John Sophocleus

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John Peter Sophocleus is an American economist and libertarian political activist.

John Peter Sophocleus
Personal details
Political partyLibertarian

Career in economics

Sophocleus has taught economics at

Auburn University Montgomery. He has been twice nominated to the Who's Who Among American Teachers. He is an adjunct faculty member of the Mises Institute[1] and occasionally lectures there, usually on United States tariff history. Sophocleus generally teaches the principles of microeconomics
.

His 1988 article "The Social Cost of Rent-seeking" with David Laband, published in

Public Choice, has been cited by Peter Leeson,[2] Gordon Tullock and others.[3]

Political efforts

In 1996, he was the

Bob Riley
.

In 2002, Sophocleus entered the

Alabama gubernatorial race on the Libertarian Party of Alabama's ticket against incumbent Don Siegelman and previous opponent Bob Riley. In the 2002 race, which was one of the closest in Alabama's history, Sophocleus received 23,242 votes (~2%),[4]
a number which was greater than the margin of victory in the race.

According to a 16 November 2002

:

The only reason the governor's race in Alabama was so close this year as to be disputed beyond election night was that the Libertarian candidate, John Sophocleus, attracted 23,000 votes.[5][6]

On 8 June 2006, in the wake of Stephen P. Gordon's acceptance of a position with the national Libertarian Party and subsequent resignation from the LPA Executive Committee, Sophocleus was named Vice-Chairman of the Libertarian Party of Alabama.[7]

In May 2022, Sophocleus was nominated by the Libertarian Party for the 2022 United States Senate election in Alabama after the party gained ballot access in the general election.[8]

Eminent domain conflict

Beginning in 1998, Sophocleus was involved in litigation[9] with the State of Alabama, the Alabama Department of Transportation, and others over the eminent domain seizure of his US Highway 280 home, near The Bottle, Alabama. Sophocleus contended that the state acted improperly by evicting him and allowing highway workers to live in his house for several months (while he still held legal title to the home) rather than immediately demolishing it as was stated would happen in United States district court.

Notes

  1. ^ "Faculty and Staff". Mises Institute.
  2. ^ Leeson, Peter T. The Invisible Hook: The Hidden Economics of Pirates. Princeton University Press. 2009. p. 191.
  3. ^ "Google Scholar". scholar.google.com.
  4. ^ "Politics: 2002 Governors." USA Today. 20 May 2005. [1]
  5. ^ Miller, John J. (16 November 2002). "A Third Party on the Right". New York Times. p. Editorials.
  6. ^ "Instapundit". instapundit.com. Archived from the original on January 20, 2006.
  7. ^ "LPA Officers." Libertarian Party of Alabama Archived 2007-05-17 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Moseley, Brandon (May 24, 2022). "Libertarians Gain Ballot Access". 1819 News. Retrieved May 24, 2022.
  9. US Supreme Court in case against AL Department of Transportation. [2]

External links

Party political offices
Preceded by
2002 (3rd)
Succeeded by