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Peter Sonski
Peter Sonski
from Wikipedia

Peter Sonski (born July 11, 1962) is an American former radio host, who served as an elected member of Connecticut's Regional School District 17 Board of Education and as director of the Knights of Columbus Museum.[1][2][3][4][5][6] A member of the American Solidarity Party, Sonski was the party's nominee for president in the 2024 United States presidential election.[7]

Key Information

Life

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Sonski was born in Massachusetts in 1962.[8] Sonski grew up in a blue collar home and registered to vote as a Democrat when he turned 18 and voted for Jimmy Carter.[9] He became a Republican during the Reagan presidency, saying that it was "the Democratic Party, the party of little guy, that left me, and it decided that the little guy in the womb was exposable."[9] He soon left that party as well and considered himself an independent.[10] However, he was elected as a Republican to the District 17 Board of Education.[11] He joined the ASP in 2018.[12][10]

Career

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Sonski has had careers in journalism and local politics. He served as a United States Marine, worked for several Catholic newspapers, and became a selectman in the town of Somers.[11]

2024 presidential campaign

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On February 20, 2023, Sonski announced his candidacy for president of the United States in the American Solidarity Party primary. The party conducts primaries by an online vote open to all dues-paying members using ranked-choice voting. Sonski won on the first ballot, with 52% of first choice votes.[11]

Political positions

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As a proponent of Christian democracy, Sonski supports a consistent life ethic, being against abortion, capital punishment, and euthanasia. He additionally supports social justice initiatives. He is against the legalization of same sex marriage and believes that gay couples should not have the same adoption rights as straight couples.[13][14] He has endorsed Robert P. George's initiative to rebrand June as Fidelity Month.[15][16]

Sonski believes the United States should continue to provide Ukraine with defensive support, and supports Israel's right to defend itself, though wants it to cease fighting in Gaza and allow more humanitarian aid.[13][9] He supports government social programs, though believes they are often better managed privately or at the local level. On immigration, Sonski supports increased border security and says the United States should be open to people seeking asylum or opportunities.[17]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Peter Sonski (born July 11, 1962) is an American political activist, former radio host, and veteran who served as the 2024 presidential nominee of the , a minor political party advocating principles of and . Sonski, raised in a working-class Catholic family, enlisted in the Marine Corps before pursuing a career in and . He later entered local politics, winning election to two terms on the Regional 17 Board of in , representing the towns of Haddam and , where he focused on educational policy and community issues. As the American Solidarity Party's nominee, Sonski campaigned on a platform emphasizing human dignity, , , and opposition to abortion, positioning the party as an alternative to the dominant by drawing on distributist economic ideas and a commitment to protecting life from conception to natural death. The party's small scale limited its electoral impact, but Sonski's run highlighted growing interest in third-party options grounded in religious and ethical principles amid dissatisfaction with mainstream politics.

Early life and education

Family background and upbringing

Peter Sonski was born in 1962 in , into a blue-collar Catholic family of working-class roots in . His father and six uncles served as veterans before taking up postwar careers in construction, embodying a tradition of manual labor and military service. The family included one sister, though Sonski's mother endured six miscarriages, underscoring early exposure to themes of life's fragility within a devout Catholic household. Raised primarily in , Sonski attended local public high schools amid a environment that defaulted to Democratic affiliations and prioritized civic , as imparted by his parents. This upbringing emphasized concern for the underprivileged and vulnerable, aligning with Catholic social teachings on and , though the household maintained modest economic circumstances without notable wealth or influence. Sonski registered as a Democrat in the late 1970s, reflecting the prevailing political leanings of his blue-collar background at the time.

Academic pursuits and early career influences

Sonski attended public high school in Connecticut before enlisting in the military and later returning to higher education as an adult student. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 2008 and a Master of Science in Management in 2016 from The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., a pontifical institution emphasizing Catholic intellectual tradition. His early professional experiences centered on Catholic media and communications in , where he worked for eight years in roles including assistant editor at the National Catholic Register and director of communications for the Basilica of the National Shrine of the . These positions provided foundational exposure to , , and faith-oriented discourse, shaping his subsequent work in radio and reporting on social issues. Sonski's involvement in pro-life advocacy, beginning in 1994 with opposition to legalization efforts in , further intersected with these early career paths, highlighting influences from Catholic social teachings on human dignity.

Military service

U.S. Marine Corps enlistment and duties

Sonski participated in the United States Marine Corps Platoon Leaders Class program from January 1981 to December 1982. This officer candidate training initiative, typically involving summer sessions for college students, prepared participants for potential commissioning as second lieutenants upon completing their degrees and fulfilling service obligations. He is described in multiple sources as a U.S. Marine Corps veteran, though precise details of enlistment dates, periods, rank achieved, or specific operational duties remain undocumented in publicly available records. Sonski's military involvement followed his early academic pursuits and preceded his entry into , aligning with the Corps' emphasis on for future officers. No evidence indicates combat deployment or specialized roles beyond the candidate training framework.

