List of United States Green Party presidential tickets

This is a list of the candidates for the offices of President of the United States and Vice President of the United States of the Green Party of the United States.

List of Green Party presidential tickets

1996, 2000

Presidential
Nominee
1996 (lost), 2000 (lost) Vice Presidential
Nominee
Ralph Nader of CT
(1934–present)
Prior experience
  • Consumer protection lawyer
Higher education
Prior experience
  • Economist
Higher education
Winona LaDuke of CA
(1959–present)
Opponent(s)
Bill Clinton (Democratic)
Bob Dole (Republican)
Ross Perot (Reform)
Electoral vote
  • Clinton/Gore: 379 (70.4%)
  • Dole/Kemp: 159 (29.6%)
Popular vote
  • Clinton/Gore: 47,401,185 (49.2%)
  • Dole/Kemp: 39,197,469 (40.7%)
  • Perot/Choate: 8,085,294 (8.4%)
  • Nader/LaDuke: 685,297 (0.71%)
Opponent(s)
Al Gore (Democratic)
Jack Kemp (Republican)
Pat Choate (Reform)
Opponent(s)
George W. Bush (Republican)
Al Gore (Democratic)
Electoral vote
  • Bush/Cheney: 271 (50.4%)
  • Gore/Lieberman: 266 (49.4%)
Popular vote
  • Gore/Lieberman: 50,999,897 (48.4%)
  • Bush/Cheney: 50,456,002 (47.9%)
  • Nader/LaDuke: 2,882,955 (2.74%)
Opponent(s)
Dick Cheney (Republican)
Joe Lieberman (Democratic)

2004

Presidential
Nominee
2004 (lost) Vice Presidential
Nominee
David Cobb of TX
(1962–present)
Prior experience
  • Attorney
Higher education
Prior experience
  • Activist
Higher education
Pat LaMarche of ME
(1960–present)
Opponent(s)
George W. Bush (Republican)
John Kerry (Democratic)
Electoral vote (President)
  • Bush: 286 (53.2%)
  • Kerry: 251 (46.7%)[1]
  • Edwards: 1 (0.2%)
Electoral vote (Vice President)
  • Cheney: 286 (53.2%)
  • Edwards: 252 (46.8%)
Popular vote
  • Bush/Cheney: 62,040,610 (50.7%)
  • Kerry/Edwards: 59,028,444 (48.3%)
  • Cobb/LaMarche: 119,859 (0.10%)
Opponent(s)
Dick Cheney (Republican)
John Edwards (Democratic)

2008

Presidential
Nominee
2008 (lost) Vice Presidential
Nominee
Cynthia McKinney of GA
(1955–present)
Prior experience
Higher education
Prior experience
  • Journalist
Higher education
Rosa Clemente of NC
(1972–present)
Opponent(s)
George W. Bush (Democratic)
John McCain (Republican)
Electoral vote
  • Obama/Biden: 365 (67.8%)
  • McCain/Palin: 173 (32.2%)
Popular vote
  • Obama/Biden: 69,498,516 (52.9%)
  • McCain/Palin: 59,948,323 (45.7%)
  • McKinney/Clemente: 161,797 (0.12%)
Opponent(s)
Joe Biden (Democratic)
Sarah Palin (Republican)

2012, 2016

Presidential
Nominee
2012 (lost), 2016 (lost) Vice Presidential
Nominee
Jill Stein of MA
(1950–present)
Prior experience
  • Physician
  • Activist
Higher education
Prior experience
  • Activist
Higher education
  • None
Cheri Honkala of PA
(1963–present)
Prior experience
  • Professor
  • Activist
Higher education
Ajamu Baraka of IL
(1963–present)
Opponent(s)
Barack Obama (Democratic)
Mitt Romney (Republican)
Electoral vote
  • Obama/Biden: 332 (61.7%)
  • Romney/Ryan: 206 (38.3%)
Popular vote
  • Obama/Biden: 65,915,796 (51.1%)
  • Romney/Ryan: 60,933,500 (47.2%)
  • Stein/Honkala: 469,627 (0.36%)
Opponent(s)
Joe Biden (Democratic)
Paul Ryan (Republican)
Opponent(s)
Donald Trump (Republican)
Hillary Clinton (Democratic)
Gary Johnson (Libertarian)
Electoral vote (President)[2]
Electoral vote (Vice President)
Popular vote
  • Clinton/Kaine: 65,853,516 (48.2%)
  • Trump/Pence: 62,984,825 (46.1%)
  • Johnson/Weld: 4,489,341 (3.28%)
  • Stein/Baraka: 1,457,216 (1.07%)
Opponent(s)
Mike Pence (Republican)
Tim Kaine (Democratic)
Bill Weld (Libertarian)

2020

Presidential
Nominee
2020 (pending) Vice Presidential
Nominee
Howie Hawkins of NY
(1952–present)
Prior experience
  • Trade unionist
  • Activist
Higher education
Prior experience
  • Labor organizer
Higher education
Angela Nicole Walker of WI
(1974–present)
Opponent(s)
Donald Trump (Republican)
Joe Biden (Democratic)
Electoral vote
  • Pending
Popular vote
  • Pending
Opponent(s)
Mike Pence (Republican)
Kamala Harris (Democratic)

See also

References

  1. A faithless elector voted Edwards for President and Vice President in the Electoral College, otherwise Kerry would have won 252 (46.8%) votes.
  2. If not for faithless electors, Trump and Pence would have won 306 Electoral College votes each, while Clinton and Kaine would have won 232 votes.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.