John Beauchemin 2024 presidential campaign

John Beauchemin, an entrepreneur, former media industry executive and sociopolitical activist, announced his candidacy in the on May 1, 2023. He graduated from with an MBA. Beauchemin founded Songbird Holdings, a independent record label holding company, and turned it into a multi-million dollar business before selling it to Everest Music Group for US$20.2 million in 1996. He was then president of RKO Media from 1999 to 2010. He is challenging incumbent for the  nomination.

Beauchemin has centered his campaign appeal on being a "logic-first" libertarian-socialist candidate. He is critical of modern American politics, blaming the divide between "red and blue states" on the idea of "might makes right" ideals spread by both parties. He has promised to institute universal basic income if elected, and has also promised to nationalize the private healthcare industry and replace it with a national public healthcare system rooted in the ideals of the proposed Medicare for All Act.

Speculation and launch
Throughout February 2023, Beauchemin made multiple statements that he was considering a run for president in 2024. In April, it was reported that Beauchemin had been filming commercials and talking with "experts" in regards to campaigning.

On April 22, 2023, Beauchemin filed his candidacy. On May 1, 2023, Beauchemin officially announced his presidential campaign during an interview on the RKO News Network program Alexander Tonight. He launched his campaign website on May 3 and held his first campaign rally later that day at in Baton Rouge.

Healthcare
Beauchemin has stated that, if elected, he would enact Medicare for All in part by nationalizing the private healthcare industry in the United States and replacing it with a no-cost, "Medicare and Medicaid-based" public healthcare system funded by taxpayers' money.

LGBT issues
Beauchemin has stated that he supports the LGBTQIA2S+ community and that, if elected, he will "protect the community from hateful legislation at all costs".