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Pacific Green Party

Political party in Oregon


Summary

Political party in Oregon

FieldValue
namePacific Green Party
of Oregon
logoPacificGreenLogo.png
colorcode
leader1_titleGoverning Body
leader1_nameCoordinating Committee
7 Co-Chairs
leader2_titleState Senate Leader
leader2_nameNone
leader3_titleState House Leader
leader3_nameNone
stateOregon
foundation1992 (as Pacific Party)
1999 (as Pacific Green Party)
ideologyGreen politics
Social democracy
Progressivism
membership_yearSeptember 2024
positionLeft-wing
membership7,915
nationalGreen Party of the United States
internationalGlobal Greens
colorsGreen
headquarters1695 Chemeketa Street NE
Salem, Oregon
97301
seats1_titleOregon State Senate
seats1
seats2_titleOregon House of Representatives
seats2
seats3_titleLocal Offices
seats310 (September 2024)
websitepacificgreens.org

of Oregon 7 Co-Chairs 1999 (as Pacific Green Party) Social democracy Progressivism Salem, Oregon 97301 The Pacific Green Party of Oregon (PGP) is a left-wing political party in the U.S. state of Oregon, recognized by the Oregon Secretary of State. It is affiliated with the Green Party of the United States. The party has occasionally elected candidates to public office at the local level.

The party gained public attention during Ralph Nader's presidential campaign in 2000, which saw Nader garner over 5% of the vote statewide.

History

The party was initially founded as the Pacific Party in 1992, largely in response of the perceived failure of the Democratic Party to provide meaningful opposition to the 1991 Gulf War.

Many of the party's early candidates were also highly involved in the forest protection movement. These included candidate for United States Senate Lou Gold in 1994; Joe Keating for Congress and Andy Davis for state representative in 1996; and Blair Bobier for governor and Karen Moskowitz for U.S. Senate in 1998. Davis and Keating were arrested for civil disobedience at the United States Forest Service office building in downtown Portland during the campaign, chaining themselves to a desk along with local activist attorney Stu Sugarman.

Ralph Nader was the party's nominee for President of the United States in 1996, and his vice-presidential candidate, Winona LaDuke, came to Portland and walked a local picket line in support of raising the minimum wage. In addition to running candidates for office that year, the Pacific Party helped pass initiatives to raise the state minimum wage and expand the Portland area light rail system.

In 2004, Teresa Keane, the Green Party's candidate for the United States Senate, won 2.4% of the vote – more than any other Green candidate for the U.S. Senate in that year. In 2006 Keane was elected Chair of the newly formed Green Senatorial Campaign Committee (GSCC), a seven-member committee elected by the National Committee of the Green Party of the United States to raise funds for senate candidates.

Platform

The party's platform emphasizes environmentalism, economic and social justice, peace and nonviolence, and respect for diversity. The party's platform expresses the following positions:

  • Public campaign financing for all campaigns for public office and strict limits on political campaign contributions.
  • Support for net neutrality.
  • Support for instant run-off voting, proportional representation in the Oregon State Legislature, and proportional allocation of Oregon's Electoral College votes by Congressional district with the end goal of electing the President solely by the popular vote with the abolishment of the Electoral College.
  • Voting rights for convicted felons and ex-felons.
  • Passage of a single-payer health care system.
  • Protection of a women's right to abortion and supportive of legal physician-assisted suicide.
  • Establishment of carbon taxes to promote use of renewable energy.
  • Opposed to nuclear weapons and to using nuclear power to generate electricity.
  • Support for legalization and cultivation of hemp and marijuana.
  • Support for a ban on patent claims on naturally originating organisms and plants.
  • Support for the establishment of a federal Department of Peace.
  • Support for the release of nonviolent drug offenders from prison.
  • Opposed to private prisons.
  • Abolishment of the death penalty.
  • Abolishment of the state's lottery.

Current elected officials

The following are currently elected Green officeholders in the state of Oregon:

  • David Shannon, Corbett Fire District Board of Directors – term through May 2027
  • Jonathan Bean, Tillamook County Transportation District – term through May 2027
  • Richard Seeberger, Lincoln County Water District Board of Supervisors – term through May 2027
  • Abe Currin, Umatilla County Community College Board of Education – term through May 2025
  • Brian Powers, Hubbard Fire Protection District – term through May 2025
  • Alex Polikoff, Corvallis Fire Protection District – term through May 2025
  • Chloe Flora, Baker County Health District – term through May 2025
  • Josiah Dean, Durfur City Council – term through November 2024
  • Michael Clary, Coos County Soil and Water Conservation District – term through November 2024
  • Matt Donohue, Oregon Circuit Court Judge – term through May 2026

Election results

Presidential elections

YearNomineeVotes%
1996Ralph Nader49,4153.59%
2000Ralph Nader77,3575.04%
2004David Cobb5,3150.29%
2008Cynthia McKinney4,5430.25%
2012Jill Stein19,4271.09%
2016Jill Stein50,0022.50%
2020Howie Hawkins11,8310.50%
2024Jill Stein19,0990.85%

Senate elections

YearNomineeVotes%
1996Gary Kutcher14,1931.04%
1996*Lou Gold7,2250.60%
1998Karyn Moskowitz22,0241.97%
2004Teresa Keane45,0532.41%
2014Christina Jean Lugo32,4342.22%
2016Eric Navickas48,8232.50%
2020Ibrahim Taher42,2391.82%
2022Dan Pulju23,4541.22%

Gubernatorial elections

YearNomineeVotes%
1998Blair Bobier15,8431.42%
2006Joe Keating20,0301.45%
2014Jason Levin29,5612.01%

References

References

  1. "Our History". Pacific Green Party.
  2. "Pacific Green Party".
  3. Stapilus, Randy. (December 13, 2023). "At a time of high polarization, there’s still activity among the small parties". Oregon Capital Chronicle.
  4. "Voter Registration by County September 2024".
  5. "Contact Us". Pacific Green Party.
  6. "Officeholders".
  7. "Voting In Oregon".
  8. Lenhard, Robert D.. (February 9, 2007). "Federal Election Commission Advisory Opinion Number 2006-36".
  9. "Who We Are". Green Senatorial Campaign Committee.
  10. "The Platform of the Pacific Green Party". Pacific Green Party.
  11. "Greens in Office".
Wikipedia Source

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