Florida Whig Party Explained

Florida Whig Party
Website:www.FloridaWhig.com
Headquarters:200 N.W. 52nd Street, Ocala, FL 34482
Chairperson:Paul Grant Truesdell
Secretary:Kellean Truesdell (Secretary)
Ideology:Syncretic politics
Transpartisanship
Fiscal conservatism
Constitutional limits on federal powers
Position:Center-right
Colors:Blue and Red

The Florida Whig Party was a political party in the state of Florida.[1] [2] [3] [4] The party chose to revive the 19th century Whig Party name. In 2008, the party aligned itself with the Modern Whig Party, a national organization of about 30,000 members initially founded by Iraq and Afghanistan veterans as a "comeback" of the historic Whig Party.[5] However, the Florida Whig Party discontinued this association in late 2009, largely due to its increasingly conservative platform.[6] The Florida Whig Party was the first "Whig" state political party to officially run candidates for federal office in over a century.

Activity

In late 2009 and early 2010, the Florida Whig Party attracted attention for fielding an unusually large number of candidates for a third party.[7] [8] However, their first candidate, Paul McKain, left the party in early 2010 to run without affiliation. In addition, the party attempted to field additional Whig candidates, to include Clayton Schock, John Annarumma, Stephen Bacon, and Steve Gerritzen, but in spring 2010 the party announced that they failed to qualify for the ballot.[9] Some of these candidates reportedly attempted to run as either write-in candidates or no party affiliation.[10]

Businessman Craig Porter, however, did qualify for the ballot as a Florida Whig. He received 2.2% of the vote, a total of 3,186 votes.[11]

After the election of November 4, 2008, the Modern Whig Party and the Florida Whig Party began a push to attract moderate/conservative Democrats and Republicans.[12]

According to the party website, the party was dissolved in 2012.[13]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Martin County Supervisor of Elections.
  2. Web site: Palm Beach County Supervisor of Elections.
  3. Web site: Hillsborough County Supervisor of Elections. 2010-03-05. https://web.archive.org/web/20110728164450/http://votehillsborough.org/PartyGroup.aspx?PartyGroupID=42. 2011-07-28. dead.
  4. News: Whig party leaders hope to offer voters more options. Bill. Thompson. Ocala Star Banner.
  5. News: Modern Whig Party has Appeal to Some Troops: No Candidates Yet, but with Moderate Stance, it's Starting to Catch On. Marine Corps Times, Army Times and Air Force Times. June 2008.
  6. Web site: Phillips. Michael M.. Political Party for Mild-Mannered Is Off to a Slow Start . The Wall Street Journal . 2010-08-24 . 2013-03-28.
  7. Web site: Winger. Richard . Whig Party Says it will Have At Least Three U.S. House Candidates on Florida Ballot in 2010 . Ballot Access News . 2009-10-19 . 2013-03-28.
  8. Web site: Florida Whig Party Now Has 5 Announced Candidates for U.S. House. Richard. Winger. January 8, 2010. Ballot-Access News.
  9. See Florida Whig Party website candidates section
  10. News: Who is Stephen Bacon? DeBaryite wants Mica's seat in Congress. Pat. Hatfield. West Volusia Beacon.
  11. Web site: U.S. House Election Results. The Gainesville Sun. 8 November 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20101108145051/http://datacenter.gainesville.com/electionresults/us/house. 8 November 2010. dead.
  12. News: Republicans are Bald, Put on your Whigs. Kyle. Munzenrieder. November 7, 2008. Miami New Times.
  13. Web site: The Florida Whig Party. www.floridawhig.com.