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Marianne Williamson presidential campaign, 2024
Date: November 5, 2024 |
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2028 • 2024 • 2020 • 2016 |
“ |
I am motivated by: a moral commitment to the tenets of liberty espoused in the Declaration of Independence and the Gettysburg Address; a realization of the Democratic Party's shift away from the party of President Franklin Roosevelt; and the economic injustices endured by millions of Americans due to the influence of corporate money on our political system.[1] |
” |
—Marianne Williamson (February 2023)[2][3] |
Marianne Williamson (D) was an author and 2020 Democratic presidential primary candidate. Williamson announced she was re-entering the Democratic presidential primary for the second time on July 2, 2024, calling for Democrats to hold an open convention at the Democratic National Convention on August 19-22, 2024.[4] Williamson did not qualify for the virtual roll call vote by the July 30 deadline.[5]
Williamson first announced her candidacy for the 2024 presidential election on February 23, 2023.[6] Williamson withdrew from the race on February 7, 2024, and re-entered the race on February 28, 2024.[7][8] Williamson withdrew from the race again on June 11, 2024.[9]
Williamson focused her campaign on economic issues, including universal healthcare, tuition-free higher education, paid parental leave, and a minimum wage increase. In her campaign announcement video, she said, "we all owe President Biden a debt of gratitude for defeating President Trump in 2020. But with the things that they're going to be throwing at us in 2024, we need to submit to the American people an agenda of fundamental economic reform."[10]
She ran in the Democratic primary for president of the United States in 2020. She entered the race on January 28, 2019, and ended her campaign on January 10, 2020.[11] In 2020, Williamson withdrew from the race before any primaries took place. She appeared on the ballot in 22 states, and her best electoral performance was in Oklahoma where she received 0.4% of the vote. To read more about Williamson's 2020 presidential campaign, click here.
Biography
Williamson was born in 1952 and grew up in Houston, Texas. She attended Pomona College in California for two years. Williamson read the book A Course in Miracles in her mid-20s, which she credited with launching her career as an author and lecturer.[12]
Williamson lectured on the book throughout the 1980s. In 1989, she founded Project Angel Food, a program delivering food to homebound individuals with AIDS in the Los Angeles area.[13] She co-founded The Peace Alliance in 2004. The nonprofit says it aims to educate and advocate around peacebuilding, including a campaign for the establishment of a U.S. Department of Peace.[14]
As of the beginning of her presidential campaign, Williamson had published 14 books, including four New York Times #1 best sellers.[12] She also had appeared as a guest on television shows such as The Oprah Winfrey Show, Good Morning America, and Real Time With Bill Maher.
Williamson ran as an independent to represent California's 33rd Congressional District in the U.S. House in 2014. She placed fourth in an 18-candidate field, receiving 13 percent of the vote in the top-two primary election.
She ran in the Democratic primary for president of the United States in 2020. She entered the race on January 28, 2019, and ended her campaign on January 10, 2020.[11]
Campaign finance
The following charts display noteworthy Democratic primary candidates' overall fundraising through the May 2024 monthly campaign finance reports. Note that the chart only displays data for principal campaign committees, not candidate-affiliated PACs or joint fundraising committees. The charts below include campaign finance reports beginning at the point the FEC started classifying the committee as a presidential candidate's principal campaign finance committee and ending after candidates withdrew from the primary.
Campaign advertisements
This section includes a selection of up to three campaign advertisements supporting this candidate and up to three campaign advertisements opposing this candidate, as well as links to other ads. If you know of additional links that should be included, please email us.
Support
May 12, 2023 |
March 4, 2023 |
Policy positions
The following policy positions were compiled from the candidate's official campaign website, editorials, speeches, and debates.
