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1994: The
Maine Green Party qualifed for statewide
ballot status in November, 1994 In Maine in 1994, the criteria for qualification for statewide ballot status was to receive 5% or more every two years in the gubernatorial and the presidential race. 1996: The
Maine Green Party failed to retain statewide
ballot status in November 1996
Ralph
Nader/Winona LaDuke received 2.5%
and 15,279 votes for President. This 2.5% was not sufficient to
surpass the 5% threshold necessary for the Maine Green Party to retain
ballot status. The Maine Green Party appealed the
Secretary of State's ruling to the District 1 Federal Court. They contested the
Maine Secretary of States ruling that a
party must receive 5% every two years to remain on the ballot - in
both the gubernatorial and presidential elections - not just every
four years at the state elections. The Judge sent the case to the
State Supreme Court to clarify Maine law.
2002: The
Maine Green Independent Party retained statewide
ballot status in November 2002
2006: The
Maine Green Independent Party retained statewide
ballot status in November 2006 2008: The
Maine Green Independent Party failed
to extend statewide ballot status in November 2008 Then on June 17th, 2009, Maine Governor John Balducci signed HB 1041, which eliminated the 5% vote test for a party to stay on the ballot and instead established that a party stays on the ballot if it has 10,000 registrants who voted in the last statewide general election. As of November 2009, the Green Party had 32,483 registrants, three-fourths of whom usually vote in November.
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