Everything about Independent Politician totally explained
In
politics, an
independent is a
politician who isn't affiliated with any
political party. In countries with a
two-party system, independents may hold a
centrist viewpoint between the two parties, they may hold an
extremist viewpoint that goes beyond that of either major parties, or they may have a viewpoint based on issues that they don't feel either party addresses.
Australia
Independents have rarely been elected to the federal
Parliament of Australia, although they tend to be more common in state parliaments. A large number of independents are former members of one of Australia's main parties, the
Australian Labor Party, the
Liberal Party of Australia or the
National Party of Australia. Currently, two independents sit in the
Australian House of Representatives:
Tony Windsor from
New South Wales and
Bob Katter from
Queensland. A third,
Peter Andren, decided to leave his seat of
Calare to run for the
Senate at the
2007 general election, before being diagnosed with cancer. He later passed away on
November 3,
2007, 21 days prior to the election. In the past, independent senators such as
Brian Harradine have had considerable influence in the Senate.
Following the
2007 federal election, Tony Windsor and Bob Katter retained their seats, while
Nick Xenophon was elected to the
Senate. Independent Senators are quite rare.
Canada
Independent politicians have held considerable sway in the
Canadian House of Commons in recent years as Canada has been governed by successive
minority governments with independent
Members of Parliament (MPs) holding the
balance of power.
In the
2004 federal election,
Chuck Cadman was elected to federal parliament as an independent MP representing the
British Columbia riding of
Surrey North. Cadman had previously represented that riding on behalf of the
Reform Party of Canada and
Canadian Alliance, but after the Canadian Alliance merged with the
Progressive Conservative Party of Canada to form the new
Conservative Party of Canada in 2003, Cadman lost the nomination to represent the Conservative Party in that riding to
Jasbir Singh Cheema. Cadman then stood in the subsequent election as an independent and defeated Cheema, as well as the candidates of other Canadian parties, by a significant margin.
In the spring of 2005, Cadman cast the tying vote in favor of a budget supported by the
Liberal Party government of
Paul Martin as well as the
New Democratic Party (NDP), but opposed by the opposition Conservatives and
Bloc Québécois. Two other independents also voted on that budget.
Carolyn Parrish, independent MP for
Mississauga—Erindale, had recently been kicked out of the Liberal Party for criticizing Prime Minister Martin but nonetheless sided with the Liberals on the budget vote.
David Kilgour independent MP for
Edmonton—Mill Woods—Beaumont, had previously quit the Liberal caucus and voted with the opposition parties against the budget. The tie vote required the
Speaker of the House Peter Milliken to cast the deciding vote, and he did so in favor of the budget, allowing the government to survive.
Cadman was terminally ill with
cancer at the time he cast his crucial vote, and he died later in 2005. In the
2006 federal election, his riding was won by NDP candidate
Penny Priddy. Neither Parrish nor Kilgour (nor
Pat O'Brien, MP for
London—Fanshawe, who quit the Liberal Party to sit as an independent after the 2005 budget vote) stood for re-election in 2006. However another independent candidate,
André Arthur, was elected in the
Quebec riding of
Portneuf—Jacques-Cartier, and was the only independent to win a seat in that election. The overall election was won by the Conservative Party, but with another minority. The combined Conservative and NDP seats in parliament currently amount to 154 out of a total of 308, meaning that if the Conservatives and NDP vote together, Arthur too may find himself holding the balance of power.
Ireland
Since the
Irish general election in 2007, there are five Independent
Teachtaí Dála (Members of Parliament) in
Dáil Éireann (the lower house of the Irish parliament). This is 3% of the total, 4 of these Independent have signed agreements to support the
current Irish government. There are 7 Independent Senators in
Seanad Éireann (the upper house of the Irish parliament). In countries where multi-seat,
Single transferable vote constituencies exist, independents are more common.
Poland
Polish Sejm election ordination in practice doesn't allow single persons to run. There always are tickets composing multiples person, as every district is representing by multiple Sejm Members. Ordination is strictly proportional. Nearly all tickets are partisans.
Home tickets just like
Civic Platform during
2001 election, were formally non-partisan (just citizens committee), CP was widely viewed as de facto political party, as it's now. However during Sejm term many Sejm Members switched parties or became independents.
