THE CLASSICAL LIBERAL PARTY CONDUCT CODE

UNIVERSAL CONDUCT

  1. Regardless of time or issue, no member of the Classical Liberal Party shall ever publicly slander, censure and or disparage any other member in good standing but shall lodge such concerns through the proper party channels and at the proper time and place.
  2. The Classical Liberal Party shall at all times be expressly clear and unambiguous about all its aims and policies both to its public and its membership.
  3. No proven public or party misconduct in the form of corruption or otherwise illegal conduct shall ever be tolerated to any extent by this party or any of its membership- ever.

CAMPAIGNING CONDUCT

  1. No member of the Classical Liberal Party shall ever accept political contributions on their own behalf from any source whatsoever but shall instead direct all such funds to the party treasury as a whole.
  2. No party candidate shall ever get caught in a name calling/mudslinging contest with candidates from other parties. But shall instead at all times stay on message.

ELECTED CONDUCT

  1. All Classical Liberal Party members given the honor of serving the people of any elected legislative office, shall be present without fail at each and every vote of their elected body regardless of the nature of the vote at hand. Should however they absolutely need to be absent from their elected posts, they shall publish in all the newspapers of the state or district they represent, a detailed reason as to the nature of that absence to the people they work for.
  2. No publicly elected member of the Classical Liberal Party shall ever travel on non-governmental business at taxpayer expense. Nor shall they ever except trips or gifts from any lobbyist or corporation for any reason whatsoever.

THERE ARE MANY MEN OF PRINCIPLE, IN BOTH PARTIES IN AMERICA. BUT NO PARTY OF      

PRINCIPLE.

                                                                                                       ALEXIS De TOCQUEVILLE (1835)

                                                                                                       Democracy in America, Chap. X