Election Name: | 2021 Libertarian National Committee chair special election |
1Data1: | 5 (31%) |
2Data1: | 9 (56%) |
Before Election: | Ken Moellman (acting) |
1Blank: | First round |
2Blank: | Fifth round |
Chair | |
1Data3: | 2 (13%) |
2Data3: | 2 (13%) |
Candidate3: | Christopher Thrasher |
1Data2: | 5 (31%) |
2Data2: | 5 (31%) |
Candidate2: | Joshua Smith |
Flag Image: | Libertarian_Disc.svg |
Candidate1: | Whitney Bilyeu |
Needed Votes: | 9 |
Votes For Election: | 16 members of the LNC who voted |
Election Date: | July 11–12, 2021 |
Next Year: | 2022 |
Previous Year: | 2020 |
Ongoing: | No |
Type: | presidential |
After Election: | Whitney Bilyeu |
The 2021 Libertarian National Committee chair special election was held on July 11, 2021, by the Libertarian National Committee (LNC), the governing body of the United States Libertarian Party, to elect their next chairperson, after their previous chair, Joe Bishop-Henchman, resigned due to an internal party controversy.
After five rounds of rank-choice (instant-runoff) voting by the committee, Whitney Bilyeu was elected to serve the rest of Bishop-Henchman's term, defeating 5 other candidates.
In June 2021, the Libertarian Party's New Hampshire affiliate wrote Tweets calling for "legalizing child labor", repealing the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and reopening Gitmo "so that Anthony Fauci and every governor that locked their state down can be sent there".[1] [2] In response, the Chair of the NH affiliate, Jilletta Jarvis, formed a new state affiliate and took control of the old affiliate's digital assets and Twitter account on June 12. The move was widely condemned by the party, including former US congressman Justin Amash and the party's 2020 VP nominee Spike Cohen, and Jarvis was expelled as Chair by the old affiliate
A letter surfaced allegedly from LNC chair Joe Bishop-Henchman, which recognized Jarvis's affiliate. This caused many LNC members to call for the chair to be expelled. Bishop-Henchman however denied ever writing the letter or supporting Jarvis's actions. On June 16, Bishop-Henchman introduced a motion to the LNC to disaffiliate the NH affiliate, which would have paved the way for Jarvis's affiliate to be recognized. Bishop-Henchman officially resigned after the LNC rejected the motion 12-2.[3]
LNC Vice Chair Ken Moellman from Kentucky assumed the role of Acting Chair after the resignation, until a new Chair could be elected.[4]
No one won a majority of votes in the first round. Steve Dasbach, Tony D'Orazio, and Chuck Moulton were eliminated in the subsequent rounds, and Whitney Bilyeu received all the transfer votes, winning a majority on the fifth round.[6]