Report from the NC Libertarian convention held this past weekend
The two-day convention included members from across the state and guests from Tennessee and Washington DC.
The convention adopted several recommendations of the platform committee, including a refinement of the current platform on Crime, a rewording of the platform plank, "End the War on Drugs," and revision to the LPNC Platform's Preamble.
The convention also heard from several of the Libertarian candidates in attendance. Candidates for federal office attending included Mike Beitler of Greensboro, U.S. Senate; Tom Rose of Benson, U.S. House District 2; Darryl Holloman of Goldsboro, U.S. House District 3; Thomas Hill of Concord, U.S. House District 8, and; Lon Cecil of High Point, U.S. House District 12.
Candidates for North Carolina General Assembly included Barbara Howe of Oxford, N.C. House 32 and Stephanie Watson of Raleigh, N.C. Senate 16. Brandon Black of Graham, a candidate for Alamance County Commissioner, and Tom Hohman of Waxhaw, a candidate for Union County Commissioner were also in attendance.
No Libertarian candidate faces any primary opposition, so these candidates will be the Libertarian candidates on the November ballot.
Dr. Michael Munger addressed the convention on Saturday morning on the topic of "State and Local Government Debt in North Carolina: The Next 10 Years." Dr. Munger is an economist who serves as chair of the political Science department at Duke University and was the Libertarian Party's candidate for governor in 2008.
The LPNC presented its Most Outspoken for Liberty award to the late Fernie Williams of Fuquay Varina. Mr. Williams was the past chair of the Wake County Libertarian Party and a tireless advocate for liberty.
The convention elected four additional members to complete one-year terms on the LPNC Executive Committee. David Grimm of Burlington, Tom Hohman of Waxhaw, Michael Shanklin of Erwin, and Aaron Yeargan of Hampstead joined the committee as new At-large members.
On Sunday, the convention passed a resolution encouraging recipients of the 2010 U. S. Census to refuse to answer questions 2-10 of the census, stating that only question 1, how many persons are living at the address, is the only question required to meet the constitutionally-stated purpose of the census.
This article was originally posted at Mountain Xpress. The full text of the resolution is available at http://www.lpnc.org/.