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Brian T. Carroll

Brian Thomas Carroll (born December 15, 1949) is an American teacher who was the American Solidarity Party's presidential nominee in the 2020 United States presidential election.[2] He is a proponent of Christian democracy.[1]

Brian T. Carroll

(1949-12-15) December 15, 1949

Teacher

Life and career[edit]

Carroll received his bachelor's degree in history from UCLA and earned a teaching credential at California State University, Los Angeles. He taught junior high history and other subjects in Farmersville, California from 1977 to 1983.[3] During that time, he also wrote for the Valley Voice newspaper, focusing primarily on the local need for public transportation.[3][4] Carroll has taught students in Colombia and China and traveled extensively throughout Europe and Brazil. As an amateur naturalist, his work has been cited in studies on spiders and insects.[5][6] In 2008, he returned to teaching in Farmersville.[7][8]

Political positions[edit]

Carroll ran on a platform that espouses the political ideology of Christian democracy,[1] which emphasizes Chestertonian distributism as an alternative to capitalism (which he opposes), a consistent life ethic, universal healthcare, climate and environmental stewardship, social justice and reconciliation, and a more peaceful world.[34][35] His positions are similar to those espoused by other Christian Democratic parties in many European and Latin American countries.


Carroll subscribes to a consistent life ethic which opposes abortion, euthanasia, and the death penalty, while advocating for progressive and social justice issues.[36] He supports Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals,[4] ranked choice voting, the breakup of companies such as Amazon and Google, amnesty for David Daleiden, diverting some police and military funding to community resources, ending private prisons, rehabilitation rather than incarceration for drug possession, and red flag laws.[37] He is anti-abortion, and has said that being pro-life "obviously, is more than abortion" in reference to elderly people endangered by the COVID-19 pandemic.[38]

Personal life[edit]

Carroll has been married for 46 years, and has five children and 14 grandchildren.[34] An elder in the Evangelical Covenant Church,[39] a Pietist denomination, Carroll considers himself an Evangelical Christian.[35]