Archive for the ‘Libertarian’ Category

Mises Caucus: Could It Sway the Libertarian Party to the Hard Right? – Southern Poverty Law Center

High-profile MC members espouse hateful rhetoric and collaborate with white nationalists and individuals linked to former President Donald Trump. Should they win control of the LP, they will take over a party that averages over 1% of the vote in national elections, peaking at 3.3% in 2016. Commentators argue libertarian candidates cost Trump at least three crucial swing states in the 2020 election Arizona, Georgia and Wisconsin all of which President Joe Biden won by less than 1%.

Collaboration between the LP and hard-right wing of the Republican party would stop this from happening again, LP members told Hatewatch.

The MC has already won control or decision-making influence over several state parties. These include such swing states as Arizona, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Minnesota and Colorado. Florida and California are also close to the MC.

Now that the MC has risen to power within the LP, some critics say they fear bigotry and bullying will flood LP ranks.

LP donations have missed targets and members are fleeing the party, according to David Valente, a former alternate member of the Libertarian National Committee (LNC) and LP member since 2012.

The purpose of what is going on with the MC is to sabotage the LP to sideline it over the next few years for Donald Trump, Valente told Hatewatch.

Valente resigned from the LNC on Oct. 2, 2021, citing health concerns. Rising bigotry and harassment inside the LP, stemming from the MC, also contributed to his resignation, he said.

Angela McArdle, chair of the Libertarian Party of Los Angeles County, Mises Caucus member and candidate for the 2022 LP national chair, told Hatewatch bigotry is not part of the MC strategy. Were grateful for the opportunity to help people let go of collectivism as they search for the truth and find their way to liberty. We will always fight for the freedom of all people."

The MC has adopted a hard-right approach to attract supporters, mimicking the paleo strategy from the early 1990s created by Murray Rothbard and Lew Rockwell. Rothbard and Rockwell used the strategy to appeal to far-right conservatives and authored a newsletter that trafficked in anti-immigrant talking points, race science and anti-LGBTQ ideas.

The MC and its members have argued for limited immigration enforced by property owners on the border and police action against Black Lives Matter and antifa protesters. Theyve also made anti-trans remarks. Mises-controlled Montana removed the right to abortion from its platform.

Ashley Shade, the former chair of the Massachusetts LP, resigned her post after her state party expelled Mises Caucus members over claims of harassment and demands to hold an early convention. Shade, who is trans, asserted in an April 10 Facebook post that MC bigotry and harassment had prompted her recent absence from social media.

Shade wrote she was successful in teaching many people about Trans rights and issues, but she experienced more harrasment [sic] and threats than support. Shade called the MC a cult and a tool of the Republican Party.

MC positions mirror the Trump-aligned hard right. But Libertarians, who view personal freedom and non-aggression as their core beliefs, have historically held pro-migration, pro-choice and pro-LGBTQ positions.

The MC has links to Trumps orbit. John Hudak, an LP member and former member of the Mises Caucus, shared screenshots of private Mises Caucus-linked groups on social media. Hudak also runs Fakertarians, a blog dedicated to addressing bigotry in the LP.

Screenshot show Michael Heise, the MC chairman from Pennsylvania, claims to have received donations and solicited advice from Patrick Byrne, former CEO of Overstock.com.

Overstock.com CEO Patrick Byrne leaves his hotel in New York on June 21, 2017. Photo credit: WENN/Alamy

Byrne was a regular visitorto the White House in the waning days of the Trump administration. He spoke at the Jan. 6, 2021, Trump rally in D.C. that preceded the insurrection. He authored a book based on spurious claims that election fraud cost Trump the 2020 election and was the main financierof the audit of the Arizonas Maricopa County election results.

In one screenshot, Heise announced a private meeting with Byrne and others on July 11, 2018.

Heise claimed in a Sept. 12, 2019, post that Byrne donated $5,000 to the caucus in 2017 after the two met at the Nexus conference, a gathering dedicated to a cryptocurrency Collin Cantrell founded. Cantrells father, Jim, is on the Mises political action committee advisory board and the Mises Caucus board. Jim Cantrell was on the founding team of Elon Musks SpaceX.

Heise said in the Sept. 12, 2019, post he would contact Byrne for another meeting.

Byrne did not respond to Hatewatchs request for comment.