Immigration
Williamson's campaign website said, "Immigrants are not our enemies. I don’t know any progressive who is arguing for open borders, but we are arguing for open hearts. This is so important to remember today as immigrants are often viciously scapegoated. Scapegoating immigrants, particularly Mexicans and Central Americans, is a deliberate dehumanization technique. Dehumanizing others has always been the required first step leading toward history’s collective atrocities. This is not the first time dehumanization has reared its head in our nation, and we must stand up against it now as other generations stood up against it in their time." [source, as of 2023-12-19]
Healthcare
Williamson's campaign website said, "We need a single-payer healthcare system. The WHOLE HEALTH PLAN expands the healthcare debate, tackling not only how to pay for healthcare but also how to provide greater opportunities for health. The problem in America is not just that our current healthcare system fails to adequately treat sickness. The problem is our current economic system, based as it is on an inordinate focus on short-term profit, actually increases the probability of sickness." [source, as of 2023-12-19]
Economy
Williamson's campaign website said, "A system that does not feel, which has no sense of ethical responsibility to people or planet, is a dangerous guide to America’s future. Living for our principles will provide more economic security than living for short-term corporate interests can ever provide. Our government should not be run like a business; it should be run like a family, where taking care of each other, and taking care of our home, are the values that guide us. America can create a care economy." [source, as of 2023-12-19]
Education
Williamson's campaign website said, "Every public school in America should be a palace of learning, culture and the arts. That will be a primary goal of the Williamson administration. Education is a central tenet of our inalienable right to the 'pursuit of happiness,' as it immeasurably expands one’s ability to actualize our God-given talents. All students deserve a world class public school education. [source, as of 2023-12-19]
Gun regulation
Williamson's campaign website said, "Gun violence is the largest cause of death among America’s children. This situation is an emergency, and a President Williamson will treat it as such." [source, as of 2023-12-19]
Criminal justice
Wiliamson's campaign website said, "America’s criminal justice system creates just results for some people, but it is terribly unjust for far too many others. Research has shown that our history of 'tough on crime' laws have been directly responsible for America becoming the most incarcerated nation in the industrialized world. These laws disproportionately affect minorities and low-income communities. And because we do so little to rehabilitate those who are incarcerated, we have created a revolving door at our jails and prisons. Within five years of their release, three-quarters of formerly incarcerated persons are arrested once again, usually for minor infractions. Criminal justice has become both a political and moral disaster." [source, as of 2023-12-19]
Abortion
Williamson's campaign website said, "Regarding abortion rights, I am one hundred percent pro-choice. I believe the decision of whether or not to have an abortion lies solely with a pregnant woman, according to the dictates of her conscience and in communion with the God of her understanding. I trust the moral decision-making of the American woman, and I do not feel the government has a right to deny or restrict her decisions." [source, as of 2023-12-19]
Coronavirus response
Wiliamson's campaign website said, "According to studies by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), our country’s inadequate response to COVID-19 has resulted in over 1.1 million deaths and on average over 3200 people hospitalized daily. This means that the pandemic should return to status as a national emergency. Long Covid has caused both cognitive and physical impairments, and we must ensure those affected are protected in their workplace, as well as with the potential impacts to their housing and healthcare needs. As a country, we cannot compromise on relieving the trauma inflicted upon working people, and disabled and otherwise marginalized communities." [source, as of 2023-12-19]
Election policy
Williamson's campaign website listed the following policies, "Establishment of election day as a national holiday, and guarantee of enough time and polling places to allow for easy access to voting. [...] Ensure prepaid vote by mail is the standard for all elections (local, state, and federal)." [source, as of 2023-12-19]
Government ethics
In an op-ed Williamson wrote, "For more than 40 years the people of the United States have been receiving less and less of what should be considered our birthright: access to the real fruits of democracy. That means people determine for ourselves — through our elected representatives — the policies that affect our daily lives. That is the democratic ideal: that the needs of the people are fulfilled because the will of the people is sacrosanct. Today, however, as often as not America does not work that way. The democratic ideal lay in tatters as our legislators place the will of their donors before the health, safety and wellbeing of their constituents." [source, as of 2023-09-17]
Sex and gender issues
Williamson's campaign website said, "Our Declaration of Independence holds that the inalienable rights of, 'Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness,' are endowed to ALL humans by their creator at birth. In 2015, marriage equality became the law of the land, yet there is still no federal law explicitly protecting the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) communities from discrimination. These communities, therefore, do not enjoy the full breadth of freedoms that this country espouses to guarantee to each and every citizen. This is in direct violation of our founding principles." [source, as of 2023-12-19]
Opioids and drug issues
Williamson's campaign website said, "The rate of addiction and drug overdoses is higher in rural America, and most counties don’t have medical professionals who specialize in treating addiction. Telehealth can help deliver treatment for opioid use disorder by making it easier for those suffering from addiction to speak to specialists." [source, as of 2023-12-19]
Veterans
Williamson's campaign website said, "I have a deep sense of gratitude for the women and men that serve in our armed forces. It saddens me that some Veterans don’t always have access to the best care and attention that they have earned. That’s why, if I am elected president, I will work closely with veteran advocacy groups to put forth policies that matter most to our nation’s active duty service members and veterans." [source, as of 2023-12-19]
Other policy positions
Click on any of the following links to read more policy positions from the 2024 presidential candidates.
Administrative state
- 2024 presidential candidates on the administrative state
- 2024 presidential candidates on the Department of Justice and Federal Bureau of Investigation
Coronavirus response
Criminal justice
- 2024 presidential candidates on criminal justice
- 2024 presidential candidates on policing
- 2024 presidential candidates on the Trump indictments
- 2024 presidential candidates on courts
Economy
- 2024 presidential candidates on the economy
- 2024 presidential candidates on Social Security
- 2024 presidential candidates on taxes
- 2024 presidential candidates on inflation
- 2024 presidential candidates on job creation
Education
- 2024 presidential candidates on education
- 2024 presidential candidates on charter schools and voucher programs
- 2024 presidential candidates on school curriculums and parental involvement
- 2024 presidential candidates on college affordability
Election policy
Energy and environmental issues
- 2024 presidential candidates on energy and environmental issues
- 2024 presidential candidates on climate change
- 2024 presidential candidates on energy production
Environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG)
Federalism
Foreign policy
- 2024 presidential candidates on foreign policy
- 2024 presidential candidates on China (foreign policy)
- 2024 presidential candidates on Russia
- 2024 presidential candidates on the Russia-Ukraine War
- 2024 presidential candidates on the Middle East and North Africa
- 2024 presidential candidates on South and Central America
- 2024 presidential candidates on the Israel-Hamas War
- 2024 presidential candidates on the Israel-Palestine conflict
Government ethics
Gun regulation
Healthcare
Sex and gender issues
- 2024 presidential candidates on sex and gender issues
- 2024 presidential candidates on transgender healthcare
Immigration
- 2024 presidential candidates on immigration
- 2024 presidential candidates on border security
- 2024 presidential candidates on immigration enforcement
Impeachment
Infrastructure
Opioids and drug issues
Trade
Veterans
Campaign themes
Website
Policies from Williamson's campaign website as of April 5, 2024, are excerpted below.
