New Hampshire Now Has Third Sitting Libertarian Party Legislator
Despite an agenda mostly aimed at less government spending and interference in people's lives, creeping libertarianism frightens some New Hampshire progressives.
As of this week, New Hampshire has three sitting Libertarians in its House of Representatives. First elected in 2016 as a Republican, Brandon Phinney, representing wards 4 and 5 in the city of Rochester, announced he's joining Caleb Dyer (former Republican) and Joseph Stallcop (former Democrat) as Libertarians, giving the L.P. a three-man caucus. (In the 1990s for a period there were four sitting Libertarians in the New Hampshire House.)

"The Libertarian Party platform gives us, as legislators, the best possible framework to expand social freedoms, support a free-market economy, and ensure the checks and balances on government power are enforced," Phinney said in the Libertarian Party's press release announcing the switch.
Phinney works for the Carroll County Department of Corrections. (Being one of the 400 members of the New Hampshire House is a part-time job.) "We do what we can to rehabilitate offenders, implement new programming in the county to help addicts get treatment, and we manage inmate behavior," he described his day job in a phone interview this week after he announced his move to the Libertarian Party.
His work in corrections "has given me inspiration as far as government's role in policing" and led him to realize "we need to be ending the drug war. I know the system is broken. I know there are people in jail who don't need to be there."
Before running for office last year, Phinney had been deployed for a year to the United Arab Emirates with the New Hampshire Army National Guard working as a construction engineer.
He has also been slightly famous in atheist circles for being a rare out-and-proud atheist politician. Phinney himself doesn't like to make too much of that, and points out that it isn't his atheism per se but his atheism combined with his previous GOP membership that made it seem like news, since Republicans "have a tradition of being faith-based." (He even once sang for a metal band named Godcrusher.)
Phinney says his initial attraction toward government work came from "issues in the past with the family court system" and a desire to reform such policies in a more father-friendly direction, though he doesn't want to discuss his personal specifics and says they are not currently an active problem in his life.
The issues he likes to front and center as a legislator that he discussed in our phone interview include some that fit well with the Libertarian Party platform—such as marijuana legalization—and some that don't—like increasing state programs for veterans. But he describes his overarching way of judging proposed legislation as having "three criteria, which are, will [a bill] expand government growth? Will it have a burden on taxpayers? And is it in the interest of freedom?"
Like fellow L.P. convert Stallcop, the former Democrat, Phinney at first considered running as an independent but found the ballot access issues too troublesome and thought the Republicans were the major party that were "closest to what I felt." He has since realized that the Republican platform didn't "actually represent what I thought should be the role of government in our lives."
He quickly found caucusing with the GOP wearying and "stopped going" to the meetings; "every time something controversial came up they wanted the Party to vote united." Phinney didn't always want to go along with their desires but "they didn't want to hear" any dissent from the Party line.
He says his friend Dyer helped him see the way clear to the L.P. switch. He'd been thinking about it since February and knew for weeks before the official announcement he intended to do it. The only Republican he informed beforehand was Gov. Chris Sununu, during a conversation over why he, Phinney, was not going to be able to vote for the budget the Republicans proposed since it raised spending too much. The $11.7 billion budget will put state spending on an "unsustainable" course, Phinney believes. (He found Sununu "nonjudgmental, understanding of why I felt that way" about the Party switch.)
Like Dyer, Phinney is also confident many other New Hampshire House members are philosophically more compatible with the L.P. than the two major parties, but are afraid to make the switch out of fear of losing re-election, a fear he hopes he and Dyer can prove groundless in 2018. His own town of Rochester, he says, tends to "lean purple" and he hopes name recognition from retail politicking and his incumbency will make the L.P. switch irrelevant to his constituents. Even running as a Republican he says his constituents "knew I have these philosophies, they get it, no problem."
Although he has a tendency to stutter and thus found door-to-door contact with voters sometimes nerve-wracking, Phinney says it's essential to winning in New Hampshire's small districts. He won his first race with 2,323 votes, only 117 votes more than a Democrat who Phinney says didn't even campaign. He does not yet know who, if anyone, he'll be running against next year from the two major parties. He advises would-be voters to look beyond Party labels and "see how I voted. That's what actually matters. If I voted in your best interest, keep me in. If I haven't, vote me out."
Fear of a Libertarian New Hampshire
Phinney has lived in New Hampshire since the late 1990s, predating the Free State Project, which advocates the libertarian-minded moving to New Hampshire to sway its politics in a liberty direction. While Phinney thinks it's a "great idea to get people who want to minimize the scope and power of government to come to this state" he has no specific opinion about anything any given Free Stater has said or done. He is aware that some New Hampshire residents "view them in a not-so-favorable light. I personally don't have an opinion as long as they are not hurting anyone."
The FSP's existence helps draw out concerns that make political progressives unhappy with the thought of libertarians in their midst. The folks at FreeKeene, not institutionally affiliated with the FSP, recently summed up a 90-minute anti-libertarian presentation by Zandra Rice Hawkins of the group Granite State Progress.
Hawkins is trying to get her fellow citizens of New Hampshire to believe the FSP's mission involves attempted secession from the U.S. (it does not), to worry that the FSP's internal communal self-help and attempts to help their communities' food needs are just sinister cover for their radical mission of dismantling government, and to condemn them for their alleged connection to the national website CopBlock which encourages keeping an eye on and curbing the power of police to harass citizens.
