{"id":61066,"date":"2020-06-07T22:30:00","date_gmt":"2020-06-08T06:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/presidential-candidate-sees-alaskans-as-a-natural-fit\/"},"modified":"2020-06-08T14:24:01","modified_gmt":"2020-06-08T22:24:01","slug":"presidential-candidate-sees-alaskans-as-a-natural-fit","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/presidential-candidate-sees-alaskans-as-a-natural-fit\/","title":{"rendered":"Presidential candidate sees Alaskans as a natural fit"},"content":{"rendered":"
Alaskans’ rugged individualism fits with what the Libertarian Party has to offer this election season, said to Jo <\/a>Jorgensen<\/a>, the party’s presidential candidate.<\/p>\n “The federal government is too big, too nosy, too, bossy and it often hurts those it’s trying to help,” Jorgensen said Friday in an interview with the Empire. “Alaskans have just a wonderful sense of individualism I can’t imagine they would enjoy the government getting into everything.”<\/p>\n Recent voting results suggest the Libertarian Party is proportionally more popular in Alaska than it is nationwide.<\/p>\n In 2016, Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson received 5.9% of the vote in Alaska, according to the New York Times’ election results<\/a>. President Donald Trump won the state with 51.3% of the vote and Hillary Clinton pulled in 36.6% of the vote.<\/p>\n Johnson did almost twice as well in Alaska as he did nationally. Johnson received 3.3% of the total popular vote, according to certified election results<\/a>. Clinton received 48.2% of the national popular vote. Trump received 46.1% of the popular vote, but he received more electoral votes and won the presidency.<\/p>\n The “one-size-fits-all” approach taken by the government limits choice and drives quality down, Jorgensen argued, pointing to public education as an example.<\/p>\n “There’s no need to have the federal government get involved in education,” she said. “The quality of education has gone down, it’s not like we have choices of schools.”<\/p>\n Asked about public services many Alaskans rely on such as the Alaska Marine Highway System and the Power Cost Equalization program, Jorgensen said the free market would provide a more effective solution than a government ever could.<\/p>\n