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Jul 202012
 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Saturday, July 21, 2012
Democracy in peril at the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office

Denver, Colorado — The Colorado State Chairs of the American Constitution, Libertarian, and Green Parties have come together to protest rules that Scott Gessler, Colorado Secretary of State, is proposing that potentially undermine the integrity of our elections.

Very few people even know that county canvass boards exist or that they oversee the health of an election. Elections are administered by the county clerk, and each county’s canvass board acts as an auditor, verifying the processes and certifying the results.

Currently canvass boards are selected by the county chairs of major political parties. The new rules would allow the county clerk to pick canvass board members for the minor political parties, effectively “rubber stamping” the clerk’s agenda . The state chairs are united in their conviction that independently appointed canvass board members are critical to the integrity of elections.

Jeff Orrok, State Chair of the Libertarian Party of Colorado said, “As much as we would like to have representation on the canvass boards, to have the clerks pick canvass board members for us violates our First Amendment right of association and negates the primary reason for being a political party in the first place.”

Bill Bartlett, Chairman of the Colorado State Green Party, said, “The proposed rules threaten to undermine the impartiality of the canvas board, and its effectiveness as a tool to keep our democracy open and honest.”

Douglas Campbell, State Chairman of the American Constitution Party (now a major political party), said, “The purpose of rules is to implement statutes. Secretary Gessler’s proposals are an attempt to undermine legislative authority. Legislative principle states that legislation can only be modified by the level of government that created it.”

The three state chairs agree the elections belong to the people, not to the government. Bill Bartlett adds, “With a contentious election approaching, we feel it is our responsibility as leaders to maintain democratic, verifiable, elections… supervised by citizens, as intended by the founders.”

The rule-making hearing is July 23, 2012 at 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. at the Colorado Secretary of State’s office. The media , voters and candidates are encouraged to attend this public meeting to communicate the importance of independent citizen oversight in Colorado’s elections.

For more information, contact
Doug Campbell americonparty@gmail.com 720-936-5578
Jeff Orrok statechair@LPColorado.org 303-995-0138
Bill Bartlett billbartlett.gpco@gmail.com 970-515-9886

 Posted by at 10:29 pm
Jun 122012
 

The Libertarian Party of Colorado welcomes its presidential candidate, former New Mexico Governor Gary Johnson, to Denver for the 37th annual Denver Pridefest.

Gov. Johnson will be walking in the Pridefest Parade Sunday, June 17 to let everyone know that when it comes to marriage equality, no other presidential candidate has a clearer message of unequivocal support. “I have always been in full support of marriage equality,” says Johnson. “While others may be resisting or “evolving”, I have always embraced the libertarian message of social tolerance and equal rights under the law.”

Gov. Johnson will also be available at the LPCO / Outright Libertarian booth (#K13) on Sunday from noon until 3:00pm. “I look forward to meeting the people of Colorado and hearing their concerns,” Gary says. “I want them to know that when I move in to the White House, they will all be coming to Washington with me!”

For more information about Gary’s campaign, please visit GaryJohnson2012.com, and to get involved locally, please visit Meetup.com/Colorado-for-Gary-Johnson-2012.

GET INVOLVED! http://www.meetup.com/lpcolorado/events/68908652/

May 312012
 

Denver, CO May 31, 2012—The Libertarian Party of Colorado has called upon Governor John Hickenlooper to veto HB12-1036, that further threatens the state’s already vulnerable electoral processes. The Libertarians join public policy organizations such as Common Cause, the ACLU, Colorado Ethics Watch, and Citizen Center, as well as the Denver Post, Boulder Daily Camera and many diverse grassroots groups and voters in requesting that the governor prevent the flawed bill from becoming law.
“House Bill 12-1036 greatly restricts the rights of citizens, the press, and candidates – particularly those who are running as unaffiliated or do not have the backing of large party machinery – to oversee and verify the people’s elections,” says LP State Chair Jeff Orrok. “The most fundamental principle of our democracy is that we the people – not the government – should control and oversee our elections. A government is legitimate only with the assent of the governed. When government strips away the rights of the voters to verify their elections, the already vulnerable system will be subject to abuse by insiders.”
The bill has been repeatedly criticized by many across the entire political spectrum for creating a special class of insiders identified as ‘interested parties’ who will be given full access that the public will rarely, if ever achieve. Well-funded candidates and parties seeking to verify the election need only pay for an expensive recount for this full access. Shut out of such a recount, the average candidate, or newspaper or citizen watchdog group may have to wait months to access only partial records, although insider ‘interested parties’ are granted immediate and complete record access.
Orrok states that there are many troubling aspects of HB12-1036, including the last-minute passage of the bill without a meaningful opportunity for a public hearing in the House, just before it was merged with an unrelated bill to force its eleventh hour legislative approval without debate.
The Libertarian Party of Colorado urges its members and all citizens to personally write to the governor to ask for a veto though his website http://www.colorado.gov/govhdir/requests/opinion-leg.html

May 142012
 

The Libertarian Party of Colorado is the only political party in Colorado to endorse Amendment 64, an initiative on the November 2012 ballot that would make the personal use, possession, and limited home-growing of marijuana legal for adults 21 years of age and older; establish a system in which marijuana is regulated and taxed similarly to alcohol; and allow for the cultivation, processing, and sale of industrial hemp.

