Natural Law Party
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Natural Law Party was founded in 1992 in the United States by a group of educators, business leaders, and lawyers in Fairfield, Iowa who practiced Transcendental Meditation.[1] The Natural Law Party was a transnational political party with national branches in over 80 countries.
The party based its platform on Maharishi Mahesh Yogi's view that natural law is the supreme organizing principle that governs the universe, and that the problems of humanity are caused by people acting against this natural law. The Natural Law Party claimed that it could realign humanity with this organizing principle through techniques such as the practice of Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi program, and problems would be alleviated.
The various Natural Law Parties disbanded over a period of years from 2001-2006.
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[edit] UK Natural Law Party
The first Natural Law Party was launched in the UK, with Dr. Geoffrey Clements as Party Leader. The party fielded candidates in approximately 599 out of a total of some 600 constituencies. A significant number of constituencies were contested by nationals of countries outside the UK, including Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and India, as British electoral law allows any member of a Commonwealth country to stand for Parliament. Former Beatle George Harrison performed in a fund-raising concert during the campaign.
The UK manifesto, like all other NLP platforms in the subsequent decade, was founded on two assertions: (1) that the development of consciousness, in particular through the practice of the Transcendental Meditation and TM-Sidhi Program including Yogic Flying, can enhance individual capability to resolve societal problems, and (2) that the practice of these techniques by a critical mass of the population, or else their group practice, in particular the group practice of Yogi Flying, results in overall improvements in society, including reduced crime, accidents and hospital admissions and improvements in prosperity, security and quality of life. The party quoted peer-reviewed published scientific research for many of its assertions. In the first UK campaign, Natural Law candidates gained an average of approximately 0.4% of votes.
The party ceased to submit accounts to the Electoral Commission from 2004.[1]
[edit] Republic of Ireland Natural Law Party
The Republic of Ireland had a Natural Law Party, centred in Dublin. Its most high profile candidate was Paddy Seery from Offaly. It is currently thought of as disbanded.
[edit] Australia
In Australia, some candidates gained as much as 10% of the vote in some electorates. Owing to the compulsory preferential voting system in that country, this figure has the capacity to cause a marginal seat to change hands, and could precipitate a change in government. In the preferential system, votes allocated to an unsuccessful candidate are transferred to the next preferred candidate, until they are eventually lodged with either the final winner or the runner-up. A party's recommendation or allocation of preferences can thus create a swing sufficient to unseat a marginal incumbent. As a result, major parties at times assiduously court minor parties for their preferences (mainly during election times). It is not clear whether Natural Law Party candidates at any time precipitated a spill in a marginal electorate in Australia. However, following the formation of the NLP, a large number of small parties were launched, transforming the country from a largely two-party electoral system (Labor and the National/Liberal Coalition, with Democrats and Greens as minor parties) to a slightly more diverse political mix.
As in the UK and most other countries in which the Natural Law Party was active, the party was discontinued after about 2001.
[edit] U.S. Natural Law Party
The U.S. Natural Law Party, led by Dr. John Hagelin, ran as a third party that was largely center-left in ideology. It took liberal positions on abortion and gay rights, promised that it had scientific solutions to combat social ills such as poverty, crime, racism, bigotry, and came off as being politically moderate to conservative on economic issues.
The NLP ran Dr. John Hagelin, a physics professor at Maharishi University of Management, for president of the United States in the 1992, 1996, and 2000 elections, when he received fewer than 84,000 votes — or less than one tenth of one percent of the total number of votes.[2]
According to the Federal Election Commission (FEC), the NLP spent nearly $2.3 million on its presidential campaign in the 1999-2000 election cycle.[3] The Natural Law Party did not run a candidate for president in the 2004 U.S. election and it is no longer a registered party in the United States.
In 2000 Hagelin attempted to create an independent coalition between the Natural Law and Reform political parties; however, that failed when Patrick Buchanan took control of the Reform Party.
Between 2000–2004 the Natural Law Party sought to create an independent coalition of voters interested in election law reform. In 2002 the party endorsed Independence Party of Minnesota candidate for Minnesota Governor, Tim Penny. In 2004 the Natural Law Party endorsed Democratic Party presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich for President. Not long afterwards the Natural Law Party headquarters announced that it was shutting down and many state chapters followed suit. Hagelin went on to start the US Peace Government.
It is not clear why the Natural Law Party dissolved. It was seen as one of the more organized third political parties in America, along with the Constitution Party, Green Party and the Libertarian Party. In 1996, it ran more than 400 candidates in 48 states and was attracting support from Democrats, Republicans and independents.
The Idaho Natural Law Party remained active, and was prepared to have three candidates on the ballot for state and federal office in 2006 by entering into a coalition with the new United Party, and thus remained the only Natural Law Party still active in the United States of America. However, on June 16 the Idaho Natural Law Party changed its name to the United Party, effectively ending the Natural Law Party's presence on American ballots.
[edit] References
- ^ Roth, R:The Natural Law Party:A Reason to Vote, page 285. St. Martin's Press, 1998
- ^ Federal Elections 2000: 2000 Presidential Popular Vote Summary Table
- ^ Campaign Finance Disclosure Data Search
[edit] See also
- Political parties of the world
- List of political parties in the United States
- Natural Law Party of Canada
- Natural Law Party of New Zealand
- Naturgesetz Partei (natural law party of Germany; article in German Wikipedia)
- Parti de la loi naturelle du Québec
- United States Natural Law Party
[edit] External links
- Homepage of the Natural Law Party of the United States
- GLBT Planet Out Interview
- U.S. Natural Law Party Platform 2000
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