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American Party of the United States

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Not to be confused withAmerican Independent Party or Elon Musk'sAmerica Party.
For the mid-19th-century nativist American Party, seeNative American Party.
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Political party in the United States
American Party of the United States
ChairmanBruce Williams[citation needed]
FoundedFebruary 1, 1969
Split fromAmerican Independent Party
Succeeded byIndependent American Party (1998)
HeadquartersUtah
IdeologyPaleoconservatism
Nativism
Political positionRight-wing
Website
https://www.americanpartyofus.com/

TheAmerican Party of the United States is aconservativepolitical party in theUnited States. The party adheres to its Permanent Principles, which were established in 1969.

The party nominated the same candidates in 1968 and 1972 as theAmerican Independent Party, before diverging and nominating their own candidates from 1976 onwards.

History

[edit]

The party began as part of the American Independent Party, supporters ofGeorge Wallace's1968 campaign for the presidency, and was the formal name of the party on the ballot inTennessee.[1] The party rejected terms such as "liberal" or "conservative" instead defining themselves as those who "acknowledges the Lord God as the Creator, Preserver, and Ruler of the Universe and of the Nation."[1]

The party claimed to represent "forgotten Americans" who are insulted as "Archie Bunker"[a] and are called "old fashioned" and "flag wavers" to offer them a real patriotic option, instead of the "lesser of two evils."[1]

The party was opposed to theVietnam War claiming it was illegal since Congress never authorized American entry, and that it led to a generation of Americans to suffer through a war that the government had no intention of winning.[1] However, the party also supported extra-judicial raids on Viet Cong prison camps to liberate POWs.[1]

In 1969, the AIP became the American Party at a convention attended by representatives from 37 states. Following the 1972 election, the American Party formally split from the American Independent Party. Both parties have nominated candidates for the presidency and other offices, although the AIP has in more recent years considered itself aCalifornia affiliate of theConstitution Party.[citation needed]

InNew York, the American Party ran a state ticket in1974 under the name ofCourage Party, because a state law there prohibits the use of the word "American" on the ballot. The AIP won its strongest finish in the1972 presidential election; nomineeJohn G. Schmitz carried 1,090,673 votes (3rd place).[citation needed]

In 1990, some former members of the American party founded the Christian Party.[2]

In 1995, theUtah Independent American Party became the party'sUtah state affiliate.[3]

The American Party has failed to achieve ballot status in any state since 1996.[citation needed]

In 1998, the Utah party split and formed theIndependent American Party, and began pursuing their own state affiliate parties across the country.[4]

The party's website disappeared sometime in 2008.[citation needed]

In 2010, the Ohio party endorsed severalLibertarian Party candidates.[citation needed]

The party had aFlorida affiliate, the American Party of Florida, that appeared to carry on operations into June 2011, but became defunct after that and no longer is listed as a political party in Florida.[citation needed]

In 2015, the party created a new website; a Twitter account and Facebook page were also created. The American Party is now formally known as the "American Party of the United States", and disclaims any association with the "American Party of South Carolina", the "Independent American Party", or the "American Party of America".[citation needed]

Presidential and vice-presidential candidates

[edit]

Electoral History of the American Party

American Party National Campaigns
YearConvention Site & CityDatesPresidential nomineeVice-Pres. nomineeVotes
1968George C. Wallace (Alabama)Curtis LeMay (Ohio)9,901,151
1972Freedom Hall,
Louisville, Kentucky
August 3–5, 1972U.S. Rep.John G. Schmitz (California)Thomas J. Anderson (Tennessee)1,090,673
1976Salt Palace,
Salt Lake City,Utah
June 16–20, 1976Thomas J. Anderson (Tennessee)Rufus E. Shackleford (Florida)160,773
1980Pasadena, CaliforniaDecember 8–9, 1979Percy L. Greaves, Jr. (New York)Frank L. Varnum (California)6,648
Anti-Greaves ticket inKansasFrank W. Shelton (Kansas)George E. Jackson1,555
Unpledged Anti-Greaves
Presidential Electors inMinnesota
No nomineeNo nominee6,136
1984Charlotte, North CarolinaDecember 1–3, 1983Delmar Dennis (Tennessee)Traves Brownlee (Delaware)13,161
1988Salt Lake City, UtahJune 1987Delmar Dennis (Tennessee)Earl Jeppson3,475
1992Pensacola, FloridaJune 1992Robert J. Smith (Utah)Doris Feimer (North Dakota)292
1996Wichita, KansasMarch 1996Diane Beall Templin (California)Gary Van Horn (Utah)1,847
2000Oklahoma City,OklahomaMarch 30–31, 2000Don Rogers (California)Al Moore (Virginia)0
2004Bob Carpenter CenterNewark, DelawareJuly 11–12, 2003Robert N. Boyd (Indiana)(withdrew)Walton C. Thompson(withdrew)0
Kenner, LouisianaJanuary 10, 2004Diane Beall Templin (California)Al Moore (Virginia)0
2008Jacaranda Hotel,
Avon Park, Florida
March 7–8, 2008Diane Beall Templin (California)Linda Patterson (Indiana)0
2016Kansas City,MissouriMay 6–7, 2016Tom Hoefling (Iowa)Steve Schulin (South Carolina)

Sources for table:

Notes

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  1. ^A character from the sitcomAll in the Family designed to satirize white middle-aged racists, who's "largely defined by his bigotry toward a diverse group of individuals: blacks, Hispanics, "Commies", Freemasons, gays, women, hippies, Jews, Asians, Catholics, "women's libbers", and Polish–Americans"

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdeSchmitz, John G."The American Scorned".The New York Times. Retrieved7 December 2024.
  2. ^Dennis, Delmar "The American Party"Contra Mundum Volume 4 (Summer 1992), pages 46-47.
  3. ^"HISTORY OF THE IAP".iaputah.org. Retrieved6 December 2024.
  4. ^Coombs, Carlene (17 July 2022)."Why confusion between registering as independent vs. unaffiliated might be causing this third party to grow".Deseret News. Retrieved6 December 2024.
  • Dennis, Delmar "The American Party"Contra Mundum Volume 4 (Summer 1992), pages 46–47.
  • The American Party of the United States.americanpartyofus.com/
  • A brief history can be found onourcampaigns.com

External links

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