Amendment 64 would remove all legal penalties for personal possession of up to one ounce of marijuana and for the home-growing of up to six marijuana plants.

For more information on the inititiative and how you can help make Colorado the first state in the nation to re-legalize marijuana, visit the Campaign to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol site.

 

 Posted by at 8:11 pm

State Board

 LPCO Info  Comments Off
Jan 222012
 

The Libertarian Party Board of Directors is made of the 11 party officers:

State Chair, Vice Chair, Western Slope Regional Director, Campaigns Director, Outreach Director, Membership Director, Communications Director, Records Director, Legislative Director, Treasurer, and Fundraising Director.

Each of the 11 members serves 2 year terms, and elections are held at the  State Convention.

 Posted by at 1:39 am
Oct 162011
 

You’ve seen the signs.  You’ve probably seen the multi-million dollar TV advertising campaign.   By now, you’re probably asking yourself,would voting for 60, 61, and 101 “kill jobs?”

Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain

According to public reports, Coloradans for Responsible Reform have raised close to $7 MILLION to oppose these measures.  That’s quite a bit of cash.  So the question becomes… just who is funding the opposition?  Turns out that 99.9% of their funding is coming from large corporations and groups who use the state to further line their wallets.  Only 0.1% of their donations have come from private individuals.  Many of these groups have donated several hundred thousand dollars to protect their special interests.

True or False?

The following are the three soundbites from the homepage of the Coloradans for Responsible Reform website:

1) “Amendment 61 shuts down our ability to build or expand our roads, schools, water facilities… all of our infrastructure.”

FALSE – the current economic crisis was caused by reckless borrowing.  Colorado state debt has TRIPLED in the last 10 years and debt repayment costs have doubled… all without voter approval.  The state is already disallowed from borrowing per the state constitution, however politicians have used clever re-wording to skirt the law.  This amendment restores the constitution and voter control by requiring a balanced budget – no deficit spending in any form.  Further, the amendment only affects that state and does still allow some borrowing by local government entities.  The great depression, the current economic crises, and indeed all major financial catastrophes were derived from irresponsible borrowing.  Do your part to protect against this destruction and vote YES on 61!

2) “Amendment 60 cuts school funding by more than a billion dollars a year”

FALSE – and completely specious conjecture.  In fact school funding is directly addressed in the amendment and BY LAW there could be no cuts in school funding!  The state has raised property taxes 183% since 1992 and seniors have been severely impacted by recent tax hikes.  These tax increases have been implemented without voter approval.  This amendment gives power back to voters to decide on their property taxes directly.

3) “Proposition 101 eliminates a major funding source for road and bridge construction across the state.”

False – the ‘fees’ assessed are not used to pay for these services.  Politicians have levied an accelerating range of “fees” on Coloradans so that they could circumvent the requirement to obtain voter approval for what amounts to a tax increase.  If the state cannot divert other revenues to cover the costs of road and bridge construction, it should ask the voters to decide on a tax increase – per our constitution!

Do 60 61 and 101 Kill Jobs?

No.  This is merely a clever marketing message… no one wants to vote to “kill jobs.”  These ballot issues ensure the long term stability of the state by requiring the state to operate in a fiscally responsible manner.   It is a difficult battle, as the corporations which comprise the opposition have raised millions of dollars to confuse voters, while the supporters have very limited funds (a mere few thousand dollars) and are generally volunteers and individuals who simply care about the long term health of our state.  Keep politicians responsible.  Keep voters in charge.  Keep corporations off of government welfare.  Protect local business and local jobs… Vote YES on 60, 61, and 101.

Read more at CO Tax Reforms.

 

 Posted by at 5:38 am

It Started here

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Mar 292011
 
colorado

David Nolan and several other friends got together in the summer of 1971 after being disgusted with then president, Richard Nixon announced to the public the implementation of wage and price controls, which basically removed the gold standard and allowed the government to impose inflation easier. Along with the ‘illegal’ Vietnam War, loss of fiscal conservative direction of the Republican Party and the socialist directions of the Democrat Party, the group started the think tank to come up with a better political solution for real limited government and individual freedom.

The group had many preliminary meetings in Westminster, Colorado and decided to start sending letters across the country to libertarian minded people. They decided that if they received 100 positive responses, they would move forward with a new political party.

After receiving overwhelming responses on December 11, 1971, David Nolan and seven other friends met at the home of Luke Zell in Colorado Springs to officially form the ‘United States’ Libertarian Party. The group held a press conference early the following year to announce the new “Libertarian Party,” which amazingly the mass press welcomed.

Thus, Colorado is the Birthplace of the Libertarian Party.

 Posted by at 9:13 pm
Mar 282011
 

In This Episode Rob McNealy interviews G. Edward Griffin, author of the Creature From Jekyll Island, about the Federal Reserve and the U.S. banking system. Listen Now G. Edward Griffin’s Bio G. EDWARD GRIFFIN is a writer and documentary film producer with many successful titles to his credit. Listed in Who’s Who in America, he [...]

 Posted by at 6:00 am
Mar 252011
 

In This Episode Rob McNealy interviews cannabis re-legalization activist Kathleen Chippi about updates to Colorado Cannabis legislation. Listen Now Kathleen Chippi’s Bio Kathleen Chippi has been an advocate for the re-legalization of the cannabis hemp plant for all uses for the last 20 years. In 1993 she was the first person to process hemp seed [...]

 Posted by at 6:00 am