LPUS Platform Committee Proposes Draft
2008-02-26
The LPUS Platform Committee met Feb. 15-16 in Las Vegas to work on
filling the Platform holes created by the 2006 LP convention in
Portland. At that convention, delegates voted to keep only 7 of the
old Platform's 62 planks. 15 deleted planks had been
consolidated during the Portland Platform debate into 8 new planks,
and those 8 plus the 7 retained planks form the current 15-plank LP
Platform. It is widely considered incomplete due to its lack
of planks on property rights, taxation, monetary policy, the
environment, health care, welfare, education, labor, national
defense, foreign policy, free trade, and electoral reform.
Going into Portland, members of the Reform Caucus had voted to
delete 15 planks and rewrite another 17. When 55 of 62 legacy
planks failed to win majorities for retention, a Reform Caucus
shadow Platform committee proposed to replace the entire Platform
with about a dozen single-sentence planks on a subset of issues
where libertarian ideas are most popular. At the same time,
traditionalists and radicals were arguing that the Portland
deletions should simply be undone, yielding again a Platform of
scores of detailed planks.
The 2008 Platform Committee considered both approaches and found
each to be inadequate. Most members were uncomfortable with
the idea of a non-comprehensive Contract With America style of
platform that leaves our fundamental principles backstage and only
spotlights a handful of popular near-term policy proposals that
overlap with those principles. They also did not favor a
resuscitation of the old platform's laundry lists, complaining issue
descriptions, random philosophical justifications, vouching for
efficacy, and implementation minutiae that had encrusted our shining
principles over the decades. They instead worked throughout
the fall and winter spelunking through a dozen past LP platforms all
the way back to the 1972 original, mining them for language that can
describe for each issue what the Bylaws mean by "a libertarian
direction in public policy". The goal was to build a "Pure
Principles" platform that states for each policy area the timeless
libertarian principles that are consistent with both incremental
reform and radical ultimate goals.
As the February Vegas meeting approached, PlatCom interim Chair
Alicia Mattson conducted a survey of past and present LP members and
NatCon delegates. The survey indicated that over 75% of likely
convention delegates want a Platform that "states our positions
[even where] mainstream Libertarian thought is at odds with what
most voters want", but that also provides"little to no
implementation detail [rather than] comprehensive detail". 60%
also agreed we should "delete the old planks and start from a clean
slate" rather than "amend the existing language".
The first question in Vegas was whether to seat LNC-appointed
alternates for the two LNC-appointed PlatCom members who were absent
from what was apparently the first PlatCom since 1983 to meet well
ahead of the convention weekend. A tie vote upheld the ruling
that the sentence "Ranked alternates may be named by the appointing
bodies to fill any vacancies in the Convention Committees" excludes
similar purposes such as filling absences. There was not much
dispute over how to interpret that sentence, and the main objection
seemed to be that past PlatComs as well as the LNC had set a
precedent for seating alternates for absences. The Chair
quoted the rule saying that precedents must give way to rules when
they conflict. She also pointed out that 1) the LNC is a board
authorized (just as committees are forbidden) to adopt extra rules,
2) the LNC had adopted such an absence-filling rule, and 3) the LNC
alternates rule did not have a "to fill any vacancies"
qualification. A majority on PlatCom seemed to agree the
Bylaws Committee should change the rules to say that alternates may
fill absences.
The PlatCom largely accepted the recommendations of the subcommittee
proposal for a platform of roughly 25 planks of recycled language
organized into three sections: Personal Liberty, Economic Liberty,
and Securing Liberty. (The old Platform had four sections,
including one that classified things like agriculture, education,
and population as "Domestic Ills".) The PlatCom was unhappy
with the language available for recycling on Education, Environment
and Resources, and included three one-sentence planks as
placeholders for them. It also adopted two recommendations to
amend its gay rights and financial markets planks with some novel
language to address concerns with the recycled language. The
gay rights amendment benefited from the advice of the two
alternates, who are both officers of Outright Libertarians.
Aside from the subcommittee recommendations, the PlatCom proposed
two historic changes. The first is to replace all abortion
language with simply this: "We recognize that abortion is a
sensitive issue and that people can hold good-faith views on both
sides. Taxpayers should not be forced to pay for other people's
abortions, nor should any government or individual force a woman to
have an abortion."
The second is to remove the initial "cult of the omnipotent"
sentence of the Statement of Principles, a move which LP founder
David Nolan recommended as preferable to replacing it with the novel
language that the committee had been considering. He said that
at an early 1990's LP convention this change came within one vote of
the required supermajority margin for passage. (As head of the
Restore04 caucus, Nolan was also requested by the committee to
submit a draft the 2004/2006 hybrid platform that the caucus has
reportedly been working on.)
No PlatCom member voted against recommending that the Denver
delegates delete all 15 planks from the 2006 Platform. With a quorum
varying between 13 and 15 members, only 6 of 30 recommendations
attracted more than one nay for adoption, and only 3 of them more
than two. The committee's current report and draft will be
available at http://www.lpconvention.org/platform_committee.php.
Brian Holtz (brian@holtz.org) is Secretary of the 2008 committee,
but his archive of Platform resources at
http://LibertarianMajority.net is unofficial.