Compare those fears with how Phinney expects to guide his future as a state representative, believing that all he and his fellow Libertarians are "trying to do is minimize government interference in lives and businesses and just try to keep as much money in people's pockets" as possible.
To many Americans, that sounds like common sense. To those living in quivering fear of a Libertarian New Hampshire in which people might just, to sum up some of Hawkins' worries, keep a watchful eye on police, act undignified in court, pay other people's parking meters, or advocate for legalization of drugs and prostitution, it sounds like something that requires organized opposition, including trying to keep a public record of Free State Project associates involved in New Hampshire politics. She is especially worried that some of them even fly under the Democratic Party's banner.
As the recent moves of Phinney, Dyer, and Stallcop to the Libertarian Party show, the libertarian-minded certainly can keep using major party labels if they wish. But in New Hampshire, they may not have to. The electoral success or failure of Dyer and Phinney in 2018 will tell.
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"Despite?"
He typed "because" wrong.
"Creeping libertarianism" was my nickname in college.
s/ing/y and I might believe you.
Although he has a tendency to stutter and thus found door-to-door contact with voters sometimes nerve-wracking,
Uncomfortable talking to strangers? He is a true libertarian! Good for this guy.
Libertarian Moment incoming
If these guys are as good as the Libertarian senate candidate from NH that was pushing for universal healthcare, all is lost!
Yeah, if only libertarian candidates passed more purity tests, we'd have that libertarian moment by now.
Um, well, yeah, actually.
Because that's clearly what the electorate wants. Nerdy ideological purity.
You know the most successful libertarian politician ever - Ron Paul - was also one of the most ideologically pure. I know it may be shocking, but a lot of people are compelled by reason and logical consistency...
Pushing for universal healthcare is a pretty big red mark on the libertarian purity test.
You don't need an A+, but try not to fail.
I don't care. Free market or nationalization. The AMA cartel has to go.
Nationalization????? We are almost there. Don't you love your VA letting vets die waiting for care. Medicaid that shows no better health outcomes than the uninsured or the insurance fraud called Medicare that the government's own Trustees show is 65% short of money needed to pay promised benefits. You think rolling private insurance that works for a majority of Americans rolled into the government screw ups is a viable solution?
We need the government even less involved in the private market. That's not an issue to negotiate.
Good on them. It's nice to see Libertarians that actually work at the system and don't just bitch about the system.
I don't have a libertarian problem with "increasing state programs for veterans" except that it should be at the federal level, since federal legislators sent them in harm's way and need to step up and take responsibility for the budgeting.
It's the sending in harm's way I have a problem with, but once you break it, you own it, so to speak. I know you didn't mean it, but the implication is that it's wrong to pay for something you broke when the breaking itself was immoral.
Or to put it in related terms, if a burglar breaks into your house, he's responsible for not just what was stolen, but the ancillary damage too, such as broken door/window/safe.
once you break it, you own it
Neither you nor I broke it, but we'll be the ones paying for it.
Sheesh, how are you supposed to graft part-time?
400 legislators? So each legislator in NH has a constituency consisting of two other people?
It does make it difficult for us to get reforms through, but it also made it difficult for the statists to shove through income tax, gun control, welfare, and a whole host of other taxes and issues. Now that the tide is turning in our favor, we have made New Hampshire a constitutional carry state, legalized firecrackers (other fireworks were legal but anything that had a report was stupidly banned), allowed towns to pay for private school tuition instead of forcing them to build their own schools or contract with a neighboring town or district, expanded charter schools which were being held back in spite of the law by the state education bureaucracy, and a few other minor wins. We should be getting something close to a school voucher system soon. It's not a perfect system, you have to go through a qualified education non-profit fund, but it does give money to home school families for their curriculum and supplies and has not strings for those wishing to use their education dollars for any private school.
It must be at least 50, because 20,000 people signed up for the FSP.
The really outrageous thing is the pay! $100 us.
https://www.artoflivingschools.org/
http://couppay.ind.in/
And the vile libertarians will start to advocate for the drugz and ass sex.
They have reason to fear.
They're already blocking construction of New Hampshire's wall with Mexico.
Ah. The wall with Mexico is on the Canadian side of the border.
"?internal communal self-help and attempts to help their communities' food needs are just sinister cover for their radical mission of dismantling government, and to condemn them for their alleged connection to the national website CopBlock which encourages keeping an eye on and curbing the power of police to harass citizens."
Here in Northern California someone who helps their community's food needs and thinks cops are out of control and need to be monitored is generally considered a progressive. So when I go to my local farmers' market and the Green Party has a booth advocating (among other things) that people grow their own food or at least buy locally grown food and then sponsors a protest against police overreach, they (Greens) are really some nefarious right-wing group? Is the SPLC on to them yet?
Congrats to all 3. 198 to go.
Wish I could afford living up there. I'm still skeptical of these guys though--especially Phinney.
like Todd responded I'm blown away that a single mom able to get paid $480000 in four weeks on the computer . go to the website????
like Todd responded I'm blown away that a single mom able to get paid $480000 in four weeks on the computer . go to the website????