Perennial candidate

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A perennial candidate is one who frequently runs for public office with a record of success that is either infrequent or non-existent. Perennial candidates are often either members of minority political parties or have political opinions that are not mainstream. They run not with any serious hope of gaining office, but in order to promote their views or themselves. According to the Guinness Book of Records, the most persistent perennial candidate is John C. Turmel, who has run and lost in a total of 66[1] elections.

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[edit] Famous perennial candidates

[edit] Brazil

  • Enéas Carneiro has run for the Presidency of Brazil three times. He has promised not to ever run for any other office, but decided to run for Congress in 2002, when he was elected with 1.4 million votes, the highest number of votes that a Brazilian Congressman ever received.

[edit] Canada

[edit] France

[edit] Mexico

[edit] United Kingdom

  • Bill Boaks contested general and by-elections for a period of 30 years under various descriptions, most famously "Public Safety Democratic Monarchist White Resident". Boaks's main concern was public safety on the roads and believed that pedestrians should have the right of way at all times. In the Glasgow Hillhead by-election, 1982 he received only 5 votes, one of the lowest recorded in a modern British Parliamentary election. He died in 1986 from injuries sustained in a car accident two years earlier.

[edit] United States

  • Lyndon LaRouche, a fringe political figure, holds the record for the most consecutive attempts at the presidency. He has run in the last eight elections, beginning in 1976. He ran once as a U.S. Labor Party candidate and seven times as a Democrat. He will tie Stassen's record of nine attempts if he runs again in 2008.
  • Harold Stassen was probably the best-known perennial candidate, at least in the United States. The one-time Governor of Minnesota ran for the Republican nomination for President on nine occasions between 1948 and 1992. While Stassen was considered a serious candidate in 1948 and 1952, his attempts were increasingly met with derision and then amusement as the decades progressed.
  • Norman Thomas was the Socialist Party's candidate for President of the United States on six occasions from 1928 to 1948 inclusive. Unlike most other perennial candidates, Thomas influenced American politics to a considerable degree, with many of his policies being appropriated by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal.id:Calon abadi

ja:泡沫候補 ru:Вечный кандидат

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