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Mike Tompkins

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American politician
For the musician, see Mike Tompkins (musician).
Mike Tompkins
Born
Mike Tompkins

Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
Alma materHarvard University
Political partyNatural Law Party

Mike Tompkins is a U.S. politician who was the Natural Law Party vice presidential candidate during the 1992 and 1996 presidential elections.

Education and career

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Born in Boston, Massachusetts,[1] he graduated from Harvard University in 1970 and completed his post-graduate studies at Maharishi European Research University (MERU) in Seelisberg, Switzerland in 1984, where he received a doctorate in the Science of Creative Intelligence.[2] He became an associate director of the Institute of Science, Technology and Public Policy, a nonprofit organization affiliated with the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi that defines itself as a "progressive policy think tank."[3]

Political campaigns

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In 1992, Tompkins joined John Hagelin as the first national candidates for the Natural Law Party. Hagelin, a quantum physicist, was the director of the Institute of Science, Technology and Public Policy and director of the physics department at the Maharishi University of Management in Fairfield, Iowa. Hagelin and Tompkins received ballot placement in 32 states and their campaign qualified for federal matching funds.[4]

In 1996, Hagelin and Tompkins ran again as the presidential and vice presidential candidates on the Natural Law Party. During a campaign stop at the University of Houston, Tompkins defended the party's place in the U.S. political landscape by stating, "The Natural Law Party was founded as an alternative to the Republicans and Democrats, and an answer to the great many issues and great many solutions that were not being brought to the public. We are building this party as a permanent part of the American political landscape. We want to win and influence debate...(America has) the least democratic society. We have made a political system that excludes new voices, new people and new ideas."[5]

Hagelin and Tomkins received 39,000 votes, or 0.04% of the total voter input, in 1992. In 1996, they were on the ballot in 44 states and received 110,000 votes, or 0.1% of the total voter input. In 2000, Hagelin ran for president again on the Natural Law Party, but Tompkins was replaced as the vice presidential candidate by Internet entrepreneur Nat Goldhaber.

References

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Preceded by
(none)
Natural Law Party vice presidential candidate
1992 (lost) 1996 (lost) Succeeded by
Democratic Party
Candidates
Republican Party
Candidates
Independent
Other independent and third-party candidates
Libertarian Party
Natural Law Party
Nominee
John Hagelin
VP nominee
Mike Tompkins
New Alliance Party
Nominee
Lenora Fulani
VP nominee
Maria Elizabeth Muñoz
Prohibition Party
Nominee
Earl Dodge
VP nominee
George Ormsby
Socialist Party USA
Nominee
J. Quinn Brisben
VP nominee
Barbara Garson
Socialist Workers Party
Nominee
James Warren
VP nominee
Willie Mae Reid
U.S. Taxpayers Party
Workers World Party
Nominee
Gloria La Riva
VP nominee
Larry Holmes
Independents and other candidates
Other 1992 elections
House
Senate
Gubernatorial
Democratic Party
Candidates
Republican Party
Candidates
Reform Party
Candidates
Green Party
Independent Grassroots Party
Nominee
John Birrenbach
VP nominee
George McMahon
Libertarian Party
Natural Law Party
Nominee
John Hagelin
VP nominee
Mike Tompkins
Prohibition Party
Nominee
Earl Dodge
VP nominee
Rachel Bubar Kelly
Socialist Party
Nominee
Mary Cal Hollis
VP nominee
Eric Chester
Socialist Workers Party
Nominee
James Harris
U.S. Taxpayers Party
Nominee
Howard Phillips
VP nominee
Herb Titus
Workers World Party
Nominee
Monica Moorehead
VP nominee
Gloria La Riva
Independents and other candidates
Other 1996 elections
House
Senate
Gubernatorial

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