In March, Heise nominated Daryl Brooks for the LP candidate for Pennsylvania governor after the caucus swept leadership elections at the state convention.

Brooks has runfor state and local office in New Jersey as a Libertarian since 2009.

Trumps former attorney and adviser, Rudy Giuliani, called Brooks as his first witness alleging widespread voter fraud in the 2020 election at the infamous press conference outside the Four Seasons Total Landscaping in Philadelphia.

Brooks is also a convicted sex offender. His nomination was invalidated due to residency requirements, according to LP insiders who spoke to Hatewatch.

Heise did not respond to Hatewatchs request for comment sent to the email listed on the MC website.

The MC first made national headlines in June 2021, when members of the Mises Caucus won control of the New Hampshire state party, prompting an internal power struggle and resignations.

An August 2021 report on the power struggle prepared by the LP noted several Libertarians were concerned by talk of Steve Bannon working with the Mises Caucus to take the Libertarian Party off the ballot in New Hampshire and other states, which Heise rejected.

The New Hampshire Mises Caucus includes Jeremy Kauffman, who authors anti-trans tweets on his own account. Kauffman was a spearheading member of the New Hampshire takeover and is the LPNH nominee for a New Hampshire senate seat. Kauffman is CEO of LBRY, a decentralized, blockchain-based network service. LBRY owns Odysee, a YouTube alternative that hosts far-right and neo-Nazi content.

Three LP members also claimed Kauffman and Bannon met in Massachusetts after Biden was inaugurated.

Bannon did not respond to Hatewatchs request for comment.

Kauffman did not respond to Hatewatchs request for comment sent through his campaign website.

When Vice President Kamala Harris tweeted in support of Biden signing an anti-lynching bill that made the heinous act a hate crime, Kauffman responded, As a Senator, I promise to legalize lynching anyone who works for the IRS.

The MC has also welcomed antisemitic speakers. The California MC invited Bryan HotepJesus Sharpe, a prominent figure in the Hotep movement, to speak at an event in May 2021.

Sharpe makes antisemitic remarks on social media and espouses conspiracy theories.

McArdle defended inviting Sharpe at the Alabama LP State Convention. McArdle rejected the premise of an audience members question about Sharpes invitation to speak. McArdle called Sharpe a truth seeker.

In response to a question about Sharpes antisemitism, McArdle told Hatewatch the Libertarian Party and broader liberty movement have always been led by and included brilliant Jewish people, and we welcome members of the black community to our movement, as well.

Critics of the Mises Caucus expect the group to nominate comedian Dave Smith for president. Smith, too, has floated the idea.

Smith, who is Jewish, has long invited extremists and hard right and fringe figures including HotepJesus on his podcast, Part of the Problem (PotP). Smith has also appeared on podcasts hosted by extremists.

Smith posts PotP episodes on his YouTube channel, which has over 77,000 subscribers. Recent videos receive roughly 25,000 views, as of early April 2022.

Smiths fans frequently post racist and antisemitic thoughts online. A source gave Hatewatch screenshots of Part of the Problem Inner Circle, a group dedicated to the podcast hosted on MeWe, an alternative to Facebook popular among libertarians.

The posts include racist, antisemitic and homophobic slurs. They also shared links to articles supportive of Trumps Stop the Steal conspiracy theory that claimed Democrats stole the 2020 election. The conspiracy theory culminated in the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

Smith is active in the group, though screenshots of Smiths activity that Hatewatch reviewed were taken after the slur-filled posts. Hudak, a former member of the group, said members post racist and antisemitic posts all the time. He knows his fans are like this.

Smith did not respond to Hatewatchs request for comment sent through his personal website.

Smith has appeared alongside white nationalist Nick Fuentes three times, most recently in December 2021, on hard-right podcaster Ethan Ralphs Killstream. Ralph was convicted earlier this year of disseminating revenge porn.

Smith also twice invited Fuentes to appear on PotP. Fuentes uses antisemitic tropes, engages in holocaust denialand openly uses racial epithetsto refer to Black people.

Fuentes and Smith debate their respective viewpoints, with Smith arguing for hard-right libertarian viewpoints while Fuentes advocates for using the U.S. government to protect the interests of white people.

Smith pushed back on the idea of a white ethnostate during the 2021 debate. However, he has leaned on the history of Mises figures like Murray Rothbard working with paleoconservatives such as Pat Buchanan, whom Fuentes and his followers admire.

