Vermont Green Party Explained

Vermont Green Party
Lang1:French
Name Lang1:Vermont Parti Vert
Colorcode:
  1. 13482D
Split:Progressive Party, Grassroots Party
Merged:Progressive Party
Position:Left-wing
National:Green Party of the United States
Colors:Green
Ideology:Green politics
Headquarters:Montpelier
State:Vermont

The Vermont Green Party (VGP) or Vermont Greens formed in 2002[1] and was a state-level political party in Vermont.

They were formed out of organizing around Ralph Nader's presidential campaigns in 1996 and 2000. The VGP was one of two established state green parties that refused to place the 2004 national presidential nominee, David Cobb on its ballot line, endorsing Nader's independent campaign instead.[2] The party ran statewide and local candidates from 2002 to 2010, but was split by internal tensions and both factions dissolved by 2011 and were absorbed back into the Progressive Party.

History

Murray Bookchin and his friends, inspired by The Greens of West Germany, formed the Green Party in Burlington, Vermont. Rudolf Bahro, one of the founding members of The Greens, met Bookchin and the Greens in 1983. Howie Hawkins stated that Bookchin inspired him to become involved with Green politics. The Progressive Coalition accused the Greens of attempting to spoil the 1989 Burlington mayoral election and for causing Erhard Mahnke, the Progressive president of the city council, to lose reelection in 1990. Internal disagreements on how to respond to spoiler accusations resulted in the party disbanding a splinter group, Northern Vermont Greens, being formed.

Statewide candidates

ElectionCandidateVotesPercentage
1996 PresidentRalph Nader5,5852.16%
2000 PresidentRalph Nader20,3746.92%
2004 SenateCraig Hill3,999 1.30%
2004 Attorney General[3] James Marc Leas8,769 3.00%
2006 SenateCraig Hill1,536 0.59%
2006 US RepresentativeBruce Marshall9940.38%
2006 GovernorJim Hogue1,9360.74%

The VGP endorsed the Progressive Party's Michael Badamo for Governor in 2002[5] and Ralph Nader's independent run in 2004. Due to the breakup of the Vermont Green Party, Green presidential nominees, Cynthia McKinney in 2008 and Jill Stein in 2012, ran as write-in candidates in Vermont.[6]

Local candidates

2004 election

Office[7] CandidateVotesPercentage
Vermont SenateBen Clarke9,6503.0%
Chittenden County High BailiffGreg Delanty17,35928%
Burlington Justice of the PeaceOwen Mulligan4,2102.8%
Burlington Justice of the PeaceJay Vos3,9232.5%
Hinesburg Justice of the PeaceCraig Chevrier8895.8%
The Burlington Green Party also ran candidates in 2007 and 2009.

Works cited

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Vt. Green Party Is Welcome | Randolph Herald . Marion . Leonard . m.rherald.com . 2002 . 2015-08-25.
  2. Web site: Vermont Green Party News Page . 2004 . 2015-08-25 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20040926074412/http://www.vermontgreens.org/news.html . September 26, 2004 .
  3. Web site: Our Campaigns - VT Attorney General Race - Nov 02, 2004 . Joshua . L. . ourcampaigns.com . 2004 . 2015-08-25.
  4. Web site: Our Campaigns - VT US President Race - Nov 07, 2000 . ourcampaigns.com . 2008 . 2015-08-25.
  5. Web site: VPR: Green Party endorses Badamo . vpr.net . 2002 . 2015-08-25.
  6. Web site: Our Campaigns - VT US President Race - Nov 04, 2008 . ourcampaigns.com . 2009 . 2015-08-25. Web site: Our Campaigns - VT US President Race - Nov 06, 2012 . ourcampaigns.com . 2013 . 2015-08-25.
  7. Web site: Vermont Green Party News Page . 2004 . 2015-08-25 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20041205095626/http://www.vermontgreens.org/news.html . December 5, 2004 .