Early Independence and Reform parties Phil Madsen and other
Ross Perot supporters formed the Independence Party of Minnesota in
Bloomington, Minnesota, on July 22, 1992.
Dean Barkley ran for a seat in the
United States House of Representatives in the
1992 election. Other supporters led by Don Dow, State Director, and Victoria Staten, Assistant State Director and Ross Perot's spokesperson on NAFTA, worked as part of
United We Stand America, and some eventually found their way to the Independence Party after the elections. Over the following years, the party began to field candidates in other state races. On June 22, 1996, the party affiliated with the
Reform Party of the United States of America and became the Reform Party of Minnesota (RPMN).
Bob Lessard of
International Falls joined the party in 2001 after he was re-elected to the Senate as an independent with 54.3% of the vote.
Sheila Kiscaden, a incumbent Republican, was reelected to the
Minnesota Senate in 2002 with the party's nomination after she failed to win the Republican nomination.
Return to the Independence Party The state party carried the Reform Party of Minnesota name until it disaffiliated from the national party in 2000 due to factional dissent and the increasing influence of
Pat Buchanan within the party. The party immediately changed its name back to Independence Party on March 4, 2000. After his most influential opponents left the party, Buchanan went on to become the Reform Party's candidate for president. On 2004's
Super Tuesday, March 2, the party held
caucuses around the state along with Minnesota's other three parties. Since the organization had no national party affiliation, it merely ran a
straw poll to gauge the opinions of members with regard to the available presidential candidates in the
2004 election. For the poll, the group used
instant-runoff voting, a voting method that has been gaining interest in the state. Additionally, the party had several fairly progressive agenda items to vote on. For a bit of levity, there was also a vote on the
mascot to use for the party. Three top possibilities were the
bison,
hawk, and
white buffalo. Technology was also involved in the IPM's caucusing, as it used the Internet to conduct a two-day online "virtual caucus" for people who were unable to attend the evening of Super Tuesday. On March 5, 2004, the party announced that the presidential winner was
John Edwards, who had privately circulated his decision to withdraw shortly before IP members voted. The Super Tuesday ballot was probably the first statewide experiment in instant-runoff voting. The Bison, to be named Indy, won the mascot vote, out-polling the nearest competitors by a 19% margin. In May 2005,
Peter Hutchinson, who was
Minnesota Finance Commissioner in the
Rudy Perpich administration, announced that he was planning to seek the Independence Party's nomination for governor in the 2006 election. Hutchinson finished 3rd of 6 earning 141,735 votes for 6.4% of the total vote. In the 2006 elections, IP
5th district congressional candidate Tammy Lee received 51,456 votes for 21.01% of the total vote. Lee's strong showing resulted in part from her unusually strong (for third parties) fundraising, Lee raised $228,938 for her run. In May 2008, a "
Draft Dean Barkley" movement started on the web to encourage the former senator to run again. He accepted, and
finished third, winning a significant 15% of all votes cast. His candidacy had a significant impact on a race in which the eventual winner
Al Franken and then-incumbent Senator
Norm Coleman were separated by only 312 votes. Two other federal candidates, David Dillon in the 3rd congressional district and Bob Anderson in the 6th congressional district, received 10% of the vote in their races. 2008 is the high-water mark for the Minnesota Independence Party in both the number of federal candidates running and the percent of vote received—both key measures of the base of support. In 2010, gubernatorial candidate Tom Horner, a former public relations executive and chief of staff to U.S. Senator
David Durenberger received 12% of the vote, nearly doubling the total of previous IP gubernatorial candidate
Peter Hutchinson. Horner polled as high as 18% in the weeks leading up to the election, but was significantly outspent by the GOP and DFL candidates and the third-party expenditure groups supporting their candidacies. Horner did receive endorsement from three of the state's five living ex-governors: Republicans
Arne Carlson and
Al Quie as well as Ventura. Former U.S. Senate candidate and prominent Minnesota attorney
Mike Ciresi also endorsed Horner. Most Minnesota newspapers including the
Star Tribune,
St. Paul Pioneer Press,
St. Cloud Times,
Duluth News Tribune, and
Rochester Post-Bulletin, as well as North Dakota's
Grand Forks Herald endorsed the IP candidate. In 2014, the Independence Party endorsed several candidates for state and national office: Hannah Nicollet for
governor, Kevin Terrell for
U.S. Senate, attorney Brandan Borgos for Minnesota Attorney General, whistleblower Pat Dean for state auditor, Bob Helland for secretary of state, John Denney for US congress CD-6,
Paula Overby for US congress CD-2 and Iraq War veteran Dave Thomas for US congress CD-4. In
2016, the party endorsed
Evan McMullin, a former
CIA agent and former chief policy director for the
House Republican Conference, for
President.
Forward Party merger In 2025, the Independence Party merged with the Minnesota affiliate of the
Forward Party and became the "Forward Independence Party of Minnesota" ==Platform==