In Senate elections there's different situation, as ordination allowed single candidates to run and some of them are elected as independents in their own.
Three
Presidents since
1990 are technically independents.
Lech Wałęsa wasn't a member of any party, but chairman of the
Solidarity and he was elected without full support of this union (Solidarity votes splits between him and Prime Minister
Tadeusz Mazowiecki).
Aleksander Kwaśniewski was a leader of the
Social Democratic of the Republic, but formally resigned from party after he was elected (however he was still close to party), as
Lech Kaczyński, who was first leader of
Law and Justice, did after get elected. He is also viewed as de facto member of his party.
Philippines
Noli de Castro, the
Philippines' current
Vice President ran as senator in 2001 with no political party affiliation. He was an adopted candidate of the opposition
Pwersa ng Masa coalition but he never joined their campaign rallies. He won in the senate race with the highest votes (then) in Philippine history.
In most recent history, popular independent Philippine politicians include
Senator Antonio Trillanes IV (former
Oakwood mutiny leader) and
Pampanga Governor
Eddie "Among Ed" Panlilio.
United Kingdom
Independent Members of Parliament were once frequently elected in Britain (
List of UK minor party and independent MPs elected), but they've been much rarer in the last half-century.
Clare Short was elected as a Labour MP in
2005 UK general election but on
20 October 2006 resigned the Labour Whip although she's intending to attempt to remain a member of the Labour Party.
Two independent MPs were elected in the
2005 UK general election:
Peter Law (MP for
Blaenau Gwent), who died on
April 25,
2006, and
Richard Taylor, sole MP of the
Independent Kidderminster Hospital and Health Concern party (for the
Wyre Forest constituency). Dr Richard Taylor's election to Parliament is most notable for the fact that he's the only independent in recent times to have been re-elected for a second term. Since Peter Law's death, the by-election has yielded another independent MP -
Dai Davies. News reporter
Martin Bell was elected as an Independent MP for
Tatton from 1997 to 2001 having stood on an anti-corruption platform.
The UK
House of Lords includes a large number of independent peers, who are usually known as
crossbenchers.
The introduction of directly elected mayors in several parts of the UK saw the election of independent candidates to run councils in
Stoke-on-Trent,
Middlesbrough,
Bedford,
Hartlepool and
Mansfield. The first
Mayor of London,
Ken Livingstone, was originally elected as an independent having run against the official Labour candidate
Frank Dobson. He was subsequently re-admitted to the
Labour Party before his first re-election campaign.
Independent candidates frequently stand and are elected to local councils. There is a special Independent group of the
Local Government Association to cater for them.
Independent candidates frequently stand in parliamentary elections, often with platforms about specific local issues, but usually with little success. A typical example from the
2001 general election was when
Aston Villa supporter Ian Robinson stood as an independent candidate in the
Sutton Coldfield constituency, in protest at the way chairman
Doug Ellis ran the club. Another example, in the
Aldershot constituency, of an independent candidate is King Arthur Pendragon - a notorious local who walks around town in long white robes with a long grey beard and a sword he claims to be Excalibur.
At the
2003 Scottish Parliamentary elections, three
MSPs were elected as Independents:
Dennis Canavan (
Falkirk West),
Dr Jean Turner (
Strathkelvin and Bearsden) and
Margo MacDonald (
Lothians). In 2004
Campbell Martin (
West of Scotland region) left the
Scottish National Party to become an independent and in 2005
Brian Monteith (
Mid Scotland and Fife) left the
Conservative Party to become an independent. At the
2007 Scottish Parliamentary elections Margo MacDonald was again returned as an independent MSP.
Other independent candidates are associated with a political party and may be former members of it, but are not able to stand under its label. For instance, after being expelled from the
Labour Party but before joining the
Respect Coalition, British
Member of Parliament (MP)
George Galloway described himself as "Independent Labour".
A third category of independents are those who may belong to or support a political party but believe they shouldn't formally represent it and thus be subject to its policies. This was common among members of most political parties for the purpose of British
local government elections until the last quarter of the twentieth century.