During their first debate, Smith argued for limited immigration, freedom of association that would allow workplace and housing discrimination and limiting migration to combat demographic change.

Smith made similar remarks in a podcast with Michelle Malkin, a conservative commentator with longstanding ties to the racist right. Smiths YouTube channel made private its copy of their discussion.

Smith has also appeared on white supremacist Stefan Molyneauxspodcast. Molyneaux promotes scientific racism, the unfounded notion that intelligence varies across racial groups.

The appearance caused controversy among his supporters. The comic addressed the issue in a podcast, which is now private. Hatewatch obtained a copy of the episode.

Smith acknowledged concerns but said the notion there are racial differences in intelligence is scientific fact.

Researchers and scientist overwhelmingly agree genes alone do not provide an explanationfor differences in intelligence between individuals. Geneticist and neuroscientist Kevin Mitchell wrote in The Guardian in 2018that differences in intelligence between races are inherently and deeply implausible.

Three days after the deadly August 2017 white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, Smith hosted neo-Nazi Christopher Cantwell.

Smith told Cantwell on his podcast he was sympathetic to the alt-right to a large degree but he disagreed with the alt-rights tactics.

Smith said the left-wing interpretation of you guys is complete bullsh*t. During the conversation, Smith made anti-trans remarks, calling transgender people liars.

The conflict between Mises libertarians and elements of the LP began in 2017. Jeff Deist, the president of the extremist Mises Institute, wrote a blog calling for a new libertarian to replace the establishment leadership of the LP.

Deist wrote that blood and soil still matter to people, and libertarians should not ignore it. Deist did not elaborate on his meaning in selecting that phrase, but blood and soil is a known hate slogan with origins in Nazi Germany that white nationalists still use today.

The Mises Institute published the blog on July 28, 2017, two weeks before white nationalists chanted blood and soil in Charlottesville ahead of the deadly rally.

Nicholas Sarwark, chair of the LP from 2014 to 2020, signed an open letter against fascism in the libertarian movement after Charlottesville. Several organizers of the white nationalist rally, Cantwell, Michael Peinovichand Augustus Invictusall claimed to be libertarians at some point.

The open letter condemned any attempt to connect white supremacy and fascism to libertarianism.

Tom Woods, a Mises Institute fellow, co-founderof the neo-Confederate League of the Southand board member of the Mises Caucus, rejected the letter, denying there was a growing bigotry problem within the LP. This prompted an online debate between himself and Sarwark.

In an April 10 post, Fakertarians accused Woods of grooming his ex-wife when he was 26 and she was 15. Woods has denied this.

Smith, who openly admires Woods, debated Sarwark on the blood and soil question in 2019. In a YouTube video titled Whos allowed in?, Smith proposed a bigger tent for the LP by asking Sarwark if he does not want to bring [racists] into a philosophy that believes in peace?

Sarwark said no, not until they disavowed their racism.

Sarwark told Hatewatch the MC wants to change fundamental aspects that are definitional to Libertarian philosophy, to suit their preferences.

In Pennsylvania, Heises state, libertarians broke from the LP and formed the Keystone Party, which launched on April 4.

Sasha Cohen, a Libertarian voters elected as city clerk in DeKalb, Illinois, resigned over what he saw as clear MC bigotry in July 2021, after the New Hampshire controversy.

Cohen told Hatewatch he wanted the LNC to do the right thing and disassociate from the MC-controlled party.

Cohen said using a big tent approach to expanding LP membership is "great in theory, but the MC strategy closes the party to too many people.

Theres no tent big enough to hold racists and people of color, Cohen said.

Photo illustration by SPLC. Pictured are, from left, Jeremy Kauffman, Michael Heise and Patrick Byrne.

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Mises Caucus: Could It Sway the Libertarian Party to the Hard Right? - Southern Poverty Law Center

Democrats, Libertarians hosting town hall tonight in New Albany – Evening News and Tribune

INDIANAPOLIS - Today in New Albany, Tom McDermott (Mayor of Hammond, Candidate for U.S. Senate), Destiny Wells (Candidate for Indiana Secretary of State), Keil Roark (Candidate for Indiana House District 72)), Nick Marshall (Candidate for Indiana Senate District 45), and the Libertarian Party of Indiana will continue the 2022 Town Hall Series, an effort by the Indiana Democratic Party to hear from all voters about the top issues facing Hoosier families ahead of the 2022 state and federal elections.

