ran for the Green Party's presidential nomination in 2000, and has run for other offices with the Green Party. , former
Black Panther Party activist, ran for Congress in 2008 with the Green Party. , served from 2005 to 2010 as a member of
Lexington's Town Meeting. , 143 officeholders in the United States were affiliated with the Green Party. The party has not had any representation in federal or statewide offices. Previously in 2016, the majority of them were in
California, several in
Illinois,
Connecticut,
Maine,
Massachusetts,
Oregon,
Pennsylvania, and
Wisconsin, with five or fewer in ten other states. These included one mayor and one deputy mayor and fourteen county or city commissioners (or equivalent). The remainder were members of school boards, clerks and other local administrative bodies and positions. Several Green Party members have been elected to state-level office, though not always as affiliates of the party.
John Eder was elected to the
Maine House of Representatives, re-elected in 2004, but defeated in 2006.
Audie Bock was elected to the
California State Assembly in 1999, but switched her registration to independent seven months later running as such in the 2000 election.
Richard Carroll was elected to the
Arkansas House of Representatives in 2008, but switched parties to become a Democrat five months after his election.
Fred Smith was elected to the Arkansas House of Representatives in 2012, but re-registered as a Democrat in 2014. In 2010, former Green Party leader
Ben Chipman was elected to the Maine House of Representatives as an
unenrolled candidate and was re-elected in 2012 and 2014. He has since registered as a Democrat, and is serving in the Maine Senate.
Gayle McLaughlin was twice elected mayor of
Richmond, California, defeating two Democrats in 2006 and then reelected in 2010; and elected to City Council in 2014 after completing her second term as mayor. With a population of over 100,000 people, it was the largest American city with a Green mayor.
Fairfax, California;
Arcata, California;
Sebastopol, California; and
New Paltz, New York are the only towns in the United States to have had a Green Party majority in their
town councils. Twin Ridges Elementary in
Nevada County, California held the first Green Party majority school board in the United States. On September 21, 2017,
Ralph Chapman, a member of the Maine House of Representatives, switched his party registration from unaffiliated to Green, providing the Green Party with their first state-level representative since 2014.
Henry John Bear became a member of the Green Party in the same year as Chapman, giving the Maine Green Independent Party and GPUS its second currently-serving state representative, though Bear is a nonvoting tribal member of the Maine House of Representatives. Though several Green congressional candidates have topped 20%, no nominee of the Green Party has been elected to office in the federal government. In 2016, Mark Salazar set a new record for a Green Party nominee for Congress. Running in the Arizona 8th district against incumbent Republican Congressman
Trent Franks, Salazar received 93,954 votes or 31.43%.
Legislative caucuses With exception to state legislatures and major city councils, all other legislative bodies included in the following chronological table had/have more than two affiliated members simultaneously serving in office. } Minority(1/13 seats)
Other notable people •
Ellen Brown •
Tom Clements •
Mike Feinstein •
Margaret Flowers •
Paul Glover •
Daniel Hamburg •
Howie Hawkins •
Dario Hunter •
Brent McMillan •
Ross Mirkarimi •
Ralph Nader •
Efia Nwangaza • •
Dona Spring •
Charlene Spretnak •
Jill Stein •
Kevin Zeese == Presidential ballot access ==