“ |
Animal Protection I have long believed in the power of the human-animal bond and the hard-wired connection we have with wild and domesticated animals. Animals enrich our lives and are an antidote to loneliness and sadness. They comfort young and old alike, and make us more human and humane. More than two-thirds of American households have pets and hundreds of millions of us enjoy visiting national parks and other protected areas to see birds and mammals. Yet there are still too many examples where the human-animal bond is broken and people treat animals cruelly. Children When it comes to health, hunger, addiction, education, and safety – we are shirking our responsibilities as a nation of parents. Child advocacy is not being addressed with the attention and care it deserves. Too many of our children are endangered physically and emotionally. This is a humanitarian emergency. Climate Action Crime Prevention Criminal Justice Criminal justice has become both a political and moral disaster. Disability Justice Drug Policy The War on Drugs has completely failed to alleviate the problem it supposedly set out to solve. It has only created more problems, fueling mass incarceration and violence at home and abroad. We have spent $1 trillion and continue to spend $100 billion annually on the failed drug war, and over half of our incarcerated population is in prison because of drug-related charges. Our approach is not defeating the drug cartels in Latin America, which feed the horrifying violence that fuels the crisis at our Southern Border. Economy Economic Bill of Rights One of my favorite lines from Mahatma Gandhi is when he said that “the idea that economics is a verifiable science is one of the greatest evils ever foisted on the human mind.” The laws of physics, for instance, are objectively the same no matter where they’re applied. The laws of economics, however, often stray into subjectivity when applied to real people’s lives. Education A more conscious sense of citizenship is imperative if we’re to right the ship of our democracy; without training in the rigor of critical thinking, we’re less prepared for engaged citizenship. A world class education should be the right of every American citizen, not only for the sake of the individual citizen but for the sake of the country. Democracy bestows more than rights. It bestows responsibilities as well: the responsibility to analyze intelligently what is happening in our country, and make carefully considered decisions regarding who should represent us. Education gives us a greater ability to direct our own lives, and the destiny of our country. Food Safety Government & Democracy Gun Safety Health The WHOLE HEALTH PLAN expands the health care debate, tackling not only how to pay for health care but also how to provide greater opportunities for health. The problem in America is not just that our current healthcare system fails to adequately treat sickness. The problem is our current economic system, based as it is on an inordinate focus on short-term profit, actually increases the probability of sickness. Healing Root Causes Housing When I was growing up, the average American could afford to own their own home. Today, there is virtually no city or town where a full-time minimum-wage worker can even afford to rent a decent two-bedroom apartment. Over 18 million families are paying the majority of their income on housing. Over half a million people will be sleeping out on the streets or in homeless shelters because they cannot afford to put a roof over their heads. Immigration Justice Labor LGBTQIA+ Rights Mass Incarceration Central to our problem is a penchant for punishment, rather than rehabilitation, that runs through too much of our criminal justice system. While there are many good people working within the system, institutionally we remain stuck within an obsolete consciousness that does more to prepare people for a life of crime once they get out of jail, than for a life repaired. Native American Justice Pandemic & Long Covid Response Long Covid has caused both cognitive and physical impairments, and we must ensure those affected are protected in their workplace, as well as with the potential impacts to their housing and healthcare needs. As a country, we cannot compromise on relieving the trauma inflicted upon working people, and disabled and otherwise marginalized communities. Peace Poverty Reparations Reproductive Justice I believe the decision of whether or not to have an abortion lies solely with a pregnant woman, according to the dictates of her conscience and in communion with the God of her understanding. I trust the moral decision-making of the American woman, and I do not feel the government has a right to deny or restrict her decisions. Social Security Under no circumstances should we put Social Security at risk. We need to protect this successful and compassionate program that retiring Americans have relied on for nearly eighty-five years. Student Plan Universal Basic Income Poverty is people sleeping out in the streets. Poverty is children going to bed with hungry stomachs. Poverty is life without a break from overwhelming stress. Poverty is anti-human. And yet, in a country as wealthy as the United States, the poverty that plagues us is a policy choice. We could simply choose to end poverty among children, among seniors, and among all of our fellow citizens. Veteran's Rights Women's Rights As the first woman President of the United States, I would be deeply aware of my pivotal role in ushering in a new era of female leadership. If I am given the authority, I will use the full powers of the presidency to advocate for the things women care about.[15] [1] |
” |
Campaign logo and slogan
The table below displays this candidate's campaign logo and slogan. Click here to view more campaign logos and slogans in the 2024 presidential race.
2024 Democratic presidential candidate logos | |||
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Candidate | Logo | Slogan | |
Marianne Williamson |
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Campaign staff
- See also: Marianne Williamson presidential campaign staff, 2024, Presidential election key staffers, 2024, and Presidential election campaign managers, 2024
Ballotpedia was unable to identify any national staff members for Williamson's campaign. To recommend additions, please email us at editor@ballotpedia.org.
Social media and campaign website
Campaign website
Social media accounts
- Marianne Williamson on Facebook
- Marianne Williamson on Twitter
- Marianne Williamson on Instagram
- Marianne Williamson on YouTube
Timeline of campaign activity
The following section provides a timeline of Williamson's campaign activity from January 2023 to June 2024. The entries are sorted by month in reverse chronological order.
2024
- June 11, 2024: Williamson withdrew from the Democratic primary. Williamson said in a statement, "Now that the primaries are complete, I’m no longer a candidate for the Democratic nomination for president. Deep thanks to all my donors, volunteers and supporters who stood for the radically humanitarian agenda that was the core of my campaign. We articulated an analysis of our history as well as a regenerative path forward that I believe in my heart is the most powerful antidote to authoritarianism and national decline. I hope our message will continue to resonate and impact our political conversation for many years to come."[16]
- June 4, 2024: Williamson lost presidential primaries in Washington, D.C., New Mexico, and South Dakota. She was awarded no delegates.
- May 23, 2024: Williamson held campaign events in Taos, New Mexico.[17]
- May 22, 2024: Williamson held campaign events in Las Cruces, New Mexico.[18]
- May 21, 2024:
- Williamson lost the Democratic presidential primaries in Kentucky and Oregon and was awarded no delegates.
- Williamson held campaign events in Albuquerque, New Mexico. [19]
- May 14, 2024: Williamson lost the Maryland Democratic primary and was awarded no delegates.
- April 28, 2024: Williamson lost the Puerto Rico Democratic primary and was awarded no delegates.
- April 24, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in Oldham County, Kentucky. She said this event would be her last public campaign event.[20]
- April 17, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in Eugene, Oregon.[21]
- April 16, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in Bend, Oregon.[22]
- April 15, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in Portland, Oregon.[23]
- April 13, 2024:
- Williamson lost the Democratic presidential caucus in Wyoming and was awarded no delegates.
- Williamson held a campaign event in Albuquerque, New Mexico.[24]
- April 12, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in Santa Fe, New Mexico.[25]
- April 8, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in Washington, D.C..[26]
- April 2, 2024: Williamson lost the Democratic presidential primaries in Connecticut and New York. She was awarded no delegates in either contest.
- March 30, 2024:
- The North Dakota Democratic presidential caucus took place. Williamson received 3.4% of the vote and was awarded no delegates.[27]
- Williamson held a campaign event in New York City.[28]
- March 29, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in Ossining, New York.[29]
- March 28, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in New Haven, Connecticut.[30]
- March 27, 2024: Williamson campaigned in Queens, New York.[31]
- March 23, 2024: The Louisiana Democratic presidential primary took place. Williamson received 4.7% of the vote and was awarded no delegates.[32]
- March 21, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in New Orleans, Louisiana.[33]
- March 19, 2024: Williamson was on the ballot in presidential primaries in Arizona, Illinois, and Kansas. She lost all three contests and was awarded no delegates.
- March 17, 2024: Williamson held campaign events in Scottsdale and Tempe, Arizona.[34]
- March 16, 2024: Williamson campaigned in Tucson, Arizona.[35]
- March 15, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in Chicago, Illinois.[36]
- March 13, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in Chicago, Illinois.[37]
- March 12, 2024: Williamson was on the ballot in presidential primaries in Georgia and Washington, and on the ballot in the presidential caucus in the Northern Mariana Islands. She lost all three contests and was allocated no delegates.
- March 11, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in Atlanta, Georgia.[38]
- March 10, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in Atlanta, Georgia.[39]
- March 9, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in Atlanta, Georgia.[40]
- March 7, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in Vancouver, Washington.[41]
- March 6, 2024: The Hawaii Democratic primary took place. Joe Biden (D) won with 66% of the vote, followed by the uncommitted ballot option with 29.1%, Williamson with 3.2%, and withdrawn candidate Dean Phillips (D) with 1%. Williamson was awarded none of Hawaii's 22 delegates.[42]
- March 5, 2024: Super Tuesday took place. Williamson did not win any nominating contests and was not projected to receive any delegates. Joe Biden (D) won 15 of the 16 Democratic nominating events and was awarded at least 1,291 delegates. Jason Palmer won American Samoa, and was projected to receive at least three delegates. At least five Minnesota delegates were sent to the Democratic National Convention as uncommitted.[43]
- March 4, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in Sacramento, California.[44]
- March 3, 2024: Williamson held campaign events in Los Angeles, California.[45]
- March 2, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in Ojai, California.[46]
- February 29, 2024: Williamson held campaign events in San Francisco, California.[47][48]
- February 28, 2024:
- Williamson re-entered the race, saying, "As of today, I am unsuspending my campaign for the presidency of the United States. I had suspended it beacuse I was losing the horse race, but something so much more important than the horse race is at stake here and we must respond. Right now we have a fascist standing at the door [...] But we're not going to defeat the fascist by - well, by what? What is President Biden offering?"[49]
- Williamson held a campaign event in Berkeley, California.[50]
- February 27, 2024: The Michigan Democratic primary took place. Joe Biden (D) won with 81.1% of the vote, followed by the uncommitted ballot option with 13%, Williamson with 3%, and Dean Phillips (D) with 2.7%. Biden was awarded 115 of Michigan's Democratic delegates, and two delegates are uncommitted. Williamson was not awarded any delegates.[51]
- February 7, 2024: Williamson withdrew from the race.[52]
- February 6, 2024: The Nevada Democratic primary took place. Joe Biden (D) won with 89.3% of the vote, followed by the ballot option None of these candidates with 5.8%, and Williamson with 2.9%. No other candidate received more than 1% of the vote. Williamson was allocated none of Nevada's 36 pledged delegates.[53]
- February 4, 2024: Williamson campaigned in Las Vegas, Nevada.[54]
- February 3, 2024:
- The South Carolina Democratic primary took place. Joe Biden (D) won with 96.2% of the vote, followed by Williamson with 2.1%, and Dean Phillips (D) with 1.7%. Williamson was allocated none of South Carolina's 55 pledged delegates.[55]
- Williamson campaigned in Las Vegas, Nevada.[56]
- January 27, 2024: Williamson commented on her performance in New Hampshire and campaign strategy moving forward. Williamson said, "When I came in at less than 5% in New Hampshire, it really felt like a fork in the road. There was a time when I thought we were gonna make it to 15% and we had a good shot at it. And then four days before there were these multimillion dollar ads, four days in a row, Super PAC funded ad campaigns with which we could not even begin to compete. So I had to sort of process this on a personal level, and I actually made a video and I wrote a letter and it was this sort of classy dignified gracious way out. And then the idea that there's just gonna be a coronation, that the machine just muted everyone. [...] And I know in South Carolina, you know, we don't have any chance there, it's just such a machine. So for the next 11 days, we're gonna mount a social media campaign particularly geared towards those of you in Nevada who want to protest the coronation."[57]
- January 23, 2024:
- Williamson's campaign manager, Carlos Cardona, resigned. Cardona said, "As of tonight I am no longer the campaign Manager for Marianne Williamson for President, I wish her the best in the future of the campaign. I got to manage some of the most amazing staff, got to work closely with many amazing volunteers that I now call friends. Hopeful this journey opens the door for future Puerto Ricans and Latinos to be able to prove that they too can run a campaign, and can do anything they set their minds and hearts to."[58]
- The New Hampshire Democratic primary took place. With 92% precincts reporting, Joe Biden (R) won as a write-in candidate with 53.9% of the vote, followed by Dean Phillips (D) with 19.6%, Williamson with 4.6%, and Derek Nadeau (D) with 1.1%. No other candidate received more than 1% of the vote. The Democratic National Committee (DNC) said the results of New Hampshire's Democratic presidential primary would not be used to allocate the state's delegates at the national convention. The DNC and the New Hampshire Democratic Party have not yet agreed on a plan for delegate allocation in the state.[59]
- January 22, 2024: Williamson campaigned in Hooksett, New Hampshire.[60]
- January 21, 2024: Williamson held campaign events in Nashua and Peterborough, New Hampshire.[61]
- January 20, 2024: Williamson held campaign events in Manchester and Portsmouth, New Hampshire.[62]
- January 18, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in Keene, New Hampshire.[63]
- January 17, 2024: Williamson campaigned in Concord, New Hampshire.[64]
- January 16, 2024: Williamson campaigned in Dover, New Hampshire.[65]
- January 15, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.[66]
- January 14, 2024: Williamson campaigned in Concord, Forest Lake, Littleton, and Center Sandwich, New Hampshire.[67][68]
- January 13, 2024: Williamson campaigned in Nashua and Manchester, New Hampshire.[69][70]
- January 12, 2024: Williamson participated in a televised NewsNation presidential candidate forum.[71]
- January 11, 2024: Williamson held campaign events in Durham and Nashua, New Hampshire.[72][73]
- January 10, 2024: Williamson spoke at a meeting with the Gilford Democrats in Laconia, New Hampshire.[74]
- January 9, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in Manchester, New Hampshire.[75]
- January 8, 2024: Williamson participated in a debate against Dean Phillips (D) in New Hampshire. Sirius XM and New England College hosted the debate.[76] Click here to read more about the debate.
- January 7, 2024: Williamson held a campaign event in Concord, New Hampshire.[77]
- January 3, 2024: Williamson campaigned in Las Vegas, Nevada.[78]
- January 3, 2024: Williamson campaigned in Las Vegas, Nevada.[79]
- January 2, 2024:
- Williamson campaigned in Las Vegas, Nevada.[80]
- Williamson campaigned in Reno, Nevada.[81]
- January 1, 2024: Williamson campaigned in Reno, Nevada.[82]
2023
- December 18, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Derry, Manchester, and Candia, New Hampshire.[83][84]
- December 17, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Keene, New Hampshire.[85]
- December 16, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Littleton, New Hampshire.[86]
- December 5, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Clemson, South Carolina.[87]
- December 4, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Columbia and Rock Hill, South Carolina.[88]
- December 3, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.[89]
- December 2, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Beaufort, South Carolina.[90]
- December 1, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Mount Pleasant and Charleston, South Carolina.[91]
- November 28, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Reno, Nevada.[92]
- November 27, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Las Vegas, Nevada.[93]
- November 26, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Las Vegas, Nevada.[94]
- November 25, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Las Vegas, Nevada.[95]
- November 21, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Dearborn Heights, Michigan.[96]
- November 20, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event at Oakland University in Rochester, Michigan.[97]
- November 19, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Ypsilanti, Michigan.[98]
- November 18, 2023: Williamson held campaign events in Dexter and Lansing, Michigan.[99]
- November 14, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in New York City.[100]
- November 12, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Boston, Massachusetts.[101]
- November 9, 2023: Williamson held campaign events in Portland, Maine.[102]
- November 8, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Candia, New Hampshire.[103]
- November 7, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Manchester, New Hampshire.[104]
- October 26, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in San Diego, California.[105]
- October 25, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Encinitas, California.[106]
- October 23, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Los Angeles, California.[107]
- October 22, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in San Francisco, California.[108]
- October 21, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Oakland, California.[109]
- October 20, 2023: Williamson spoke at Scripps College in Claremont, California.[110]
- October 18, 2023: Williamson spoke at UC Berkeley in Berkeley, California.[111]
- October 17, 2023: Williamson spoke at the George Washington University in Washington, D.C..[112]
- October 16, 2023: Williamson spoke at The College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia.[113]
- October 15, 2023: The October quarterly Federal Election Commission campaign finance reporting deadline passed. Williamson raised $821,832 and spent $825,656, with $101,167 in cash on hand as of September 30.[114]
- October 11, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Las Vegas, Nevada.[115]
- October 9, 2023: Williamson held campaign events in Carson City and Reno, Nevada.[116]
- October 8, 2023: Williamson issued a statement in response to Hamas' military attacks against Israel, and Israel's subsequent declaration of war. Williamson said, "Innocent civilians who had nothing to do with the actions of the Israeli government are, even as I write this, either being tortured or killed or are dead already. Children have been taken hostage. A nation is terrorized. Israeli Military Intelligence, who everyone thought had such vast operational superiority that no one would ever dare do what Hamas has now done, has spectacularly and tragically failed at its job. And yes, I know. These events did not occur in a vacuum. I could write about - and indeed I have, and at length - the myriad injustices Palestinians have endured at the hands of Israel. [...] For now, I stand with Israel. And I stand with the Palestinian people. I do not stand with Hamas, nor will I ever."[117]
- October 7, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Las Vegas, Nevada.[118]
- October 4, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Tilton, Henniker, Manchester, and Goffstown, New Hampshire.[119]
- October 3, 2023: Williamson spoke at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire.[120]
- October 2, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Rindge, Keene, and Exeter, New Hampshire.[121]
- October 1, 2023: Williamson held campaign events in Franconia and Durham, New Hampshire.[122]
- September 22, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Atlanta, Georgia.[123]
- September 17, 2023: Williamson wrote an op-ed for the New Hampshire Union-Leader titled "Marianne Williamson: It's time for a huge change in America." Williamson wrote, "The worst enemy of democracy is not Donald Trump; the worst enemy of democracy is corporate greed. Corporate greed laid the foundation for a world in which ideas such as Trump’s are thought by anyone to be attractive. People aren’t attracted to authoritarians as long as democracy is doing what it is meant to do: provide what in our Declaration of Independence are referred to as the 'inalienable rights' of 'life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.'"[124]
- September 10, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Ann Arbor, Michigan.[125]
- September 9, 2023: Williamson held campaign events in Highland Park and Royal Oak, Michigan.[126]
- August 31, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Austin, Texas.[127]
- August 29, 2023: Williamson held campaign events in North Charleston and Charleston, South Carolina.[128]
- August 28, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Aiken, South Carolina.[129]
- August 26, 2023: Williamson held campaign events in Fort Mill and Rock Hill, South Carolina.[130]
