Trump’s policy proposal to temporarily ban Muslims from entering the country goes against a historical and doctrinal opposition to religious discrimination among Mormons. The thrice-married candidate’s boastful and brash style also clashes with traditional Mormon ideals of leadership qualities.

So what’s a Mormon voter — particularly a Republican one repelled by Trump but equally queasy about pulling the lever for Clinton — to do? The Libertarian Party has a suggestion, and if a third-party candidate has a prayer of having any significant impact in the 2016 election, winning over Mormon voters is a good place to start.

Brian Kamerath, the Utah Libertarian Party secretary, told Independent Journal Review that Utah voters like Libertarian principles like “agency and laissez-faire government and staying out of people’s lives,” and think a Libertarian could “potentially” win the state.

The campaign headquarters for Libertarian presidential candidate Gov. Gary Johnson is even in Salt Lake City, where his campaign manager Ron Nielson lives.

Johnson also has the backing of former Massachusetts Gov. William Weld, whom he said he’d like as his running mate if he wins the party’s nomination. Weld was a fundraiser in 2012 for the Beyonce of Mormon Republicans, Mitt Romney.