Why don’t libertarians win elections? Simple. Most people don’t want the things that libertarians promise. They don’t believe in the things that libertarians believe in. So the question is why libertarians bother to run campaigns.
This has been a question I’ve heard debated ever since I became a libertarian 20 years ago. It always seemed like a contradiction to me. When I was active in the Libertarian Party, it felt as though we weren’t clear on what we were doing. Were we trying to win elections? Or were we just trying to educate people?
Every libertarian campaign suffers from the same confusion. Some people try to talk themselves into believing the candidate can win, but more realistic people understand it’s not going to happen. Those people tell themselves that the campaign is worth it anyway, because they’re educating people and “spreading the message of liberty.”
Both groups are lying to themselves, but they don’t realize it. If they read what I’m saying here, they will be certain that I’m wrong. But if I’m wrong, I’d like someone to show me the successful libertarian campaigns that are changing people’s minds and then winning elections. Here’s a hint. You won’t find any.

Your words of kindness can show love to strangers struggling in life
Goodbye, Thomas (2006?-2023)
Truth beyond physical world is hard for a skeptical man to see
Ethicists argue for killing newborns, say it’s just as moral as abortion
Nature struggles to keep alive
There are three kinds of lonely — and I don’t know which this is
Without real human connection, we’re just living in a simulation
We’re becoming so selfish that our old ‘social scripts’ are dying