Wallace campaign and early history In 1967, the AIP was founded by Bill Shearer and his wife, Eileen Knowland Shearer. It nominated George C. Wallace (Democrat) as its presidential candidate and retired
U.S. Air Force General
Curtis E. LeMay (Republican) as the vice-presidential candidate. Wallace ran on every state ballot in the election, though he did not represent the American Independent Party in all fifty states: in
Connecticut, for instance, he was listed on the ballot as the nominee of the "George Wallace Party." The Wallace/LeMay ticket received 13.5 percent of the popular vote and 46 electoral votes from the states of
Arkansas,
Louisiana,
Mississippi,
Georgia, and
Alabama. No third-party candidate has won more than one electoral vote since the 1968 election. In 1969, representatives from forty states established the
American Party as the successor to the American Independent Party. In some places, such as Connecticut, the American Party was constituted as the American Conservative Party. (The modern American Conservative Party, founded in 2008, is unrelated to the Wallace-era party.) In March 1969, the party ran a candidate in a
special election in
Tennessee's 8th congressional district in northwestern
Tennessee, where Wallace had done well the previous November, to replace Congressman
Robert "Fats" Everett, who had died in office. Their candidate, William J. Davis, out-polled Republican
Leonard Dunavant, with 16,375 votes to Dunavant's 15,773; but the race was carried by moderate
Democrat Ed Jones, with 33,028 votes (47% of the vote). The party flag, adopted on August 30, 1970, depicts an
eagle holding a group of arrows in its left talons, over a
compass rose, with a banner which reads "The American Independent Party" at the eagle's base. The American Party had gained
ballot access in Tennessee in 1970 as the result of George Wallace's strong (second-place) showing in the state in 1968, easily crossing the 5 percent threshold required, and held a
primary election which nominated a slate of candidates including businessman Douglas Heinsohn for governor. However, neither Heinsohn nor any other candidate running on the American Party line achieved the 5 percent threshold in the 1970 Tennessee election, and it likewise failed to do so in 1972, meaning that the party lost its newfound ballot access, which as of 2025 it has never regained. In 1972, the American Party nominated
Republican Congressman
John G. Schmitz of California for president and Tennessee author
Thomas Jefferson Anderson, both members of the
John Birch Society, for vice president, winning the party over 1.1 million votes, the highest vote share the party has ever achieved since Wallace's run. That year, Hall Lyons, a
petroleum industry executive and former Republican, ran as the AP nominee
in Louisiana for the United States Senate but finished last in a four-way race dominated by the Democratic nominee,
J. Bennett Johnston, Jr. After the 1976 split In 1976, the American Independent Party split into the more moderate
American Party, which included more northern conservatives and Schmitz supporters, and the American Independent Party, which focused on the
Deep South. Both parties have nominated candidates for the presidency and other offices. Neither the American Party nor the American Independent Party has had national success, and the American Party has not achieved ballot status in any state since 1996. In the early 1980s, Bill Shearer led the American Independent Party into the
Populist Party. From 1992 to 2008, the American Independent Party was the California affiliate of the national
Constitution Party, formerly the U.S. Taxpayers Party, whose founders included the late
Howard Phillips.
2007 leadership dispute A split in the American Independent Party occurred during the
2008 presidential campaign, with one faction recognizing Jim King as chairman of the AIP with the other recognizing Ed Noonan as chairman. Noonan's faction claims the old AIP main website while the King organization claims the AIP's
blog. King's group met in Los Angeles on June 28–29, elected King to state chair. Ed Noonan's faction, which included 8 of the 17 AIP officers, held a convention in Sacramento on July 5, 2008. Issues in the split were U.S. foreign policy and the influence of Constitution Party founder Howard Phillips on the state party. The King group elected to stay in the Constitution Party and supported its presidential candidate,
Chuck Baldwin. It was not listed as the "Qualified Political Party" by the California Secretary of State and Baldwin's name was not printed on the state's ballots. King's group sued for ballot access and their case was dismissed without prejudice. The Noonan group voted to pull out of the Constitution Party and join a new party called America's Party, put together by
perennial candidate and former
United Nations Ambassador Alan Keyes as a vehicle for his own presidential campaign. This group elected Markham Robinson as its new chair at the convention.
Presidential tickets Following the split within the American Independent Party into factions led by Jim King and Ed Noonan, the Noonan faction has maintained control over the party's operations and ballot access in California. The party did not nominate
Chuck Baldwin, the 2008 Constitution Party presidential candidate, nor
Virgil Goode, the 2012 nominee, and both candidates were unable to secure independent positions on the California presidential ballot.
California gubernatorial candidates == List of chairs and vice chairs ==