On December 12, 2007, the Party adopted a resolution requesting Paul to run on the Libertarian ticket if he did not win the Republican Party nomination.
Mr. Koch was the Vice-Presidential candidate on the Libertarian ticket in 1980.
In 1984, the Libertarian ticket was on 39 state ballots and received 228,000 votes.
In June 2001 Rubin let it be known he was considering running for governor of California on the Libertarian ticket, renewing controversies among libertarians.
Governor Thompson's brother Ed Thompson ran unsuccessfully for Wisconsin governor on the Libertarian ticket in 2002.
It was announced on 9/13/10 that Murkowski cannot run on the Libertarian ticket.
Mr. Paul once ran for president on the Libertarian ticket and faced Loy Sneary, a Democratic rancher, whom he defeated in 1998.
That November, the Libertarian ticket received only one per cent of the vote.
On the Libertarian ticket, the petitions formally show Mr. Stern, the radio talk-show host, as the candidate for governor.
The party's most successful state and national candidates (in some cases running on the Libertarian ticket, in other cases running as an independent) have included: