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LaRouche and was
LaRouche was a presidential candidate eight times between 1976 to 2004, running once for his own U. S. Labor Party and campaigning seven times for the Democratic Party nomination.
Ramsey Clark, who was LaRouche's chief appellate attorney and a former U. S. Attorney General, said that LaRouche was denied a fair trial.
LaRouche wrote that many GIs feared they would be asked to support British forces in actions against Indian independence forces, and that prospect was " revolting to most of us.
For six months, LaRouche worked with American Healyite leader Tim Wohlforth, who later wrote that LaRouche had a " gargantuan ego ," and " a marvelous ability to place any world happening in a larger context, which seemed to give the event additional meaning, but his thinking was schematic, lacking factual detail and depth.
Members all over the world would send information to NCLC headquarters, which would distribute the information via briefings and other publications. LaRouche organized the network as a series of news services and magazines, which commentators say was done to gain access to government officials under press cover.
" LaRouche describes it in another location as " a new Whig association ," adding that an important objective of the party was to fight against " the attempted revival of the ' preventive nuclear war ' organization, the revived Committee on the Present Danger.
LaRouche would question spouses about their partner's sexual habits, the Times said, and in one case reportedly ordered a member to stop having sex with his wife because it was making him " politically impotent.
The Party for the Commonwealth of Canada was a Canadian political party formed by Canadians who supported the ideology of U. S. politician Lyndon LaRouche in the 1984, 1988 and 1993 elections.
and that the Mossad was responsible for the assassination of John F. Kennedy, the Watergate scandal and the Monica Lewinsky affair ; and Lyndon LaRouche, who spoke about global finance and his proposal for a transcontinental highway.
The NALP was the Canadian affiliate of the Lyndon LaRouche movement, and later became the Party for the Commonwealth of Canada / Party for the Commonwealth-Republic.
It was originally a New Left organization influenced by Trotskyist ideas as well as those of other Marxists such as Rosa Luxemburg, but opposed other New Left organizations which LaRouche said were dominated by the Ford Foundation, Institute for Policy Studies and Herbert Marcuse.
Jeffrey Steinberg, LaRouche spokesperson and NCLC " director of counterintelligence ", described it as the " COINTELPRO memo ", which he says showed " that the FBI was considering supporting an assassination attempt against LaRouche by the Communist Party USA.
The reason Fred Newman and his colleagues provided for leaving the NCLC was a disagreement between LaRouche and Newman over what to do with the National Unemployed and Welfare Rights Organization ( NUWRO ), which the LaRouchians had founded the previous year ( Newman wanted to build it up, while LaRouche wanted to concentrate on more rarefied issues ).
However, the differences in life style between LaRouchians and Newmanites were equally important in triggering the split, with the notably puritanical LaRouche writing that there was no room in the NCLC for the CFC's unconventional ( by LaRouchian standards ) sexual practices.
This was after Mop Up was over, but while the LaRouche organization was still engaging in physical intimidation against black activists and West Coast leftists.
The institute was founded at a conference in Wiesbaden, Germany, in 1984 by Helga Zepp-LaRouche, the German-born wife of American political activist Lyndon LaRouche.
There he became a Professor at Rutgers University, New Jersey and an associate of Lyndon LaRouche, and was a founding board member of the Schiller Institute in 1984.

LaRouche and born
Lyndon Hermyle LaRouche, Jr. ( born September 8, 1922 ), also known as Lyn Marcus, is an American political activist and founder of the LaRouche movement.

LaRouche and Rochester
He served time in the Federal Medical Center, Rochester, in Rochester, Minnesota, sharing a cell with activist Lyndon LaRouche and skydiver Roger Nelson.

