2013 Liberal Party Leadership Election

John Moloch
Platform - The End Just a back bench MP during the previous term, Moloch's estrangement from the now notoriously innefectual Triangle cabinet has allowed to him to soar in prominence within the party in the year since the V.O.N.C. After the debilitating result for the party in the 2013 general election, he became the lead spokesperson of a faction within the party calling for a merger with the liberal-conservative Civic Union. He ran for leader with the promise of enacting this vision should he be elected. His campaign was criticized after swathes of northern conservatives registered for the Liberal Party in the run up to the election with the aim of swaying the outcome in his favour - although Moloch himself official condemned this practice.

Isaac Ulysses Hawthorne
Platform - Essence of Triangle Triangles former right hand man, and interim leader of the party for the past year, Hawthorne wants to uphold the legacy of his predecessor. He sees the CU, LWP, and LBT as having betrayed the liberals during the triangle term, and as such holds a remarkably hostile view of all other parties in the NA. His continued leadership would promise an isolated LP, which looks inward, and attempts to reacpture the charisma that once won their party nearly of a third of the seats in parliament.

Jack Walker
Platform - Constitutional Reform Fist gaining distinction after his succsesful senatorial run under the Abolish The Senate ticket, Jack Walker sided strongly with the PM and Zebra during the power struggle between the upper and lower house that took place two years earlier. His reputation is as an adovocate for anti-elitism, and that eponymous constitutional reform. Despite sitting ideologically to the right of present party leadership, Walkers faction calls for a reconcilliatory attitude to the other centrist parties, all while assuring the Liberals would remain their own party under his leadership.

Nicholas Sean
Platform - Labour-Liberal Notorious for sitting in the senate under his distinctive labour-liberal moniker, Sean esposes a unique blend of social democracy and Liberal ideology. His campaign is centered around closer association, even a merger, with the LWP, to make Labour-Liberalism a national reality.