WHO: Tom McDermott, Mayor of Hammond, Candidate for U.S. Senate

Destiny Wells, Candidate for Indiana Secretary of State

Keil Roark, Candidate for Indiana House District 72

Nick Marshall, Candidate for Indiana Senate District 45

WHAT: 2022 Town Hall Series

WHEN: 5:30 PM, May 25, 2022

WHERE: 40/8 Veterans Hall

221 Albany Street, New Albany, Indiana 47150

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Democrats, Libertarians hosting town hall tonight in New Albany - Evening News and Tribune

How Ukraine Could Become the Most Libertarian Country in the World Once Peace Is Achieved | Dr Rainer Zitelmann – Foundation for Economic Education

In Ukraine, libertarian think tanks and politicians are already making plans for the period after the war. The future of Ukraine was one of the major topics at the Europe Liberty Forum 2022 on 12 and 13 May, organized by the Atlas Network, the leading global association of libertarian think tanks. The event was originally due to take place in Kyiv, but was moved to Warsaw because of the war.

One of the guest speakers was Maryan Zablotskyy, a Member of the Ukrainian Parliament and of Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy's ruling party. Zablotskyy also used to be a member of the Ukraine Economic Freedom Foundation, a libertarian think tank founded in 2015. Income tax in Ukraine, Zablotskyy said, was recently lowered to two percent, and numerous regulations and tariffs have been abolished.

We are currently the most economically free country in the world, he tells me.

It is beyond extraordinary for a country to cut taxes and abolish regulations while it is at war. Normally, in wartime, governments massively increase taxes and expand their reach. In 1942, the US government passed the Victory Act, causing the top tax rate to skyrocket to 88 percent, a level that rose further, to 94 percent in 1944, as a result of various surtaxes. In Britain, the top tax rate rose as high as 98 percent in the 1940s, and in Germany it climbed to 64.99 percent in 1941.

We believe that we are stronger when we are economically freer, Zablotskyy said.

Due to the billions of dollars in international aid flowing into the country, Ukraine is an anomaly of history: a country engaged in a bitter war that is more economically free than ever. The goal, Zablotskyy says, is to ensure that these economic reforms, which were adopted as temporary measures, remain in place after the war.

After the war is a phrase that echoes repeatedly throughout the Europe Liberty Forum.

No one from Ukraine discussed how the war might end, instead they focused solely on the opportunities that will arise after victory. Nataliya Melnyk, representative of the Bendukidze Free Market Center in Kyiv, said it would be wrong to aspire to rebuild Ukraine.

We cannot aim to return to the conditions of the pre-war period, we need to create something new, Melnyk explains

She speaks of a window of opportunity and refers to the findings of the Heritage Foundations Index of Economic Freedom, which ranks Ukraine as the most economically unfree of 45 countries in the European region. In the global ranking, Ukraine comes 127th, trailing countries such as India and Nicaragua. The Heritage Foundation identifies Ukraines property rights, rule of law and labor market regulations as the greatest deficits.

Roman Waschuk, Canadas ambassador to Kyiv from 2014 to 2019 and now Business Omdudsman for Ukraine, takes a more nuanced view: Ukraine is not as economically unfree as the Heritage Foundations Index and other statistics would have us believe. Such rankings only evaluate official statistics, which fail to capture Ukraines enormous shadow economy, Waschuk explains.

Many people in the West, he says, have been surprised by the fact that Ukraines army is in a far better state than they assumed. And the same, Waschuk says, is true of the countrys economy.

Especially in the IT sector, which according to Nataliya Melnyk comprises at least 250,000 technology specialists, companies make extensive use of tax loopholes. The top rate of tax in the Ukraine used to be 20 percent, but there is a regulation that allows individual entrepreneurs to pay just 5 percent. Actually, Waschuk says, this tax was originally designed for small-scale sole-traders, but it has also been used by entrepreneurs, including IT specialists.

