
Ballot Qualification History
2000:
The Green Party of Pennsylvania qualified for
statewide ballot status by petition in August
2000, for the November 2000 elections.
2000: The
Green Party of Pennsylvania qualified for statewide
ballot status as a minor political party, by
virtue of votes cast for Ralph Nader and Winona LaDuke, Barbara Knox, Anne
Goeke
and Tom Linzey in November 2000.
Pennsylvania election law provides automatic ballot status only to those
parties in which the number of registered voters is greater than 15 percent
of the
number
of voters registered in all parties. Minor political parties (in which at
least one candidate on the ballot in at least ten counties in the most recent
general
election earned at least 2 percent of the votes cast for the candidate who
received the greatest number of votes in the same election) have automatic
ballot status
for special elections only.
As of November
2001, the Green Party had 3,266 registrants. These voters constituted 0.05
percent of the number of voters registered in any party, short of the 15
percent required and thus not sufficient for ballot qualification for the
2002 general election.
2002: The Green Party of Pennsylvania re-qualified for
statewide ballot status by petition in August
2002, for the November 2002 elections.
2002: The
Green Party of Pennsylvania re-qualified for
statewide ballot status as a minor political party, by
virtue of votes cast for Michael Morrill and Vicki Smedley
for Governor and Lt. Governor in November
2002.
As of November 2003, the Green Party had 11,084 registrants. These voters constituted
0.14 percent of the number of voters registered in any party, short of the
15
percent required and thus not sufficient for ballot qualification for the 2004
general election.
2004:
The Green Party of Pennsylvania re-qualified for
statewide ballot status by petition in August 2004, for the November 2004
elections, with 30,023 valid signatures.
2004:
The Green Party of Pennsylvania re-qualified for
statewide ballot status as a minor political party, by virtue of votes cast
for Marakay
Rogers for Attorney General.
As
of May 2005, the Green Party had 16,047 registrants. These voters constituted
0.20 percent of the number of voters registered in any party, short of the
15 percent required and thus not sufficient for
ballot qualification for the 2006 general election.