LaRouche and New
It has also published editorials comparing the attacks by Seymour Hersh, and The New York Times on Leo Strauss and his alleged influence in the George W. Bush administration with those of Lyndon LaRouche, a fringe conspiracy theorist and perennial presidential candidate.
In 1967 LaRouche began teaching classes on Marx's dialectical materialism at New York City's Free School, and attracted a group of students from Columbia University and the City College of New York, recommending that they read Das Kapital, as well as Hegel, Kant, and Leibniz.
LaRouche wrote in his 1987 autobiography that violent altercations had begun in 1969 between his NCLC members and several New Left groups when Mark Rudd's faction began assaulting LaRouche's faction at Columbia University.
Press accounts alleged that between April and September 1973, during what LaRouche called " Operation Mop-Up ," NCLC members began physically attacking members of leftist groups that LaRouche classified as " left-protofascists "; an editorial in LaRouche's New Solidarity said of the Communist Party that the movement " must dispose of this stinking corpse.
A two-part article in The New York Times in 1979 by Howard Blum and Paul L. Montgomery alleged that LaRouche had turned it — at that point with 1, 000 members in 37 offices in North America, and 26 in Europe and Latin America — into an extreme-right, anti-Semitic organization, despite the presence of Jewish members.
" The LaRouche Connection ," The New Republic, November 19, 1984, p. 15.
" LaRouche: A Dictatorial Mind at Work ", New America, April – May 1982.
Led by LaRouche, it included " New Left lieutenants " Ed Spannaus, Nancy Spannaus, and Tony Papert, as well as Paul Milkman, Paul Gallagher, Leif Johnson, Tony Chaitkin, and Steve Fraser.
* Dennis King's LaRouche Watch site includes full text of Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism with history of NCLC / ICLC through late 1980s.
In a dramatic public confrontation at a forum on New York's Upper West Side and in a series of mimeographed broadsides, they accused Newman of running a psychotherapy cult and of encouraging his followers to provide the FBI with false information on a dissident member of the former CFC, Jim Retherford, who had denounced Newman's alliance with LaRouche.
King described a typical post-transition USLP campaign in Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism ( Doubleday, 1989 ):
In 1974 the Wisconsin branch of the Labor Party took out a newspaper advertisement announcing that it had filed for an injunction to prevent the CIA, FBI, and the New York Police Department from arresting Lyndon LaRouche ( then known as Lyn Marcus ) or anyone involved in the movement's kidnapping of Christopher White, who had married LaRouche's former common-law wife.
LaRouche said the party was funded by members ' dues, other small contributions, and the sale of publications like The Campaigner and New Solidarity – one a theoretical journal, the other a twice-weekly newspaper.
Frankhouser cultivated a contact with a media source in New York, enabling him to tip off LaRouche about upcoming stories before they became public.
In 1979, a two-part article by Howard Blum and Paul L. Montgomery appeared in the New York Times that accused LaRouche of running a cult.
A farm in upstate New York was allegedly being used for guerrilla training, attended by LaRouche members from Germany and Mexico.
* James J. Cleary, candidate in 1984 for New Jersey's 8th congressional district, in 1986 for New Jersey's 7th congressional district, in 1990 for New Jersey's 12th congressional district, in 1994 for New Jersey's 7th congressional district ( with the " LaRouche Was Right " party )

LaRouche and Hampshire
LaRouche budgeted $ 150, 000 for the first primary state, New Hampshire.
In 1980, a political unknown named Lyndon LaRouche entered the New Hampshire Democratic Primary and polled 2 % of the vote, coming in fourth place.

LaRouche and three
In 1984 he founded the Schiller Institute in Germany with his second wife, and three political parties there — the Europäische Arbeiterpartei, Patrioten für Deutschland, and Bürgerrechtsbewegung Solidarität — and in 2000 the Worldwide LaRouche Youth Movement.
In the 2010 general election, three candidates running on the LaRouche platform received support from the LaRouche Political Action Committee ( LaRouchePAC ).
In January 1985, the grand jury in Boston, Massachusetts, subpoenaed documents from the National Democratic Policy Committee ( NDPC ), and three other LaRouche organizations: Caucus Distributors Inc., Fusion Energy Foundation, and Campaigner Publications Inc.
On the same day as the Leesburg search, the Boston grand jury handed down a 117-count indictment that named ten LaRouche associates, two corporations, and three campaign committees.
They also managed three flagship campaigns in the Melbourne Region, including the campaign of Aaron Isherwood, himself a member of the ALYM, standing against Michael Danby ( long parliament's only Jewish MP and a well-known LaRouche opponent ) in the seat of Melbourne Ports.

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