Everyone agrees that there is an urgent need for reform, especially as so many of the regulations in force in Ukraine date back to the Soviet era of the 1970s. Tom Palmer, Executive Vice President for International Programs of the Atlas Network, suggested that Germanys post-war Minister of Economics Ludwig Erhard, who introduced the market economy after the Second World War, could serve as a model for the future Ukraine. There are also frequent calls for a Marshall Plan for Ukraine. Palmer believes that it is not a Marshall Plan that will help Ukraine, but only market-economy reforms similar to those introduced by Erhard.

Palmer is undoubtedly right. The economic course charted by Erhards free-market policies clearly contributed more to the Federal Republic of Germanys subsequent economic miracle than the Marshall Plan, named after the then American Secretary of State George C. Marshall, which provided aid to relieve the suffering and hunger of populations across Europe after the war. The programme had a volume of $13.1 billion. Despite the British receiving more than twice as much from the plan as the Germans, Great Britain did not develop anywhere near as well as Germany. While the British were governed by socialists, Erhard introduced the market economy in Germany having already devised his policies during the war.

Libertarian think tanks in Ukraine have closer links to the countrys politicians than similar think tanks in most other Western countries. Alexander Danilyuk, co-founder of the Free Market Centre, was Ukraines finance minister from 2016 to 2018, and Zablotskyy, a member of parliament, believes that a majority of Ukraines parliamentarians subscribe to libertarian principles. However, the libertarian Atlas Network also helps Ukraine in a very practical way.

Atlas has raised $2.3 million to date in support of Ukraine. Germans and Americans who belong to the network not only contribute money, but also supply medicines, night vision equipment, drones and body armor to Ukraine. An article in The Spokesman-Review appeared under the headline: In Ukraine, an informal web of Libertarians becomes a resistance network.

The libertarian program for Ukraine is clear. When we talk about the new Ukraine, we mean three things above all, says Nataliya Melnyk, fighting corruption, rule of law, and economic freedom.

Maybe it sounds a bit dramatic, she says, but freedom is our religion. Throughout the Atlas event, at every opportunity, people implore each other: Next year in Kyiv.

Rainer Zitelmann is a German historian and author. His latest book is Hitlers National Socialism which was published on 22 February 2022.

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How Ukraine Could Become the Most Libertarian Country in the World Once Peace Is Achieved | Dr Rainer Zitelmann - Foundation for Economic Education

Primaries Are Over. Here’s What Your November Ballot Could Look Like – D Magazine

After Tuesdays primary runoffs, the general election ballot is set. But your ballot was determined by not quite 105,000 voters in Dallas County, which is actually an improvement over the primary elections in March, where a little more than 92,000 voted.

Thats not a lot of people deciding everyones choices for midterm elections.

Heres how some of the bigger races on that ballot will shape up after yesterdays election (you can find statewide results here).

Incumbent Dallas County Commissioner District 2 Commissioner J.J. Koch will face Democratic opponent Andrew Sommerman in November. Sommerman is also part of the team of lawyers representing Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins in a lawsuit over mask mandates filed by Koch.

Incumbent Dallas County Clerk John Warren gets to keep his seat after beating opponent Ann Cruz in the Democratic primary. There were no Republican challengers.

Former U.S. Rep. John Bryant beat attorney Alexandra Guio and will face Republican Mark Hajdu in November for the Texas House District 114 seat that is being vacated by John Turner, who opted not to run again.

Former Dallas City Council member Sandra Crenshaw lost her bid for the District 100 seat to Democrat Venton Jones, CEO of the Southern Black Policy and Advocacy Network, which means hell be replacing Jasmine Crockett (more on that in a minute), since there was no Republican challenger for that race.

With all of those races now firmed up, voters will also decide between Lauren Davis and incumbent Clay Jenkins for Dallas County Judge; Dallas County District Attorney John Creuzot and Republican Faith Johnson (who was his predecessor); Dallas County Treasurer Pauline Medrano and Republican Shelly Akerly; District 108 State Rep. Morgan Meyer and Democrat Elizabeth Ginsberg; Texas Senate District 16 incumbent Nathan Johnson and Republican Brandon Copeland; and State Board of Education, District 12, Republican incumbent Pam Little will face Democrat Alex Cornwallis and Libertarian Christy Mowrey.

Jan McDowell narrowly beat Derrik Gay to face U.S. Rep. Beth Van Duyne for U.S. District 24, which is wide enough to include both East Dallas and Watauga.

