Libertarian Party of the District of Columbia

[6] Scott Kohlhaas was the Libertarian Party candidate for an at-large seat on the Council of the District of Columbia in 1986.

[7] Dennis Sobin was the Libertarian Party candidate for an at-large seat on the Council of the District of Columbia in 1988.

[8] Sobin was an entrepreneur who published an adult magazine, an escort service, telephone party lines, and video stores.

[9] Sobin opposed a proposed law that would have prohibited minors from being inside certain clubs in late hours.

[14] Lord campaigned promising a ten-percent decrease in the number of employees of the Government of the District of Columbia.

[15] She promised to end government regulations that she said strangle small businesses,[14] such as the Boxing Commission and most of the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs.

[16] Lord advocated for increasing property taxes on undeveloped parcels of land, and Jacques Chevalier filed to run for chair of the District Council as a Libertarian,[17] but he was not successful at securing a place on the general election ballot.

[21] He said the District's biggest problem was that half of black males ages 18 to 35 are incarcerated, on parole, or on probation because anti-drug legislation has displayed a racial bias.

[24] Damien Lincoln Ober ran as the Libertarian Party candidate for the District's shadow senator in 2008.

[27] When The Washington Post asked why voters should elect him, Ober said, "Anyone who can answer this in 25 words is surely using market-tested phrases in place of true discourse or new ideas about government and advocacy.

[28] In 2012, Bruce Majors ran as the Libertarian Party candidate for the Congressional delegate for the District of Columbia.

[29] In 2010, Majors told a reporter from The Washington Post that he was comfortable working with people who support the Tea Party movement because they have common goals with libertarians.

[32] He said his goal was to receive at least 7,500 votes in order to secure major-party status for the Libertarian Party and make it far easier for its candidates to appear on the ballot.

[35] John Vaught LaBeaume ran as the Libertarian Party candidate to represent Ward 1 on the Council.

[37] LaBeaume worked as the director of communications for Robert Sarvis, Libertarian candidate for Governor of Virginia.

[38] He wanted to restore ethical behavior on the District Council, and he favored developing the ward's land for residential and retail uses instead of industrial uses.

[35] Libertarian Party member William Hanff ran as a write-in candidate in the general election for the Ward 5 seat on the Council.

[38] A resident of Capitol Hill,[42] Badhwar is originally from India, and he has also lived in Toronto and New York City before moving to the District in 2000.

[35] Sara Jane Panfil announced she would run for Libertarian Party candidate for Delegate to the United States House of Representatives.

[37][47] Originally from the San Francisco Bay Area,[48] and a graduate of Dartmouth College, Moulton is a resident of Shaw.

[56][55] Martin Moulton ran as a candidate in the District of Columbia mayoral election, offering Libertarian solutions for education, public safety and other issues.

[55] Denise Hicks filed to run as a candidate for at-large member of the Council,[58] but did not appear on the ballot.

[60][61] In 2020 the DC LP ran Partick Hynes for Delegate to Congress in a crowded field with several independent candidates.

[citation needed] DC elected three delegates to attend the national convention in Reno, NV May 26–29, Tom Fleming, Bruce Majors, and Pranav Badhwar.