New Mexico Green Party Begins Ballot Drive

News from Ballot Access News about the New Mexico Green Party petitioning efforts:

The Green Party of New Mexico has started circulating its petition to get itself back on the ballot, and it has 500 signatures already. The party needs 4,151 signatures by April 1.

If New Mexico had a rational election law to determine which parties are on the ballot automatically, that law would already recognize the Green Party. In 2008 the Green Party carried Santa Fe County and Los Alamos County for its candidate for Public Regulation Commission, Rick Lass. Lass polled 43.69% for this partisan race. His vote total, 77,006 votes, was more than 5% of the total vote cast in the entire state. The law defines “major party” to be a group that polled for any of its candidates, a number of votes greater than 5% of the entire vote in the state. The law also requires a “major party” to have registration of at least one-third of 1%, and the Green Party has enough registered members to meet that test as well.

The catch is that before a group can be a “major party”, it must be a “political party”, and a “political party” must have polled one-half of 1% for either President or Governor at either of the last two elections. The Green Party didn’t have a gubernatorial candidate in 2006, and Cynthia McKinney didn’t poll as much as one-half of 1% in 2008.

Parties on the ballot now in New Mexico, besides the two major parties, are the Independent Party and the Constitution Party. The Independent Party is on because it polled over one-half of 1% for president in 2008. The Constitution Party is on because it petitioned in 2008 and parties that petition get ballot status for the next two elections. The Libertarian Party is currently petitioning in New Mexico also.

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