Arizona Green Party

Arizona Green Party
Chairperson Luisa Evonne Valdez, Angel Torres
Senate leader None
House leader None
Headquarters P.O. Box 60173, Phoenix, AZ 85082
Ideology Green politics
American Progressivism
Social democracy
National affiliation Green Party
Colors Green
Seats in the Upper House
0 / 30
Seats in the Lower House
0 / 60
Website
http://www.azgp.org/
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Activists of the Arizona Green Party collecting signatures for ballot status.

The Green Party of Arizona is the affiliate of the Green Party in Arizona. It was founded by Carolyn Campbell and others in the 1990s.

The Arizona Green Party is perhaps best known for its strong stances on immigration. It proposes that the urban walls on the border be dismantled and the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) repealed for the sake of the thousands of immigrants who die while trying to cross the border. The AZGP also paid to put two statements in an Arizona voter's guide on ballot initiatives and referendums in 2006. One statement opposed Arizona Proposition 107, which bans civil unions and the second favored Arizona Proposition 202, which raises the Arizona minimum wage to $6.75/hr.

In 2006 the Arizona Green Party and the Pima County Green Party hosted the 2006 annual national meeting of the Green Party of the United States in Tucson, Arizona.

The Arizona Greens had a 5 percent increase in registered members between November 2008 and April 2009, to 4,210 voters.[1][2]

Ballot access

In 2008, the Arizona Green Party gathered enough signatures to gain ballot access.[3] The party had worked with Arizona's ballot access laws, achieving ballot access for the 2000 election cycle, then losing it again in 2004. On March 6, 2008 the Arizona deadline for ballot access, the Arizona Green Party submitted 29,300 signatures on its petition for party recognition. The legal requirement is 20,449. On April 9, 2008 the Arizona Secretary of State announced that the Arizona Green Party had enough valid signatures to be recognized as an official political party. On February 10, The national Green Party’s ballot access committee had appropriated $4,000 to assist the Arizona Green Party's petition effort.[4]

The Arizona Green Party again qualified for the ballot in 2010 on April 15.[5] It needed 20,449 signatures by March 11, 2010, and they tuned in 29,015 signatures to the Arizona Secretary of State.[6]

On April 28, 2011, Governor Jan Brewer signed HB 2304, which says that when a new party qualifies, it is entitled to be on the ballot in the next two elections, not just the next election. As a result the Green Party is now automatically on the ballot for 2012, because it had successfully petitioned in 2010.[7][8]

Campaigns

Prominent Green candidates in Arizona have included Vance Hansen, who ran for the US Senate in 2000 and received 108,926 votes, Claudia Ellquist who ran for Pima County Attorney in 2004 on a platform largely focused on declaring a moratorium on the death penalty, and Dave Croteau who ran for mayor of Tucson in 2007 on a platform of relocalization and received over 28% of the vote. The party is also home to noted Tucson area water-access activist John Kromko.

Primary Results

The Arizona Green Party held its primary on March 22. Jill Stein won with 80% of the vote, and the overall number of voters that took place in the primary saw an increase from 561 in 2012 to 817 in 2016.[9] Only two candidates qualified for the primary:[10]

Arizona Green Party presidential primary, March 22, 2016[11]
Candidate Votes Percentage National delegates
Jill Stein 666 82% 5
Kent Mesplay 151 18% 1
Write-in/Blank 18 2% -
Total 817 100.00% 6

Presidential nominee results

Year Nominee Votes
1996 Ralph Nader 2,062 (0.15%)
2000 Ralph Nader 45,645 (3.00%)
2004 David Cobb (write-in) 138
2008 Cynthia McKinney 3,406 (0.15%)
2012 Jill Stein 7,816 (0.34%)

See also

References

External links

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