Guest Columns
Chase Oliver: The New Socially Liberal Face of the Libertarian Party
Throughout former President Donald Trump’s speech at the Libertarian Party National Convention last week, he was booed more than cheered. Multiple shouting matches erupted between Libertarians protesting Trump (their signs included “MAGA = Socialist” and “No More Dictators”) and Trump supporters there to cheer on their hero. As the protests and boos continued, Trump shot back at the Libertarians, telling them if they didn’t nominate him as their candidate, they would “keep getting your 3% every four years.”
Libertarian Party chooses Chase Oliver
On Sunday, the Libertarians didn’t choose the former president as their nominee, opting instead for one of their own, 38-year-old party activist Chase Oliver, who represents the socially progressive wing of the Libertarian Party. In his home state of Georgia, Oliver previously ran for Georgia’s 5th Congressional District special election to replace the late John Lewis and then in the 2022 Georgia Senate election where he amassed enough votes to force a run-off between the GOP and Democratic candidates.
Reflecting the sentiments of the Trump-booing libertarians, Oliver expressed his disdain for the former president in a RealClearPolitics interview Tuesday.
“I think if Donald Trump was really a candidate worth his salt, he wouldn’t have to worry about 3%. But he knows he has to worry about it because his base has been shrinking,” Oliver said. Although he explained he didn’t approve of how Twitter coordinated with federal agencies to censor speech, he stood by his Jan. 8, 2021, tweet
where he wrote, “Bye @realDonaldTrump glad you are banned,” telling RCP that “Twitter has been a lot better without him.”
On abortion and surgical mutilation and hormonal poisoning of minors
Oliver’s socially liberal views are most pronounced on the issues of abortion and transgender rights for minors.
In an interview with 2016 Libertarian presidential candidate Austin Peterson, Oliver said he is against irreversible surgery but favors other “gender-affirming” treatments such as puberty blockers. On abortion, his website states he will work with states to “decriminalize abortions, as these decisions should rest in the hands of individuals and their doctors.” RCP sent a follow-up email to clarify his positions on whether abortion should be illegal at any stage of fetal development and “gender-affirming care” but has not received a response.
Dr. Michael Rectenwald, the runner-up Libertarian presidential candidate endorsed by the Mises Caucus – which emphasizes libertarian free-market economics over social policy – told RCP that all libertarians do not share Oliver’s social positions. For example, Rectenwald argued that babies in the womb also have rights:
I believe that abortion violates the Non-Aggression Principle against the most helpless people in society, those in the womb, and so those people have the right to live just like everybody else.
He also said that he and other Libertarian Mises Caucus members are opposed to trans surgeries and puberty blockers because they don’t believe children can “meaningfully consent” to such life-altering drugs and procedures.
Immigration, Economics, and Foreign Policy
Another example of Oliver’s more liberal views is the top issue on his campaign website: immigration. Oliver’s primary position on the issue is that he wants an “Ellis Island”-style immigration system, where immigrants can come to a border crossing, and as long as they’re not wanted for a crime that requires extradition, are welcomed and given government IDs. His running mate, Mike ter Maat, echoed Oliver’s support for more accessible paths for legal immigration, saying in the Libertarian presidential debate on Saturday, “I’m here to invite the entire nation of Cuba into my state.”
Some other Libertarians, including presidential candidate Joshua Smith, advocated instead for a closed border. Smith, who defines himself as an “America First Libertarian,” said in the debate, “We’ve got to worry about Americans first, it’s very important. If you want to be a sovereign nation, you cannot flood the borders.” Rectenwald also advocates for a more restrictive immigration policy than Oliver, telling RCP that he favors a privatized “invitation-based” system of immigration, where someone can only immigrate if they have an invitation, and the organization that invited them is liable for the actions of the people they invite.
Withdraw from permanent alliances
On the issue of the border and drug smuggling, Oliver told RCP that to end the drug trade, the best solution would be to legalize all drugs so that they are standardized and not contaminated with fentanyl and other unknown substances. “You don’t need somebody telling you that heroin is a bad idea,” he argued. “You don’t need a government being your nanny to tell you that. You have society and culture that can inform you of the dangers of drugs without creating a police state.”
On foreign policy, Oliver says the United States should be a “beacon of peace” to the world. He clarified in the interview with RCP that this means he believes we should stop giving aid to nations and territories currently at war, including Israel, Ukraine, and Gaza. One central sticking point was that we should eliminate “permanent entangling alliances,” such as NATO, and instead handle our alliances with foreign countries on a “case-by-case basis.”
He went a step further and said that “anybody in Ukraine who’s being currently conscripted to fight in that war should be allowed to come to the United States in an asylum claim because conscription is basically servitude.” Oliver continued, saying that if Israel also had a volunteer army instead of mandatory service as they do now, they would have to “abide by what the majority of their population wants.”
End the Fed
Some issues, such as how to handle the economy and inflation, were in line with mainstream Libertarian Party thought. Although he doesn’t claim the position on his website, he clarified with RCP that he believes “we need to end the monetary abuse of the Fed, and the best way to do that is end the Fed outright.” Oliver says instead of using the Federal Reserve to print money, we should base our currency on something finite like gold or silver so that the Federal Reserve can’t continue to “create fiat currency out of thin air.”
He also wasn’t afraid to criticize the way he thought Democrats, including President Biden, create too many social programs that cost taxpayers too much. “Joe Biden is the standard-issue, big government liberal who thinks that every problem has to be solved through some sort of program and some sort of bureaucrat or some sort of process or department. And the truth is, the world will work better when we get government out of our lives,” he said.
Future of the Libertarian Party
Although Chase Oliver is running for president, he acknowledges that he would have to live in some other “multiverse” to win the presidential campaign in 2024. Instead of focusing on the objective of winning the presidential election in November, Oliver said that they are focusing on other metrics of victory, such as “helping local electable Libertarian races all over the country get across the finish line to victory” and “growing the membership ranks.”
“There are so many young voters who are looking for options and looking for alternatives, particularly in the anti-war space. I’m hoping we can capture that energy and enthusiasm and bring a lot of new members in and really start a foundation building, so that way, in the future, we have more activists, more candidates, and more ability to get our word out there, and of course, win more elections. We can’t do that if we don’t build a solid party foundation structure that’s ready for growth. This is a growth election,” Oliver explained.
This article was originally published by RealClearPolitics and made available via RealClearWire.
Jonathan Draeger is a National Political Reporter for RealClearPolitics.
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