U.S. Rep. Colin Allred and Libertarian Nathan Bosley will face Wingstop founder Antonio Swad in November, after last nights District 32 Republican runoff election.

State Rep. Jasmine Crockett and Republican James Rodgers will vie for the District 30 seat of Eddie Bernice Johnson, who is retiring.

U.S. Rep. Mark Veasey will face off with Republican Patrick Gillespie and Libertarian Ken Ashby for District 33.

I dont have to tell anyone how important it is to vote in midterm elections, not just presidential ones. The above list? Those are the people that will be in Austin making decisions. These are the people who will be sitting in the commissioners court plotting the countys continued emergence from the pandemic.

A professor of mine once said, as he canceled class so we could all go vote in a municipal election, that there are no minor elections, just progressively larger erosions of rights.

Make your plan to vote.

Early voting for the Nov. 8 General Election starts Oct. 24. The last day to register to vote is Oct. 11. To make sure youre registered, or to start the process, head here.

Dallas most important news stories of the week, delivered to your inbox each Sunday.

Bethany Erickson is the senior digital editor for D Magazine. She's written about real estate, education policy, the stock market, and crime throughout her career, and sometimes all at the same time. She hates lima beans and 5 a.m. and takes SAT practice tests for fun.

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Primaries Are Over. Here's What Your November Ballot Could Look Like - D Magazine

‘COVID brought everything to light’ – The North Bay Nugget

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Libertarian candidate says pandemic revealed political path

Michelle Lashbrook never saw herself as a politician.

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But the candidate for the Libertarian Party in the June 2 provincial election didnt like what she saw happening around her.

I have been very much involved in the community, Lashbrook says, working with the Womens Business Network of North Bay, with international exchange students through the Rotary Club and helping seniors at the Chartwell Barclay House.

You get to know people, really enjoy people when you work with them like that, Lashbrook says. You see what makes people tick.

Everyone has a story.

But when the COVID-19 pandemic struck, there was so much that wasnt right, she says.

We locked down in the first three weeks. But why were Wal-Mart and the LCBO open? Why could the big corporations stay open while small businesses were shut down? Why did our politicians continue to get raises? They were imposing their will on us. Friends were charged because they were hugging someone.

It was a huge abuse of power.

Lashbrook, the chair of the Northern Freedom Riders who spent several weeks in Ottawa earlier this year when truckers and protesters descended on the city to oppose the mandates surrounding COVID-19, said the only good thing to come out of the mandates was exposing the cracks in the system.

Education, hospitals, government, they were all faulty. COVID brought everything to light. A lot of things (government enacted) were taken right from the Nazi handbook.

She went to Ottawa during the protests to see for myself the stuff that was reported from the Northern Freedom Alliance.

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It was frustrating, she says, when you see some of the stuff that is reported.

She said a protest in North Bay which ended up at the North Bay Mall in 2021 was nothing like what really happened.

Several of the protesters were charged with theft and vandalism, but there were zero thefts. Nothing was damaged. There were zero threats.And it took the police four months to charge seven people, mostly women over 60 years of age.

A North Bay business person was also charged under the COVID-19 protocols, she says, although those criminal charges were vacated. When she and other supporters of the business woman protested at the North Bay courthouse, they tried to run us off the grounds.

The political leaders, she said, do absolutely nothing to help the general public.

The PCs (Progressive Conservatives) are like the Liberals, the Liberals partner with the NDP.

The Libertarian Party has been in existence since 1975, and its major focus, Lashbrook says, is very much about freedom of choice.

That freedom, she says, comes with responsibility, and brings back accountability to political leadership in the province.

Nobody now is accountable. The buck keeps being passed. Government has created massive issues in the province.

There is too much government. There is too much over-reach. We need less government, fewer mandates. When you cut those things, local business is able to thrive. There is more money in their pockets.

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Right now, she says, just being able to build a house is overburdened with regulations and codes, slowing down the approvals and making a home more expensive than it should be.

That should be on me. Government doesnt belong there. Government shouldnt be able to tell us how to raise our kids.We need less restriction.

And while the country was gripped by the pandemic, little was done to tackle issues such as the opioid crisis.

Right now is a critical time in our history. There are a lot of unhappy people. The (protest) convoys attracted thousands of people.

People are just done. They are looking for options.

Its time people take their country back.

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'COVID brought everything to light' - The North Bay Nugget