Activities of the party in 2005 In 2005, a dispute arose for the number of National Committee members required under the party's by-laws to call meetings of the National Committee. These members came from several states including
Texas,
Michigan, and
Florida. At both meetings, it was determined that a national convention would be called and held in
Tampa, Florida. The chairman at the time and National Committee members from
Arizona,
California, and
Oklahoma boycotted the National and executive committee meetings, claiming the meetings were illegitimate. As a result, those states held a second convention in Yuma, Arizona.
2006 candidates In 2006, the Reform Party nominated candidates in Arizona, and petitioned to regain ballot access in several other states where state Reform Party organizations were active. The Reform Party of Kansas nominated a slate of candidates, led by Iraq War veteran Richard Ranzau. In
Colorado's 4th congressional district, "fiscal conservative"
Eric Eidsness (a former assistant
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency administrator and Navy veteran) ran on the Reform Party ticket. He received 11.28 percent of the vote, five times the winning candidate's margin of victory; he later switched his affiliation to the Democratic Party. The Florida Reform Party granted use of its ballot line for governor to Max Linn of Florida Citizens for Term Limits (a Republican-leaning organization) in the
2006 Florida gubernatorial election. Linn retained professional campaign staff with connections to the Perot and Ventura campaigns, but received only 1.9 percent of the vote. By March 2007, the Reform Party had ballot access for the 2008 presidential election in four states (Florida, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi) and had already started petitioning in an additional four.
2008 National Convention The Reform Party held its 2008 National Convention in
Dallas, July 18–20. At the national convention,
Ted Weill of Mississippi was nominated to be the party's 2008 presidential candidate. Frank McEnulty of California, the 2008 presidential candidate of the
New American Independent Party, was nominated to be the party's 2008 vice-presidential candidate. David Collison of Texas was elected national chairman of the party. However, the party could not announce the results of the national convention on its web site until October because of a court order obtained by a dissident faction associated with the
Independence Party of New York. Therefore, the Weill/McEnulty ticket appeared on the ballot only in Mississippi, in which it received 481 votes. Frank MacKay of the dissident
Independence Party of New York faction had made the endorsement, not the Reform Party USA. Reform Party USA Reference The candidates for the nomination included: • Gene Chapman, a blogger from
Denton, Texas 2009 legal action A long-standing feud in the party involved John Blare, of the Reform Party of California, and the Reform Party officers. On December 4, 2009, a New York Federal judge heard
MacKay v Crews on the question of who are the legal Reform Party officers. On December 16, 2009, the judge ruled in favor of David Collison's faction. Collison said: "After over two years of litigation in Texas and New York, it is my profound pleasure to announce that US District Court Judge Joseph Bianco of the Eastern District of New York has ruled in our favor, and has further reinforced the 2008 ruling of Judge Carl Ginsberg of the 193rd District Court in Texas." Faddis later left the party, and ran in
2016 for
Maryland's 5th congressional district as a Republican. In February 2010, former Reform Party Chairman
Pat Choate emerged to discuss the appeal of the
Tea Party movement, contrasting it with Ross Perot's party, saying: "The difference with the Tea Party is it's been heavily pushed by a bunch of talk-show conservatives. You have the Republican Party attempting to use this as a means to pull independents or conservative independents to their policies, to their agenda." In February,
Congressional candidates filed to run as Reform Party candidates in all four of
Mississippi's congressional districts, but none for any statewide offices. Among these were Barbara Dale Washer, Tracella Lou O'Hara Hill, and Anna Jewel Revies. In April 2010, former
Vice President Dan Quayle condemned the Reform Party on
CBS, saying: "Many remember the Reform Party of the 1990s, which formed around the candidacy of Ross Perot. I sure do, because it eliminated any chance that President George H.W. Bush and I would prevail over Bill Clinton and Al Gore in 1992. Speaking on behalf of the Bush-Quayle campaign, to this day we firmly believe that Perot cost the Republican Party the White House." In an April 28, 2010 interview with
Monmouth University's student newspaper, Pat Choate remained suspicious of the Tea Party movement, saying: "At these [Tea Party] events, a professional Republican always speaks. What to me is questionable is that the Tea Parties endorse candidates, but never endorse Democrats—they seem to be a front for the Republican Party. We were seen as very serious. Perot gave millions, we fielded candidates, and we were a real threat to the status quo. The media treats the Tea Parties as a sign of dissatisfaction, and views them skeptically."
Kristin M. Davis, the
Manhattan madam involved in the
Eliot Spitzer scandal, announced on June 27, 2010, that she was running for governor on an independent line in New York State using the name, Reform Party without Reform Party authorization after failing to secure the
Libertarian Party nomination. Davis condemned the
Democrats and Republicans for catering to wealthy white males, saying: "Where are the women, the Hispanics, the African-Americans, and the gay people? We must reject their tired old thinking...." On June 29, 2010, Reform Party National Committee chairman David Collison delivered Davis a cease-and-desist notice demanding that she immediately change the name under which she was seeking to run for governor. Davis made no attempt to obtain permission to run as an official Reform Party candidate, and therefore withdrew her use of the Reform Party name. Davis was not a member of the Reform Party. At the national convention, the Reform Party nominated
Andre Barnett from New York for president and Ken Cross from Arkansas for vice president. Among those who sought the presidential nomination before dropping out several months prior to the convention were former
Savannah State University football coach
Robby Wells, economist
Laurence Kotlikoff, historian Darcy Richardson, and former Louisiana Governor
Buddy Roemer.
2016 presidential election The Reform Party co-nominated the
American Delta Party's presidential and vice-presidential candidates
Rocky de la Fuente and
Michael Steinberg as their 2016 presidential ticket. However, in 2016, De La Fuente ran as a Democrat in the presidential and U.S. Senate primaries too.
2020 presidential election On June 20, 2020, during a virtual convention, the Reform Party again nominated Rocky de la Fuente for president. De la Fuente defeated three other recognized candidates,
Max Abramson,
Souraya Faas, and Ben Zion (formerly the nominee for the
Transhumanist Party). Darcy Richardson from Florida was nominated for vice president.
2024 presidential election In September 2023, the Reform Party lost its ballot access in
Florida, leaving the party with no state ballot lines. At their party convention on May 23, 2024, the Reform Party nominated the
Kennedy Jr./Shanahan ticket for president and vice president respectively. The Reform Party filed paperwork for re-qualification in May 2024, which would place Kennedy and Shanahan on the ballot in Florida. Kennedy withdrew from the race in August and endorsed
Donald Trump and withdrew his name from the Florida ballot on August 23.
Best results in major races ==Presidential tickets==