Professional career

Media roles in journalism and radio

Sonski served as assistant editor at the , a Catholic publication owned by , where he contributed to editorial content and reporting on Church-related matters. In this role, he engaged in journalistic work aligned with Catholic perspectives on current events, faith, and social issues. He later held the position of director of communications for the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, D.C., for eight years, managing media relations, public outreach, and promotional efforts for the prominent Catholic site. This role involved crafting press releases, coordinating with journalists, and leveraging media platforms to disseminate information about basilica events, pilgrimages, and liturgical activities. Sonski's media experience also extended to public relations with the Knights of Columbus, where he supported communication strategies for the fraternal organization's initiatives. These positions reflect a career focused on faith-informed media and communications rather than mainstream broadcast journalism or dedicated radio hosting.

Transition to public service roles

Following a career in Catholic media and communications, including serving as assistant editor at the National Catholic Register and as host on the Veritas Catholic Network in 2021, Sonski pursued elected office as an extension of his advocacy work. His prior roles, such as Director of Communications at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception from 1998 to 2006 and Education and Outreach Coordinator for the Knights of Columbus from 2006 onward, involved promoting Catholic teachings on family, education, and social issues, fostering skills in public engagement that informed his shift toward direct policy influence. This transition aligned with Sonski's relocation to Connecticut and growing involvement in local community matters, particularly education governance, amid broader concerns over curriculum content and parental rights in public schools during the late . On November 5, 2019, he ran as an independent candidate for the Regional 17 , securing with approximately 18.1% of the vote in a multi-candidate field. Sonski's candidacy emphasized applying first-hand experience from media outreach to address district-specific challenges, marking his entry into formal public service while maintaining parallel commitments in Catholic communications. He went on to win re-election, serving a second term through at least 2023.

Local political engagement

Election and service on Regional School District 17 Board

Peter Sonski was elected to the Regional 17 on November 5, 2019, running as a Republican in a multi-seat municipal election covering the towns of Haddam and . He received 18.1% of the votes, securing one of the available seats among several candidates. Prior to the election, Sonski, a Haddam resident of 13 years with five children who had attended district schools, emphasized community involvement through St. Peter's Church and local organizations, positioning his candidacy on priorities such as enhancing educational outcomes and fiscal responsibility. Sonski served a first term from 2020 to 2024 and was re-elected for a second term in the November 2023 municipal election, though specific vote totals for his re-election are not publicly detailed in available records. During his tenure, he held the role of board , overseeing financial matters for the district, which operates two elementary schools, a , and a high school serving approximately 1,800 students. His service concluded at the end of his second term in 2027, after which he did not seek re-election amid his national political activities.

Political philosophy

Foundations in Christian democracy and Catholic social teaching

Sonski's political foundations are deeply rooted in his Catholic upbringing in a blue-collar family in , where parental emphasis on civic duty intertwined with faith formed his early worldview. This background, reinforced by his education at the and professional experience in Catholic institutions such as the , the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, and the Knights of Columbus, oriented him toward applying Church teachings to . His trajectory—from initial Democratic affiliation, to Republican support, to two decades as an independent before joining the in 2018—reflects a deliberate alignment with principles transcending partisan divides, driven by 's insistence on human dignity as inviolable and derived from individuals as image-bearers of God. Central to Sonski's philosophy is , which he embraces through the American Solidarity Party's platform, emphasizing the as the benchmark for policy effectiveness and the integration of faith-guided pluralism in governance. This tradition, informed by , prioritizes —collective action for justice and neighborly love—and subsidiarity, devolving authority to the most proximate effective level, such as families and communities, over centralized state intervention. Sonski views governments as deriving legitimacy from divine order, tasked with fostering authentic freedom and human flourishing rather than mere or , while maintaining state neutrality toward comprehensive worldviews yet upholding natural law-derived norms. In practice, these foundations manifest in Sonski's advocacy for policies safeguarding life's sanctity from conception to natural , opposing , , and the death penalty; promoting economic measures like family wages, worker protections, and broad ownership to counter inequality; and endorsing as a moral imperative for . He articulates the —defined as a union of husband and wife—as society's foundational unit, warranting policies that bolster its stability amid systemic challenges like racial injustice and . Sonski has publicly elaborated on these themes, as in his September 2024 panel at Kuyper College on faith in the , where he defended Christian democracy's compatibility with democratic pluralism against secularist critiques. His approach critiques both laissez-faire capitalism's neglect of the vulnerable and socialism's overreach, favoring a "third way" that privileges empirical and causal accountability in social outcomes.

