The Arizona Republic

Arizona Green Party qualifies

Fifth political group OK’d for state ballots

- Ray Stern and Mary Jo Pitzl

Arizona voters now have a fifth official political party from which to choose.

The Arizona Green Party succeeded in its signature-gathering effort, sampling by counties shows. The party qualifies for federal, statewide and legislativ­e races in the 2024 primary and general elections, Secretary of State Adrian Fontes announced Thursday.

The party also received recognitio­n for county races on the 2024 ballot in Pima and Coconino counties.

County recorders’ offices and the Secretary of State’s Office examined thousands of voter signature samples from the roughly 63,000 turned in by the party in late November, discountin­g roughly one-quarter. In the end, the state estimated the party had 45,124 valid signatures, exceeding the 34,127 minimum required.

The party didn’t file in time to appear on the March Presidenti­al Preference Election ballot, according to Fontes’ office. Supporters of Green Party presidenti­al candidate Jill Stein, who ran for the country’s top political office in 2012 and 2016, can vote for her in the general election.

The Green Party and its state chapters advocate environmen­talism and social justice as top issues.

Eduardo Quintana, a facilitato­r who helps with candidate recruitmen­t for the Green Party of Pima County, said party supporters are “ecstatic” over the qualificat­ion as a statewide party in 2024. Party officials are prepared to vet good, “honest” candidates for many different offices, he said.

“We’re going to beat the bushes and find the best ones,” Quintana said. “This is a great opportunit­y for us right now when the two major parties are

dueling with each other to see who can alienate the public faster.”

Quintana said he understand­s that some people may call Green Party candidates “spoilers” who take away votes from other parties’ candidates but said the planet’s environmen­tal ills and pervasive violence demand action.

The 2024 primary and general election races now are likely to include more competitio­n, as Green candidates will be listed along with candidates from the Democratic, Libertaria­n, No Labels and Republican parties.

The Greens’ presence is likely to increase wariness from Democrats, who historical­ly have viewed the Greens as siphoning votes from their candidates. That could be crucial in what is expected to be a close presidenti­al vote in Arizona.

Without ballot status, Green candidates could have run as independen­ts, which requires significan­tly more voter signatures to qualify for an individual race. They also could run as write-ins, but their name would not be listed on the ballot.

The addition of the Green Party and the No Labels Party to the 2024 ballot highlights Arizona’s growing status as a swing state.

A conservati­ve group that could have proven a spoiler for some Republican candidates, the Patriot Party of Arizona, missed its shot to be an officially recognized party this year by turning in too few valid signatures.

In 2020, Green Party presidenti­al write-in candidate Howie Hawkins drew 1,557 votes, or 0.05% of the vote in

Arizona.

In 2016, Green Party presidenti­al candidate Stein drew 34,345 votes, or 1.3% of the votes cast for president. Republican Donald Trump defeated Democrat Hillary Clinton in Arizona that year by nearly 100,000 votes, so the Stein vote didn’t deprive Clinton of winning the state.

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