84% with Gary Johnson
80% with Ron Paul
51% with Mitt Romney
1% with Barack Obama
9% with Georgie Voters
9% with American Voters
It should be noted though that I did not bother to give a weight to any question, and that I provided custom answers for many of them.
Those would mostly be considered even more libertarian, and perhaps somewhat leftist. They focused on eliminating government granted privileges like copyrights (and thus obviously not cracking down on "piracy"), taxing the monopolization or destruction of natural resources (land value taxes, pollution taxes), and redistributing rents (not wages) through citizens' dividends. They also included how we should restrict citizenship to only those willing to sign a written contract after passing tests to ensure informed consent, but should have almost completely open borders with no legal barriers to work or permanent residency for non-citizens regardless of their place or origin. The only reasons to keep immigrants out is if they are carrying dangerous epidemics or are fleeing from justice in another country, and the only acceptable deportations are called extraditions.
My least libertarian proposal was reducing healthcare costs by going back to the old rules that banned direct to consumer advertisements of prescription drugs without the full disclosure of the health risks that are required in medical journals. Under the old rule, American drugs were just as cheap as Canadian drugs despite their government negotiating prices. Prescription prices tripled soon after the FDA started allowing those annoying TV ads, and drug companies now spend close to four times as much money on advertising as on research. The only other country where DTC ads for prescriptions is legal is New Zealand, where the increased consumer demand for (often unnecessary) drugs is held in check by government price controls. There is enough government intervention driving prices up that this small measure is justified to counteract that. There is enough asymmetry of information in the industry that such rules can be considered necessary in order to prevent fraud.