Gary Johnson to Face Five Rivals for Libertarian Nomination Skeptics question whether Johnson really holds the party's beliefs.

ORLANDO, Florida -- Fending off challenges from more extreme wings of the Libertarian party, Gary Johnson wooed his ticket's skeptics in a nominating speech this afternoon at the national Libertarian convention.

The frontrunner didn't mention the elephant in the room -– Johnson's running mate, former Massachusetts Gov. Bill Weld. Delegates here have been hesitant about Weld, questioning his commitment to the party given his earlier endorsement of Ohio Gov. John Kasich, who some say was actively trying to keep Libertarians off the ballot in Ohio.

"Libertarian principles are very simple, but you can’t violate any of them and still call yourself Libertarian. Mr. Weld is not by any stretch of the imagination a Libertarian," said John McAfee, one of Johnson's rivals for the nomination.

During his speech, Johnson instead focused on major Libertarian talking points, decrying military intervention and equating taxation to theft.

"I am not Republican-lite," he said, rebuking criticisms that he is not libertarian enough. "I am a Libertarian and I'm proud of it.

"The two party system is broken," he went on, adding the Libertarian party has the opportunity "to achieve major party status" this cycle.

All of the national delegates here are free to vote for whichever candidate they want at this weekend's meetings, unlike the two major parties, which bind most delegates according to a primary or caucus process.

Johnson will have five challengers in the presidential race, three of whom were scheduled to join him on the debate stage Saturday night. The others didn't make the cut. His main challengers are:

-- Young, up-and-coming Austin Petersen, a former TV producer and Libertarian activist.

-- John McAfee, the millionaire software entrepreneur who fled Belize after he was sought for questioning in the killing of his neighbor.

-- Darryl Perry, who believes "the United States government, as it exists today, should be abolished," according to his website.

Delegates vote separately on presidential and vice presidential nominees, so Weld will need to get a majority of delegates on his own separate ballot.

The Libertarian ticket, no matter who it is, will face a steep climb in November, as the party got only 1 percent of the vote in 2012. But party leaders cite the unpopularity of both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump and polls that show Americans more open to a third party than ever before.