| Roger Lea MacBride | |
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Election date November 2, 1976 |
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| Running mate | David Bergland |
| Opponent(s) | Jimmy Carter
(D) Gerald Ford (R) Eugene McCarthy (I) Lester Maddox (AI) Thomas J. Anderson (A) |
| Incumbent | Gerald Ford (R) |
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| Born | August 6,
1929 |
| Died | March 5,
1995 (aged 65) |
| Political party | Libertarian |
| Profession | lawyer, television producer |
Roger Lea MacBride (6 August 1929 - 5 March 1995) was a American lawyer, political figure, and television producer. He was the presidential nominee of the Libertarian Party in the 1976 election.
MacBride was the treasurer of the Republican Party of Virginia in 1972 and one of the party's electors when Richard Nixon won the popular vote for his second term as president of the United States. MacBride, however, voted for the candidates of the Libertarian Party. Because of this vote, he is sometimes called a "faithless elector." David Boaz wrote in an obituary in Liberty Magazine, "faithless to Nixon and Agnew, anyway, but faithful to the constitutional principles Rose Lane had instilled in him."[1]
He became the first presidential elector to cast a vote for a woman when, in the presidential election of 1972, he voted for the Libertarian Party candidates John Hospers for president and Theodora (Tonie) Nathan for Vice President. MacBride went on to be the Libertarian Party candidate for president in the 1976 election.
MacBride attended Princeton University and Harvard Law School. He practiced law in Vermont, served in the legislature and ran for governor as a Republican, and published two books on constitutional law—The American Electoral College and Treaties versus the Constitution. After moving to Virginia and then casting his famous electoral vote in 1972, he instantly became a hero to the fledgling Libertarian Party, which had only begun the previous year. As the Libertarian presidential candidate in 1976, he achieved ballot access in 32 states; he and his running mate, David Bergland, received 173,011 popular votes but no electoral votes.
He scored another first in 1976 when he became the first U.S. presidential candidate to pilot his own plane, a DC3 based at the Charlottesville-Albemarle Airport in Virginia. His plane was known as the "No Force One." He published a campaign book, A New Dawn for America.
After the 1976 election, he attempted to found a news magazine like "Atlas" which surveys and translates newspapers published in other lands. The magazine was not successful, and shortly thereafter he sold his home "Esmont House" and left the state.
MacBride rejoined the Republican Party in 1983 and helped establish the Republican Liberty Caucus, a group promoting libertarian principles within the Republican Party. He chaired this group in 1994.
MacBride called himself "the adopted grandson" of a family friend, writer and political theorist Rose Wilder Lane, the daughter of writer Laura Ingalls Wilder. He inherited Lane's estate including rights to the substantial Ingalls-Wilder literary estate, including the "Little House on the Prairie" franchise. He is the author of record of three additional "Little House" books, and began the "Rocky Ridge Years" series, describing the Ozark childhood of Rose Wilder Lane. He also co-produced the 1970s television series Little House on the Prairie.
Controversy came after MacBride's death in 1995, when the local library in Mansfield, Missouri, contended that Wilder's original will gave her daughter ownership of the literary estate for her lifetime only, all rights to revert to the Laura Ingalls Wilder Library after her death. The ensuing court case was settled in an undisclosed manner, but MacBride's heirs retained the rights.
In an obituary for MacBride, David Boaz wrote, "In some ways he was the last living link to the best of the Old Right, the rugged-individualist, anti-New Deal, anti-interventionist spirit of Rep. Howard Buffett, Albert Jay Nock, H. L. Mencken, Isabel Paterson, and Lane."
Series on the early life of Rose Wilder
| Party political offices | ||
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| Preceded by John Hospers |
Libertarian Party Presidential
candidate 1976 (lost) |
Succeeded by Ed Clark |
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