Green Party of Pennsylvania


The Green Party of Pennsylvania is the Pennsylvania state party affiliate of the Green Party of the United States. Since 2016, the party is again recognized as a minor political party under Pennsylvania law due to receiving the required voter turnout in the 2016 election.
As of early 2018, the party has at least 19 members elected to office statewide.

Party Platform and Ideology

The Green Party of Pennsylvania supports the Ten Key Values of the Green Party of the United States.
The party platform includes a number of issues including: creation of a single payer universal healthcare system, establishment of a living wage, decriminalization of cannabis, a ban on fracking and nuclear energy, investment in sustainable energy such as solar and wind, and improvements to the state election system.

Party Structure

The Green Party of Pennsylvania's highest body is the State Committee, made up of delegates from county affiliate parties, and is governed by internal bylaws. In keeping with the Green Party's key value of "decentralization", county affiliates may draft their own bylaws and procedures, including how to nominate and elect delegates to the State Committee. The party also elects a chair, secretary, and treasurer.
In addition to the governing State Committee, the party operates a number of teams for critical functions, including: the Core Committee, Communications, Finance, and Green Wave.
The Green Party of Pennsylvania nominates electoral candidates by caucus instead of primary elections.
As of early 2018, 24 county chapters are recognized by the state party, the largest of which are the Green Party of Philadelphia, and the Green Party of Allegheny County.

Elected Officials (19)

Allegheny County:
Jay Ting Walker | Pittsburgh Inspector of Elections
Tara Yaney | Edgewood Borough Council
Berks County:
Jim Keller | West Reading Borough Judge of Elections
David Kurzweg | Cumru Township Judge of Elections
Joseph Reeves | City of Reading Inspector of Elections
Julia Zion | Maxatawny Township Judge of Elections
Bucks County:
Stuart Chen-Hayes | Newtown Township Judge of Elections
Paul Notwick | Bristol Township Judge of Elections
Dave Ochmanowicz | Quakertown Community School Board
Butler County:
Michael Bagdes-Canning | Cherry Valley Borough Council
Lackawanna County:
William Pilkonis | Scranton Judge of Elections
Lancaster County:
Tim Runkle | Elizabethtown Judge of Elections
Monroe County:
Cem Zeytinoglu | Stroudsburg School Board
Philadelphia County:
Kristin Combs | Philadelphia Judge of Elections
Olivia Faison | Philadelphia Inspector of Elections
Ethan Leatherbarrow | Philadelphia Judge of Elections
Susquehanna County:
Kerry Foose | Lenox Township Judge of Elections
Wyoming County:
David Kennedy | Overfield Township Auditor
Jay Sweeney | Falls Township Auditor

History

Presidential elections

Since 1996, the national Green Party has run a candidate for President of the United States. In 2000, the Green Party of Pennsylvania placed Ralph Nader, the nominee of the Green Party of the United States, on the statewide presidential ballot. The highest vote total came in 2000, when Ralph Nader received over 103,000 votes. The lowest vote total came in 2008, when Cynthia McKinney was the nominee. Her campaign received only 71 votes. Nader, who was also on the ballot as an independent candidate, received more than 42,000 votes.
YearNomineeVotes
2000Ralph Nader103,392
2004David Cobb6,319
2008Cynthia McKinney71
2012Jill Stein21,341
2016Jill Stein49,941

2014 state and federal elections

In 2014, the party nominated Paul Glover for Governor of Pennsylvania.

2016 presidential election and election audit lawsuit

Dr Jill Stein was again the party's candidate for president in 2016. Previously, on February 6, 2016, it was reported that some members of the party anticipated that Jill Stein, who had been the Greens' nominee for the 2012 presidential election, would become their candidate for the 2016 election as well.
Following the election, the Stein campaign filed in Pennsylvania court for a recount, citing insecure electronic voting systems and the lack of paper audit trail. The request was later denied by a federal judge.

2017 special election and election fraud lawsuit

In 2017, the previous 2012 Green Party Vice Presidential candidate Cheri Honkala was nominated for Pennsylvania State Representative in District 197 in Philadelphia for the special election to be held in March 2017.
Shortly after the election, Honkala and the Green Party of Pennsylvania filed a federal lawsuit alleging voter intimidation and election fraud during the special election and calling for a new election to be held. In April 2018, one official was sentenced to probation for one year due to election misconduct, with the remaining defendants awaiting trial in early May 2018.

2017 municipal elections

In 2017, Jules Mermelstein was the nominee for the Superior Court of Pennsylvania. He received 106,969 votes in the general election, and 1.4% of the vote in a nine-way race with four candidates elected. A number of other candidates also ran for local positions including mayor, township council, and school board.

2018 state and federal elections

In 2018, Paul Glover has been nominated for Governor of Pennsylvania once again.
Jocolyn Bowser-Bostick is the party nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania.
Neal Gale is the party nominee for US Senate.
Brianna Johnston is the party nominee for US Congress in PA-07
Three other candidates were also endorsed for state office.

2020 state and federal elections and ballot access lawsuit due to COVID-19

In 2020, Timothy Runkle was nominated for State Treasurer, Olivia Faison was nominated for Auditor General, and Richard L. Weiss, Esq., was nominated for Attorney General. Several candidates for state legislative offices were also endorsed.
On May 15, 2020, the party filed suit in the U.S. Court for the Eastern District of PA, demanding relief from unconstitutional election laws which are impossible to meet under emergency COVID-19 measures declared by PA Governor Tom Wolf.