On August 18, 2017, the Party voiced support for removing
Confederate monuments and statues of
Robert E. Lee., in response to a recent
Ku Klux Klan rally and counter protest in
Durham resulting in a General Lee statue being torn down by vandals. On August 23, 2018, the NC Green Party endorsed the
2018 National Prison Strike. On June 30, 2022, the North Carolina State Board of Elections rejected certifying the North Carolina Green Party on a 3–2 vote among partisan lines. The party had enough verified signatures to be certified as a political party in North Carolina. The party had collected over 22,000 signatures, with just less than 16,000 signatures being verified. This is more than the 13,865 signatures needed to be on the ballot. However, several county boards of elections claimed they found apparent fraud and irregularities while examining the petitions. This resulted in the State Board launching an investigation against the North Carolina Green Party. The Board claimed to have discovered various irregularities in the investigation such as voters signing more than one petition, voters claiming to have never signed the petitions, and similar handwriting among signatures. The North Carolina Green Party had hired contractors from Michigan that were under investigation for invalid petitions in that state. This led to five of the ten gubernatorial candidates being removed from the ballot in Michigan. The investigation led to the State Board of Elections refusing to certify the party. The North Carolina Green Party claimed that the State Board of Elections had acted very undemocratically and unethically. One of the contractors from Michigan the party hired, First Choice Contracting, had only collected less than 100 signatures before terminating the contract and received a refund. Furthermore, the Green Party had evidence of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee harassing signers multiple times asking if they want their signatures to be removed from the petition. The callers would claim to either be from the DSCC, not disclose who they were with, or even impersonate members of the Green Party. The DSCC confirmed that they are calling voters to ensure that they have not been deceived. During their party’s meeting with the State Board, the party’s attorney questioned the board on whether the signatures that were disputed would be enough to invalidate the party. The board did not clearly answer the question and their attorney was muted for supposedly acting out of order. The party also claimed that the board failed to provide any evidence for their claims. The reason why there was not an investigation into the callers was that they were protected under free speech and that the calls are part of the political process. In response to the board’s decision, the North Carolina Green Party had filed a lawsuit against the state board of elections on July 14, 2022, to be certified on the ballot. On August 1, the State Board of Elections reversed their decision by a unanimous vote to certify the Green Party on the ballot. As the decision was ruled after the July 1st deadline, it remained unclear whether the party would have its candidates printed on the ballot. The Democratic Party filed a lawsuit to prevent the Green Party from being on the ballot as a response to the Board’s decision. On August 8, Judge James Dever III ruled in favor of the North Carolina Green Party by declaring the Democratic Party’s suit as moot, resulting in the State Board of Elections being required to print the names of Green Party candidates on the ballot. The Green Party was certified as the judge ruled that the plaintiffs did not have a basis in fact or law. This also led the NC Democratic Party, led by the Elias Law Group, to file an emergency motion believing that it would cause irreparable harm to the Democratic Party by forcing the party to divide its resources that would be of better use for other purposes. The appeal was dismissed on August 11. On April 2, 2024, U.S. District Court Judge James C. Devers III ruled that the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and the North Carolina Democratic Party was required to pay $6,525 to the Green Party's attorneys as he determined that the actions of both bodies were deemed “frivolous, unreasonable, and without foundation.” ==Personnel==