Positions on social, economic, and foreign policy issues

Sonski holds a comprehensive pro-life position, opposing as the direct killing of human life from conception, as the abandonment of vulnerable individuals, and the death penalty as an unnecessary state-sanctioned execution, consistent with the sanctity of life principle in . He supports policies reinforcing traditional marriage between husband and wife as the foundational institution of society and advocates for family-centric measures, including paid , flexible work arrangements, affordable childcare, enhanced child tax credits, living wages, and reforms to improve access. On economic matters, Sonski endorses distributist principles aimed at decentralizing ownership away from large concentrations, favoring small businesses, widespread property holding, and worker protections to foster economic security and human flourishing, drawing from thinkers like G.K. Chesterton. He emphasizes subsidiarity, whereby economic decisions occur at the most local level feasible, and supports government roles in ensuring family-sustaining wages and addressing systemic injustices affecting the vulnerable, while critiquing unchecked corporate power. In , Sonski prioritizes peace achieved through justice, advocating nonviolent diplomatic solutions and adherence to just-war criteria for any military engagement, rejecting perpetual interventions. He promotes international solidarity via and policies that advance and human dignity, alongside responsible as a shared globally.

2024 presidential campaign

Nomination process within the

The (ASP) selected its 2024 presidential nominee through an online primary open to party members, conducted from May 24 to June 1, 2023, employing ranked-choice voting to determine the candidate with majority support. This process reflected the party's decentralized structure and emphasis on member participation, as a minor political entity without state-level ballot-qualified status in most jurisdictions. Peter Sonski emerged victorious on the first , garnering 328 votes or 52% of the total , thereby securing the nomination on June 2, 2023, without necessitating runoff rounds under the ranked-choice system. Competing candidates included Jacqueline Abernathy from (207 votes, 33%), Joe Schriner from (50 votes, 8%), Larry Johnson from (24 votes, 4%), and Erskine Levi from California (16 votes, 3%), highlighting a field drawn primarily from party activists aligned with its Christian democratic principles. Sonski's win positioned him to lead the ASP's subsequent efforts for and vice-presidential selection, with the latter deferred to a separate member vote expected to align with his preference. The primary's modest turnout underscored the ASP's scale, yet affirmed Sonski's alignment with the party's platform rooted in and solidarity economics.

Core platform elements and campaign activities

Sonski's campaign platform centered on the principles of , emphasizing the sanctity of human life from conception to natural death as the preeminent right, with opposition to abortion, , and the death penalty. He advocated for robust protections for the vulnerable, including measures to address systemic injustices and racial inequalities while upholding human dignity for all. Economically, the platform promoted widespread property ownership, workers' rights, a wage sufficient to support dependents, and government support for those unable to work, drawing from to prioritize local and family-level solutions over centralized intervention. The platform underscored the —defined as the union of husband and wife—as the foundational institution of , with policies aimed at assistance to strengthen family well-being rather than supplant it. Environmentally, Sonski called for responsible of resources to ensure access to clean water, air, and sources for current and . In foreign policy, he prioritized through , favoring diplomatic engagement and adherence to just-war doctrine over unilateral military actions. These elements aligned closely with the American Solidarity Party's broader commitments to pluralism under a vision of the common good, informed by . Campaign activities were modest, reflecting the constraints of a minor-party effort with limited resources and primarily through write-in options or select state lines. Sonski engaged in targeted outreach to Catholic and conservative audiences, including a speaking event at Holy Cross College on April 18, 2024, where he discussed the party's platform. He participated in media appearances, such as a interview with Crisis Magazine on September 12, 2024, highlighting Catholic alternatives in the election, and local stops like an October 15, 2024, event in , to connect with regional voters. Online efforts included posts on the campaign , such as a September 13, 2024, entry critiquing "politics as usual" and urging principled voting, alongside presence on platforms like to promote write-in voting instructions across states. The campaign focused on long-term party-building rather than short-term electoral gains, appealing to voters disillusioned with major-party options by emphasizing consistency on life and family issues.

Election outcomes, reception, and critiques

Sonski and Lauren Onak received 41,853 popular votes in the November 5, 2024, , accounting for approximately 0.03 percent of the total national vote and securing zero electoral votes. The campaign achieved in a limited number of states, including where Sonski garnered 7,454 votes (0.07 percent), with 3,780 votes, and with 910 votes, while relying on write-in status elsewhere such as (1,069 votes). and J.D. Vance won the election with 312 electoral votes and over 77 million popular votes, rendering Sonski's performance negligible in influencing the outcome. Reception within conservative Catholic and pro-life communities was generally positive, with outlets portraying Sonski as a principled alternative grounded in , emphasizing protections for the unborn, family support, and economic . Crisis Magazine described him as "the other Catholic candidate," highlighting his blue-collar roots and unwavering pro-life stance amid major-party compromises. The Pillar noted the American Solidarity Party's long-term strategy to attract voters disillusioned with both major parties, framing the campaign as an investment in building a sustainable third option rather than expecting immediate victory. Mainstream media coverage was minimal, consistent with the structural disadvantages faced by minor parties, which receive disproportionate attention compared to their vote shares in national elections. Critiques centered on the campaign's practicality and potential to fragment conservative votes, though such views were aired more in online forums than formal analyses. Some pro-life advocates admired Sonski's consistency but argued that supporting him diverted resources from defeating , prioritizing electoral realism over ideological purity in a . The limited and organizational scale of the underscored broader challenges for third parties, including fundraising constraints and regulatory hurdles that cap their viability absent major reforms.

References

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