Andrew Pulley

Cleve Andrew Pulley (born May 5, 1951),[1] better known as Andrew Pulley, is an American former politician who ran as Socialist Workers Party (SWP) nominee for Vice President of the United States in 1972 and one of three nominees the party put forth for President of the United States in 1980.

[3] Pulley's speech at the April 24, 1971 500,000 person protest march in Washington, D.C. against the Vietnam War appears in filmmaker David Loeb Weiss' 1972 documentary short film, To Make a Revolution.

[3] In 1972, he was the Socialist Workers Party nominee for vice president in 1972, the running mate of Linda Jenness.

[10] As the party's presidential nominee in the states of California, Colorado, Delaware, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, New Jersey, New Mexico, and South Dakota, he received a total of 6,272 votes nationwide.

A central part of his platform was opposition to the privatization of Wayne County General Hospital.