The Fifth Largest Party
By Bob Small
The Constitution Party is the fifth largest political party in the United States.
It began life as the US Taxpayer Party in 1992. Its chairman is James M. Clymer of Pennsylvania.
As of November, the Constitution Party had 20 members elected to municipal offices throughout the United States. Clymer was its vice-presidential candidate in 2012.
The Constitution Party refuses to take any federal funds for its presidential campaign.
Its mission statement includes this paragraph:
“The mission of the Constitution Party is to secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity through the election, at all levels of government, of Constitution Party candidates who will uphold the principles of the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution of the United States, the Bill of Rights. It is our goal to limit the federal government to its delegated, enumerated, Constitutional functions.”
In an email discussion, Troy Bowman, the Southeast Region Chair for Pennsylvania, stated that the party’s outreach efforts consist largely of mailing flyers, newspaper ads, social media posts, and phone calls.
Speaking of the Constitution Party as a party with a strong Christian backbone, Bowman went on to say, “it is not debatable that this country was founded on Christian principles which are deeply rooted in the Bible.” However, the party welcomes anyone “who believes what the original intent for the Constitution was.”
In Pennsylvania, the party has six elected members in municipal offices and hopes to have more after next November.
Lastly, he added, “what I have learned in the last 14 years is that the Republican Party can not and will not (emphasis mine) ever fix itself or rehabilitate itself.”
Change a word or two, and this could be the Greens talking about the Democrats.
Though I don’t share all the party’s values, I have not hesitated to vote for a Constitution Party candidate when a Green Party candidate was not available.
Hopefully, the Constitution Party will be on a plethora of municipal ballots this election year.