- August 25, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Atlanta, Georgia.[131]
- August 22, 2023: Williamson held campaign events in Barre, Johnson, and Burlington, Vermont.[132]
- August 21, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Laconia, New Hampshire.[133]
- August 20, 2023: Williamson attended her New Hampshire campaign office opening in North Conway, New Hampshire.[134]
- August 19, 2023: Williamson held campaign events in Tamworth and Manchester, New Hampshire.[135]
- August 18, 2023: Williamson held campaign events in Nashua and Manchester, New Hampshire.[136]
- August 14, 2023: Williamson commented on the Georgia grand jury indictment of Donald Trump (R). Williamson said, "The Georgia indictments against Donald Trump give us ten new reasons to turn the page and move on. The former president will have to deal with his troubles but the country should not be further weighed down by them."[137]
- August 12, 2023: Williamson spoke at the Des Moines Register's Political Soapbox event at the Iowa State Fair. Click here to view her remarks.[138]
- August 10, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Las Vegas, Nevada.[139]
- August 6, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Highland Park, Michigan.[140]
- August 5, 2023: Williamson attended a Pride Festival in Royal Oak, Michigan, and campaigned in Detroit, Michigan.[141]
- August 1, 2023: Williamson commented on the federal indictment of Donald Trump (R) related to interference in the certification of the 2020 presidential election. Williamson said, "He was indicted again. Just shocking."[142]
- July 25, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Greenville, South Carolina.[143]
- July 24, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Columbia, South Carolina.[144]
- July 15, 2023:
- Williamson campaigned in West Hollywood, California.[145]
- The July quarterly Federal Election Commission campaign finance reporting deadline passed. Williamson raised $920,636 and spent $1 million with $104,991 in cash on hand as of June 30.[146]
- July 10, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Chicago, Illinois.[147]
- July 7, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Detroit, Michigan.[148]
- July 4, 2023: Williamson participated in Independence Day parades in Wolfeboro and Merrimack, New Hampshire.[149]
- July 3, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Manchester and Sandwich, New Hampshire.[150][151]
- July 2, 2023: Williamson participated in an Independence Day parade in Laconia, New Hampshire.[152]
- June 30, 2023:
- Williamson campaigned in Boston, Massachusetts.[153]
- Williamson announced Carlos Cardona, her campaign's former New Hampshire state director, would serve as her campaign manager.[154]
- June 20, 2023: Politico reported that Roza Calderon resigned as Williamson's campaign manager.[155]
- June 9, 2023: Williamson's campaign issued a statement on Trump's indictment on charges he mishandled classified documents. Williamson's campaign said, "The indictment of a former president on charges related to the Espionage Act is a sobering development. All Americans - regardless of our political affiliation - should be hoping for a fair and impartial trial for the former president. Mr. Trump and his lawyers have the right to defend his case in court, and all of us as citizens have the responsibility to honor our criminal codes of justice."[156]
- May 31, 2023:
- Williamson wrote an op-ed for Newsweek titled "Debate Us, Mr. President." Williamson wrote, "Candidate suppression is a form of voter suppression, and the party that purports to be the champion of democracy should not be so wary of it in our own house. The best way to protect our democracy is through practicing it. The DNC does not have the right to determine who's 'qualified' for president, when all that really means is who in their mind is qualified to perpetuate the system as it is. The Democratic Party must allow President Biden to debate his opponents. The fate of our democracy is at stake, and only more democracy can save it."[157]
- Williamson commented on the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023, saying, "The debt ceiling deal is not an example of good governance and honorable compromise. It sells out the American people and the planet on which we live, protecting the powerful and inflicting harm on the weak and powerless."[158]
- May 23, 2023: Williamson released the text of her economic policy, titled "An Economic Bill of Rights: A Vision for a Moral Economy." Click here to read the policy.[159]
- May 20, 2023: Williamson's campaign manager, Peter Daou, resigned from her campaign.[160] In a statement, Daou said, "urgent family obligations made it very difficult for me to continue in my role, but I believe deeply in the campaign's platform, which is the strongest and most transformation of this election. I wish Marianne and the team well as they promote crucial issues like universal healthcare, climate action, and reparations."[161]
- May 19, 2023: Williamson's deputy campaign manager, Jason Call, resigned from her campaign.[162]
- May 18, 2023: Williamson delivered a speech outlining her economic policy at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C.. Williamson said, "People are struggling because the entire political system over the last fifty years has left millions of people behind, creating and countenancing the destruction of America's middle class. Forces of economic royalism that have sucked the majority of America's financial resources into the hands of 1% of Americans are headquartered in both political parties. And the Democrats will win in 2024 as well as for the foreseeable future by reclaiming its traditional values as the party that tells those forces to get the hell out."[163]
- May 14, 2023: Williamson spoke at a Mother's Day event in Atlanta, Georgia.[164]
- May 11, 2023: Williamson held a campaign event in Washington, D.C..[165]
- May 9, 2023: Williamson held a town hall in Darlington, Pennsylvania, which is near East Palestine, Ohio, to discuss the train derailment in East Palestine.[166]
- May 3, 2023: In response to the Writers Guild of America strike, Williamson said, "The WGA writers strike will go down as a pivotal moment in the counteroffensive against vulture capitalism ... And economic system - in Hollywood or anywhere else - that thrives by keeping the majority of people in a necessitous situation is an attack on freedom."[167]
