In 1979, Clark won the Libertarian Party presidential nomination at the party's convention in Los Angeles, California. He published a book on his programs,
A New Beginning, with an introduction by
Eugene McCarthy. During the campaign, Clark positioned himself as a peace candidate and emphasized both large budget and tax cuts, as well as outreach to
liberals and
progressives unhappy with the resumption of
Selective Service registration and the
arms race with the
Soviet Union. Clark was endorsed by the
Peoria Journal Star of
Peoria, Illinois. When asked in a television interview to summarize
libertarianism, Clark used the phrase "low-tax liberalism," causing some consternation among traditional libertarian theorists, most notably
Murray Rothbard. Clark's running to the
center marked the start of a split within the Libertarian Party between a moderate faction led by
Ed Crane and a radical faction led by Rothbard that eventually came to a head in 1983, with the moderate faction walking out of the party convention after the nomination for the 1984 presidential race went to
David Bergland. Ed Clark's running mate in 1980 was
David H. Koch of
Koch Industries, who pledged part of his personal fortune to the campaign for the vice-presidential nomination, enabling the Clark/Koch ticket to largely fund itself and run national television advertising. Clark received 921,128 votes (1.1% of the total nationwide); the highest number and percentage of popular votes a Libertarian Party candidate had ever received in a presidential race up to that point. His strongest support was in
Alaska, where he came in third place with 11.7% of the vote, finishing ahead of
independent candidate
John Anderson and receiving almost half as many votes as
Jimmy Carter. Clark's record for most votes won by a Libertarian presidential candidate stood for 32 years until it was broken by
Gary Johnson in
2012. His Libertarian vote percentage of 1.1% ranks 3rd behind Johnson's 3.3% showing in
2016 and
Jo Jorgensen's 1.2% performance in
2020. After his presidential campaign, Clark mostly left politics, and most of his supporters gave up their interest in the party, but he stayed as a Libertarian. ==References==