Some independents in the
United Kingdom have registered locality-based political parties. UK examples include
Independent Kidderminster Hospital and Health Concern,
Epsom and Ewell Residents Association,
Derwentside Independents and those local residents' or ratepayers' associations that contest elections. They are usually considered independent as they've no alignment in national politics.
United States
Recent prominent independent candidates for
President of the United States include
John Anderson in
1980,
Ross Perot in
1992 and
Ralph Nader in
2004 and
2008. None of them were successful. Historically,
George Washington was the first and only elected independent President, as he wasn't formally affiliated with any party during his two terms.
John Tyler was expelled from the
Whig Party in September 1841, and remained effectively an independent for the remainder of his presidency, later becoming a
Democrat. He briefly sought re-election in
1844 as a National Democrat, but withdrew as he feared to split the Democratic vote.
Maine,
Oregon and
Texas are the only states in American history that have elected formally independent candidates as governor:
James B. Longley in 1974 and
Angus King in 1994 and 1998 from Maine,
Julius Meier in 1930 from Oregon, and
Sam Houston in 1859 from Texas.
Lowell P. Weicker, Jr. is sometimes mentioned as an independent governor, though this isn't technically correct; he ran as
A Connecticut Party candidate (which gave him better ballot placement than an unaffiliated candidate would receive), defeating the Democratic and Republican party nominees. Another former governor who is sometimes mentioned as an independent is
Jesse Ventura, who actually ran as a member of the
Reform Party before later founding and switching to the
Independence Party of Minnesota.
There have been several independents elected to the
United States Senate throughout history. Notable examples include
David Davis of
Illinois (a former
Republican) in the nineteenth century, and
Harry F. Byrd, Jr. of
Virginia (who had been elected to his first term as a Democrat) in the twentieth century. Some officials have been elected as members of a party but became independent while in office (without being elected as such), such as
Wayne Morse of
Oregon or
Virgil Goode of
Virginia.
Vermont senator
Jim Jeffords left the
Republican Party to become an independent in 2001. Jeffords's
change of party status was especially significant because it shifted the Senate composition from 50-50 between the Republicans and
Democrats (with a Republican
Vice President,
Dick Cheney, who would break all ties in favor of the Republicans), to 49 Republicans, 50 Democrats, and one Independent. Jeffords agreed to vote for Democratic control of the Senate in exchange for being appointed chairman of the
Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, and the Democrats held control of the Senate until the
Congressional elections in 2002, when the Republicans regained their majority. Senator Jeffords retired at the end of his term in 2007. Wayne Morse after two years as an independent became Democrat, while Goode switched to Republican.
Representative
Bernie Sanders was an independent member of the
United States House of Representatives for
Vermont-at-large from 1991 to 2006. Bernie later won the open Senate seat of
Jim Jeffords, as an independent.
Joe Lieberman a former
Democrat who ran like Lowell P. Weicker, Jr. under a third party (
Connecticut for Lieberman Party) in the 2006 election after losing the Democratic primary to
Ned Lamont. Though both representatives are technically independent politicians, they caucus with the Democrats.
In 1971, State Senator
Henry Howell of
Virginia, a former Democrat, was elected
lieutenant governor as an independent. Two years later, he campaigned for
Governor as an independent, losing the election by only 15,000 votes.
In 2006, there were 7 major independent candidates for statewide office including successful runs for the U.S. Senate by Bernie Sanders and Joseph Lieberman. In
Maine, state legislator
Barbara Merrill (formerly a Democrat) made the gubernatorial ballot, while retired college professor
Bill Slavick ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate. In
Massachusetts, wealthy
convenience store owner and former
Massachusetts Turnpike Authority board member
Christy Mihos ran for Governor. Finally, in
Texas,
country music singer and
mystery novelist Kinky Friedman and State
Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn both ran for Governor splitting the ballot four ways between themselves and the two major parties.
As of April 2007 at the state level, there were eleven people who held offices as independents in state legislatures. There were three state senators, one from
Kentucky, one from
Oregon, and one from
Tennessee. The representatives came from the states of (2)
Louisiana, (2)
Maine, (2)
Vermont, (2)
Virginia.
On
June 19,
2007 the
Mayor of New York City,
Michael Bloomberg, switched his party affiliation from Republican to independent.
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