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Green Party of Minnesota | |
|---|---|
| Founded | 1994 (1994) |
| Headquarters | 4200 Cedar Ave S. Suite 8 Minneapolis,MN 55407 |
| Ideology | Green politics |
| Political position | Left-wing |
| National affiliation | Green Party of the United States |
| Colors | Green |
| Senate | 0 / 67 |
| House of Representatives | 0 / 134 |
| U.S. Senate | 0 / 2 |
| U.S. House of Representatives | 0 / 8 |
| Minneapolis City Council | 0 / 13 |
| Website | |
| mngreens | |
TheGreen Party of Minnesota is agreenpolitical party in theU.S. state ofMinnesota. It is affiliated with theGreen Party of the United States.
The Minnesota Greens Confederation, foundedc. 1990–1991, fostered the development of local Green Party organizations in the state. The Green Party of Minnesota was organized in December 1993. It was officially established in February and June 1994 at two founding conventions.[1]
Twin Cities Greens was organized in 1988. The Green Party of St. Paul was established in 1997 to 1998.[1]
The Green Party of Minnesota was founded in 1994 on the Four Pillars of the Green Party: Ecological Wisdom, Social and Economic Justice, Grassroots Democracy, and Nonviolence and Peace.
In the2000 presidential election, Green Party presidential nomineeRalph Nader and vice presidential nomineeWinona LaDuke received 5% of the vote in Minnesota, which earned major party status for the Green Party in Minnesota.[2] But in theelection of 2004, neither Green Party presidential nomineeDavid Cobb nor any candidate for statewide office received 5% or more, thus losing major party status in the state.[3]
In 2003Elaine Fleming became the first elected Green mayor in Minnesota. Fleming is mayor ofCass Lake, Minnesota, and was elected mayor for her first term by seven votes. Fleming was elected mayor for a second term as a write-in candidate. As of 2006, Fleming was serving her second and last term as Mayor.
While the party is currently defined as a minor political party, it has had recent success in some city elections, especially in Minneapolis and St. Paul. In 2005,Cam Gordon, a former chair of the Green Party of Minnesota, was elected in Ward 2 to theMinneapolis City Council, winning overDFLer Cara Letofsky in a 51% to 48% vote. Ward 2 is considered one of the most diverse areas of Minneapolis, representing theUniversity of Minnesota Minneapolis Campus and theCedar-Riverside andSeward neighborhoods. Despite this gain on the council, two Green incumbents on the council, Natalie Johnson Lee (Ward 6) andDean Zimmermann (Ward 7), were unseated during the 2005 election. Redistricting had pitted both against other council incumbents.
While initially elected as a Democrat in 1986 to the Minneapolis Park Board,Annie Young ran as a Green from her third term on, becoming one of the longest serving Park Board Commissioners in Minneapolis history.[4]
In 2009, Cam Gordon was re-elected to Minneapolis City Council.[5] In 2011, Green Party endorsed Laura Libby was elected to the Section 1 seat of the City Council ofCrystal, Minnesota.[6] Cam Gordon was elected to a third term on the Minneapolis City Council in 2013.[7]
In 2014, the Green Party of Minnesota ran former DFL State RepresentativeAndy Dawkins for Attorney General receiving 1.49% of the vote statewide and regaining minor party status.[8]
Despite restrictive Minnesota ballot access laws, volunteers collected three times the required signatures to place Green endorsed presidential candidate DrJill Stein on the ballot in 2016.[9] Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon refused to replace the ballot petitions stand-in vice presidential candidate Howie Hawkins with Ajamu Baraka, the only candidate of color in the race, despite no law denying his ability to do so.[10][11] Dr. Jill Stein went on to receive 1.26% of the vote statewide – double the Green presidential vote from 2012 – and again securing minor party status for the Green Party of Minnesota until 2020.[12][13]
Three additional Greens were elected in 2016, including the first elected Green in Ramsey County history – Lena Buggs winning a seat on the Ramsey County Soil & Water District Board unseating the incumbent.[14][15] In Anoka County, Greens Sharon Lemay and Steve Laitinen were both elected to the Anoka County Soil and Water District Board as well.[14][16]
City councils
Boards and commissions
The Green Party of Minnesota follows the ideals ofgreen politics, which are based on the Four Pillars of the Green Party:Ecological wisdom,Social justice,Grassroots democracy andNonviolence. The "Ten Key Values,"[20] which expand upon the four pillars, are as follows:
The Green Party of Minnesota constitution Article XI Section 2 prohibits donations from corporations orpolitical action committees (PACs).[21] The party'splatforms and rhetoric harshly criticize any corporate influence and control over government, media, and society at large.[citation needed]
The party is led by a 17-member coordinating committee which sets the party's long-range goals, budget, and strategy. These decisions are then implemented by an executive committee made of five party co-chairs, each of whom is responsible for one of five portfolios of party business (membership, political affairs, finances, communications, and internal organization). Each portfolio co-chair oversees a number of committees and party functions. While the coordinating and executive committees handle day-to-day operations of the state party, most organizing, activism, and decision-making is decentralized into a number of autonomous local party organizations (or "seedlings") located throughout the state.[21]