Green Party of New Jersey | |
Party Articletitle: | Green Party (United States)--> |
Leader1 Title: | Co-chairs |
Leader1 Name: | Jon Serrano Kim Muedt Ben Taylor |
Leader2 Title: | Founders |
Leader2 Name: | Nick Mellis Steve Welzer |
National: | Green Party of the United States |
Membership Year: | 2021 |
Membership: | 11,758[1] |
Youth Wing: | Young Ecosocialists Caucus[2] |
Colors: | Green |
Colorcode: |
|
Position: | Left-wing |
Ideology: | Green politics |
State: | New Jersey |
Website: | gpnj.org |
Seats1 Title: | Seats in the US Senate |
Seats2 Title: | Seats in the US House |
Seats3 Title: | Seats in the NJ Senate |
Seats4 Title: | Seats in the NJ House |
Seats5 Title: | Local offices |
Seats5: | 2 |
The Green Party of New Jersey is the state party organization for New Jersey of the Green Party of the United States. It was founded in January 1997 by Nick Mellis (chair from 2008 to 2009) and Steve Welzer.[3]
The Green Party of New Jersey is an active Green Party of the U.S. state affiliate, having nominated over 150 candidates for office since it began in 1997. The party experienced its first non-partisan electoral victory in 1999 when Gary Novosielski was elected to the Board of Education of the Rutherford School District.[4]
In January 2003, Matt Ahearn, a New Jersey state legislator who had been elected to the New Jersey General Assembly as a Democrat in 2002, switched his registration to the Green Party, becoming the party's first state-level representative.[5] Ahearn ran for re-election as a Green Party candidate in 2003 but lost to Robert M. Gordon, the Democratic candidate for office.[6]
In 2012 2012, medical marijuana advocate Ken Wolski was the Green Party nominee for U.S. Senator. He finished fourth out of eleven candidates.
In May 2016, the Green Party of New Jersey saw a spike in registration with as many new voters in two months as it had in the past four years.[7] By the end of 2016, there were 3,252 voters registered as Green.[8]
In the 2016 election, Green Camden City Council candidate Gary Frazier received 6% of the vote, and Green Congressional candidates Raj Mailiah and Steve Welzer each received 0.7%.[8]
The Green Party of New Jersey's 2017 gubernatorial candidate was Rev. Seth Kaper-Dale of Highland Park with Lisa R. Durden of Newark as his running mate. By November 2017, ten New Jersey counties had local affiliates recognized by the state party: Monmouth, Ocean, Atlantic, Gloucester, Essex, Camden, Bergen, Union, Mercer, and Morris.
Two candidates ran in the 2018 general election: professor and activist Madelyn Hoffman for U.S. Senate,[9] and attorney and activist Diane Moxley for Congressional District 7.[10] Hoffman received 25,150 votes and Moxley received 2,676 votes.[11]
State party co-chair Craig Cayetano ran for Hawthorne Council in 2019 and 2020. Madelyn Hoffman ran for U.S. Senate again in the 2020 election, winning 38,288 votes and coming in third.[12] Incumbent Jessica Clayton ran for a second term on the Brick, NJ school board and lost after a very close recount.
Green Party affiliate[13] Dr. Corey Teague serves on the Paterson Board of Education after being elected in 2019 with the largest number of votes.
As of August 2021, there were 11,758 registered Greens in New Jersey. The party plans to run multiple candidates for state assembly and for statewide office, including governor, in future elections.
In preparation for the 2024 election, the Green Party of New Jersey has 13 candidates; Robin Brownfield (CD-01), Thomas Cannavo (CD-02), Steve Welzer (CD-03), Barry Bendar (CD-04), Beau Forte (CD-05), Herb Tarbous (CD-06), Andrew Black (CD-07), Christian Robins (CD-08), Benjamin Taylor (CD-09), Jon Serrano (CD-10), Lily Benavides (CD-11), and Kim Meudt (CD-12) and our Senatorial Candidate, Christina Khalil.
In July of 2024, the Green Party of New Jersey held an event created to welcome Jill Stein as she introduced the so-called "Green 13" of New Jersey. She and the National Green Party have both endorsed the Green 13.
In 2019, Green Party endorsed candidate Corey Teague, who won a seat on the Paterson School Board.[16]
Year | Nominee | Votes[17] | |
---|---|---|---|
1997 | Madelyn R. Hoffman | 10,703 (0.44%) | |
Jerry L. Coleman | 6,238 (0.28%) | ||
Matthew Thieke | 12,315 (0.54%) | ||
None | n/a | ||
2013 | Steve Welzer | 8,295 (0.39%) | |
2017 | Seth Kaper-Dale | 10,053 (0.47%) | |
2021 | Madelyn R. Hoffman | 8,450 (0.32%) |
Year | Nominee | Votes[18] | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2018 | Madelyn R. Hoffman | 25,150 | 0.79 | |
2014 | Madelyn R. Hoffman | 38,288 | 0.86 |
Year | Nominee | Votes[19] | |
---|---|---|---|
Ralph Nader | 32,465 (1.06%) | ||
Ralph Nader | 94,554 (2.97%) | ||
1,807 (0.05%) | |||
3,636 (0.09%) | |||
9,888 (0.27%) | |||
37,772 (0.99%) | |||
2020 | Howie Hawkins | 14,202 (0.31%) |