- April 29, 2023: Williamson spoke at the South Carolina Democratic Party state convention in Columbia, South Carolina.[168]
- April 28, 2023: Williamson spoke at a Young Democrats of South Carolina event in Columbia, South Carolina. She also spoke at a Lexington County Democrats event in Lexington.[169]
- April 27, 2023: Williamson spoke at an event at the College of Charleston.[170]
- April 26, 2023: Williamson spoke at a Young Democrats of Emory University event.[171]
- April 25, 2023: Williamson released a statement responding to President Joe Biden's (D) announcement that he would seek re-election. Williamson said, "I look forward to a robust debate with Joe Biden, as I present to the American people my platform of fundamental economic reform as a far better way to win the White House in 2024 than the president’s incremental approach to governing. At such a critical time in our country, neither the President nor the DNC has the right to determine who and who is not a serious candidate. That is the right of the people alone."[172]
- April 24, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Detroit, Michigan and spoke at an event hosted by the Michigan State University College Democrats.[173][174]
- April 22, 2023: Williamson spoke at an Earth Day event in New York City.[175]
- April 17, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Durham and Plaistow, New Hampshire.[176]
- April 16, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Keene and Henniker, New Hampshire.[177]
- April 15, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Dover, New Hampshire. She also spoke at an event hosted by Cornel West in Cambridge, Massachusetts.[178]
- April 14, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Lancaster and Littleton, New Hampshire.[179]
- April 11, 2023: Williamson spoke at an event hosted by the Yale Political Union.[180]
- March 31, 2023: Williamson spoke at a drag show and story hour in Johnson City, Tennessee.[181]
- March 29, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Lancaster, South Carolina. She appeared at an event hosted by the Lancaster County Democratic Party.[182]
- March 28, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Charleston, South Carolina. According to WCBD, Williamson "visit[ed] a North Charleston community center on Tuesday to meet with voters, activists, party officials, religious leaders, and state representatives."[183]
- March 27, 2023: Williamson campaign in Columbia, South Carolina.[184]
- March 26, 2023: Williamson spoke at a South Carolina Democratic Party Black Caucus dinner in West Columbia, South Carolina.[185]
- March 15, 2023: Williamson announced Carlos Cardona would serve as her campaign's New Hampshire state director. At the time, Cardona was a member of the Democratic National Committee's Rule Committee, and formerly chaired the Laconia Democratic Party.[186]
- March 13, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Milford, New Hampshire.[187]
- March 12, 2023: Williamson campaigned in North Hampton and Manchester, New Hampshire.[188]
- March 11, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Concord, Laconia, and Manchester, New Hampshire.[189]
- March 10, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Peterborough, Raymond, and Londonderry, New Hampshire.[190]
- March 9, 2023: Williamson campaign in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. She also addressed the New Hampshire State Senate.[191][192]
- March 8, 2023: Williamson campaigned in Hampton, New Hampshire. Speaking to WMUR 9, she commented on the Democratic National Committee's early primary calendar plan, "New Hampshirites are clearly open to independent thinkers, to progressive thinkers, so the DNC just tried to shuttle that off to the side, you know. It's all so obvious."[193]
- March 6, 2023: Williamson held a meet and greet in Charleston, South Carolina.[194]
- March 4, 2023: Williamson officially launched her campaign at an event in Washington, D.C.. She said, "The opponent is not a specific situation or circumstance. The opponent is an economic mindset that has had its grip on this country for the last 50 years."[195]
- March 2, 2023: Williamson tweeted about her healthcare policy. She wrote, "Insulin capped at $35 is huge and important, but it's just the beginning. The goal is universal healthcare in America, just as there is in every other advanced democracy."[196]
- February 26, 2023: The Washington Post interviewed Williamson. In the interview, she said she would campaign in South Carolina, New Hampshire, and East Palestine, Ohio, after her formal presidential declaration on March 4.[197]
- February 23, 2023: In an interview with the Medill News Service, Williamson confirmed her candidacy for the 2024 Democratic presidential nomination.[198]
See also
Use the dropdown menu below to navigate Ballotpedia's coverage of noteworthy Democratic and Republican presidential primary campaigns.
Footnotes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
- ↑ 4President, "Statement from Marianne Williamson," February 18, 2023
- ↑ The Hill, "Marianne Williamson to make ‘important announcement’ on March 4," Feburary 18, 2023
- ↑ X, "Williamson on July 2, 2024," accessed July 2, 2024
- ↑ DNC, "DNC and DNCC Chairs Announce Results of Presidential Nominating Petition Process and Opening of Virtual Roll Call on August 1," July 30, 2024
- ↑ The Hill, "Marianne Williamson confirms she will run for president in 2024," February 23, 2023
- ↑ Twitter, "Williamson on February 7, 2024," accesssed February 8, 2024
- ↑ Twitter, "Williamson on February 28, 2024
- ↑ X, "Williamson on June 11, 2024," accessed June 13, 2024
- ↑ YouTube, "Marianne Williamson is Running For President," March 4, 2023
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 The New York Times, "Marianne Williamson Drops Out of 2020 Presidential Race," January 10, 2020
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 Marianne Williamson's 2019 campaign website, "My Story," accessed July 10, 2019
- ↑ Marianne Williamson, "Marianne's Bio," accessed July 10, 2019
- ↑ Peace Alliance, "History," accessed July 10, 2019
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