W. C. Young is running as a Libertarian candidate for the Us Senate - Missouri in the upcoming 2024 United States Senate Election.
Competing against 6 other candidate(s), W. C. Young aims to bring their extensive experience to the role as a candidate for Senator in the United States Federal Government.
Jared Young, an independent candidate for the U.S. Senate, grew up in a family of five children, living in various states including Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah, and California.
He married Christine Mortensen in 2008, and they have six children. The family moved to Missouri from Washington D.C.
in 2015.
In Missouri, Young has actively volunteered, serving on the board of the local Boys and Girls Club and in various church positions. These roles have provided him with insight into the challenges of generational poverty.
Young pursued higher education passionately, earning a bachelor’s degree in Middle East Studies and Arabic from BYU and a law degree from Harvard. His early career included internships in every branch of government, and he lived in Europe and the Middle East, gaining a deep appreciation for diverse cultures.
After a brief stint at a D.C. law firm, he was recruited to help run a business in Joplin, Missouri.
Over the past eight years, Young’s business experience has connected him with business owners across Missouri, enhancing his understanding of government regulation's impact on businesses. He believes his unique blend of international experience, legal knowledge, business acumen, and empathy will make him an effective and compassionate U.S.
Senator.
Young advocates for independent voting as a means to combat extremism and heal national divides. He emphasizes that a significant portion of Missourians are open to third-party candidates and invites others to join his movement for change.
The Libertarian Party (LP) was established in August 1971 during gatherings at David F. Nolan's home in Westminster, Colorado, and was officially founded on December 11, 1971, in Colorado Springs.
Influenced by Austrian economist Murray Rothbard, the party was a response to the Nixon administration's policies, the Vietnam War, conscription, and the adoption of fiat money.
The LP promotes civil liberties, non-interventionism, laissez-faire capitalism, and a limited government. They advocate for classical liberal principles, positioning themselves as more culturally liberal than Democrats and more fiscally conservative than Republicans.
Their platform includes lowering taxes, abolishing the IRS, reducing national debt, and dismantling the welfare state in favor of private charity.
Civil and Cultural Issues Cultural Policies: The LP supports ending the prohibition of illegal drugs, criminal justice reform, same-sex marriage, and the abolition of capital punishment. They uphold gun ownership rights and advocate for a society where individuals are sovereign over their lives without government-imposed values.
The party emphasizes strong civil liberties, including freedom of speech, unrestricted freedom of the press, and the right to dissent from government. They oppose censorship and support the legalization of victimless crimes like drug use, pornography, prostitution, and gambling.
The LP is also a staunch defender of Second Amendment rights, opposing any restrictions on firearms ownership.
Free Market and Fiscal Conservatism Economic Philosophy: The Libertarian Party supports minimally regulated markets and a less powerful federal government. They advocate for the elimination of minimum wage laws, believing these drive up employment costs.
The party also opposes government subsidies and promotes free-market banking with unrestricted competition.
The LP favors a free market healthcare system without government oversight, supporting the repeal of social insurance policies like Medicare and Medicaid. They argue for dismantling the entire welfare state, encouraging individuals to rely on family, community, or private charity instead.
The LP believes in protecting the environment through private land ownership and conservation efforts, arguing that governments are less accountable for environmental damage. They support free markets and property rights as the best means to stimulate environmental protection and technological innovation.
The party advocates for ending the public school system, promoting education through the free market for greater quality, accountability, and efficiency. They emphasize parental responsibility for children's education, supporting the elimination of corporal punishment in schools and advocating for parental control over educational funding.
The LP supports election systems that represent the electorate more accurately and opposes laws that restrict alternative candidates. They promote direct democracy through referendum and recall processes, opposing tax-financed subsidies to candidates or parties.
Libertarians favor mutual respect between nations, free trade, and non-interventionism. They have called for the withdrawal of American troops from global conflict zones, opposed military interventions like the 2011 Libya intervention, and advocated for withdrawal from NATO.