launching event with no TV crew covering it, the party was able to put its founder Rocky Anderson on the ballot in 15 states and secure official write-in status in 15 additional states. It was the fifth largest third party in terms of presidential ballot access in the 2012 presidential election.[6] On October 23, Anderson faced off with other third party candidates Gary Johnson of the Libertarian Party, Jill Stein of the Green Party and Virgil Goode of the Constitution Party for a debate moderated by former CNN talk-show host Larry King.[3] They met again to debate on November 5, this time hosted by Ralph Nader.[7]

The party released a draft statement endorsing Bernie Sanders for the 2016 Democratic nomination rather than nominating its own candidate, but no official announcement was made.[8]

Ideology and positions

The Justice Party was created with the motto "economic, environmental, and social justice for all".[3] The party was designed with the intention of shifting government back to a focus on the Constitution by removing corporate influence in politics.[3]

Economic justice

The Justice Party supports campaign finance reform and does not accept any corporate funding. The Justice Party supports a constitutional amendment to abolish corporate personhood through Move to Amend. The party is in favor of a financial transaction tax, pro-progressive tax structure and wants to end the Bush tax cuts. They support green jobs and infrastructure programs. The Justice Party wants to bolster social security by raising the cap on payroll taxes. It wants to require that banks work with homeowners to stop foreclosures. It is pro-immigration reform, pro-breaking up large banks, pro-reinstating Glass–Steagall, pro-government funded higher education and against subsidies to oil and gas companies.[9]

Environmental justice

The party is for aggressive climate protection. It is against the Keystone Pipeline and advocates transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy. The Justice Party supports a ban on mountaintop removal and wants to strengthen the Environmental Protection Agency.[9]

Social justice

The Justice Party supports a universal single payer health system, an equal rights amendment for women, marriage equality, ending wars of aggression, closing many military bases, reducing the budget, immigration reform, repealing the Patriot Act, protecting and rewarding whistleblowers and ending the War on Drugs. The party also seeks to prosecute individuals whose illegal conduct led to the 2008 financial crisis.[9]

2012 Presidential election results

State Votes % Misc.
 Alabama No ballot access No ballot access
 Alaska No ballot access No ballot access
 Arizona 119 0.01% Write-in votes
 Arkansas No ballot access No ballot access
 California 992 0.01% Write-in votes
 Colorado 1,260 0.05%
 Connecticut 5,487 0.35%
 Delaware No ballot access No ballot access
 Florida 1,754 0.02%
 Georgia 154 0.00% Write-in votes
 Hawaii No ballot access No ballot access
 Idaho 2,499 0.38%
 Illinois 185 0.00% Write-in votes
 Indiana No ballot access No ballot access
 Iowa No ballot access No ballot access
 Kansas 95 0.01% Write-in votes
 Kentucky 60 0.00% Write-in votes
 Louisiana 1,368 0.07%
 Maine 62 0.01% Write-in votes
 Maryland 204 0.01% Write-in votes
 Massachusetts No ballot access No ballot access
 Michigan 5,147 0.11% On the Natural Law Party ballot-line
 Minnesota 1,996 0.07%
 Mississippi No ballot access No ballot access
 Missouri No ballot access No ballot access
 Montana 59 0.01% Write-in votes
 Nebraska No ballot access No ballot access
 Nevada No ballot access No ballot access
 New Hampshire No ballot access No ballot access
 New Jersey 1,726 0.05%
 New Mexico 1,174 0.15%
 New York 227 0.00% Write-in votes
 North Carolina No ballot access No ballot access
 North Dakota No ballot access No ballot access
 Ohio No ballot access No ballot access
 Oklahoma No ballot access No ballot access
 Oregon 3,384 0.19% On the Progressive Party ballot-line
 Pennsylvania 84 0.00% Write-in votes
 Rhode Island 416 0.09%
 South Carolina No ballot access No ballot access
 South Dakota No ballot access No ballot access
 Tennessee 2,639 0.11%
 Texas 426 0.01% Write-in votes
 Utah 5,335 0.52%
 Vermont No ballot access No ballot access
 Virginia 73 0.00% Write-in votes
 Washington 4,946 0.16%
 West Virginia 12 0.00% Write-in votes
 Wisconsin 112 0.00% Write-in votes
 Wyoming No ballot access No ballot access
Total 43,088 0.03%

Candidates for other offices

Office State Candidate Votes %
Senator  Utah Daniel Geery[10] 7,444 0.81%
U.S. House 4th district  Utah Torin Nelson[11] Withdrew[12] n.a.
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gollark: It pulls in associated data from other tables in a query.
gollark: What?
gollark: I did not.
gollark: Each column belongs to exactly one table.

See also

References

  1. "Justice Party - Leaders". Archived from the original on December 25, 2014. Retrieved January 25, 2014.
  2. "Presidential Hopefuls Meet in Third Party Debate - PBS NewsHour Extra".
  3. "The 'other' presidential debate: Third-party candidates make their cases". The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved 2013-10-19.
  4. Romboy, Dennis "Rocky Anderson forms Justice Party, plans to run for president", Deseret News, November 30, 2011. Retrieved December 30, 2011.
  5. Winger, Richard (December 29, 2011) "Justice Party qualifies for Mississippi ballot", Ballot Access News. Retrieved December 30, 2011. Archived May 29, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  6. Winger, Richard (October 1, 2012) "2012 Ballot Status for President" Ballot Access News. Retrieved November 1, 2012. Archived November 4, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  7. Singer, Paul (November 5, 2012). "Nader's third-party debate raises alternate issues". USA Today. Retrieved 2013-10-19.
  8. Wachtler, Mark (2016-01-22). "Opposition Left divided over Bernie Sanders". Opposition News. Retrieved 2016-05-09.
  9. "Policy of the Justice Party". The Justice Party's website. Archived from the original on December 17, 2011.
  10. "Utah Federal Senator". Daniel Geery. Archived from the original on 2011-02-01. Retrieved 2013-10-19.
  11. "If you want a truly independent voice in Congress you need to vote for a truly Independent candidate! Vote Torin Nelson". Archived from the original on March 24, 2012. Retrieved August 24, 2012.
  12. "2012 Candidate Filings". Elections. Utah Lieutenant Governor's Office. 2012. Retrieved 8 November 2012.
General
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