Jill Stein 2024 presidential campaign
American political campaign From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jill Stein, a physician from Massachusetts, announced her entry into the 2024 United States presidential election on November 9, 2023. Stein had been the Green Party nominee in 2012 and 2016. In 2012, she received 470,000 votes.[2] In the 2016 election, she received 1.46 million votes (1.1% of the popular vote).[3]
Jill Stein for President 2024 | |
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Campaign | 2024 U.S. presidential election 2024 Green primaries |
Candidate | Jill Stein Physician, 2012 and 2016 Green Party presidential candidate Butch Ware History professor and author |
Affiliation | Green Party |
Status | Announced: November 9, 2023 Presumptive nominee: May 26, 2024 Official nominee: August 17, 2024 |
Receipts | US$2,751,003[1] (November 25, 2024) |
Slogan | People, Planet, Peace |
Website | |
www |
Stein was polling between 0.9%[4] and 1.2%[5] nationally as of November 3, 2024. An August poll of 1,159 Muslims by the Council on American–Islamic Relations indicated that 29% planned to vote for Stein.[6][7]
Background
In June 2023, Stein took on the role of campaign manager for the 2024 presidential campaign of activist and scholar Cornel West, who was then seeking the nomination of the Green Party.[8] After West withdrew from the Green Party to continue his campaign as an independent, Stein launched her campaign for the Green Party's 2024 presidential nomination in November 2023.[9]
Platform
When announcing her candidacy, Stein described the two-party political system as "broken." She called for prioritizing a "pro-worker, anti-war, climate emergency agenda" in the upcoming election, aiming to bring these issues to the forefront of national discourse.[10]
Stein has also been an outspoken critic of U.S. foreign policy, particularly regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Following the October 2023 Hamas attack, she condemned Israel's military actions in the Gaza Strip and criticized President Joe Biden for what she described as a failure to intervene against what she termed Israel's "genocidal rampage."[10]
Polling
Stein is polling between 0.9%[4] and 1.2%[5] nationally as of November 3, 2024.
An August 2024 survey published by the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) found that 29% of Muslim voters planned to vote for Stein.[11] In Michigan, 40 percent of Muslim voters supported Stein, 18% supported Trump and 12% supported Harris.[12] CAIR's final election poll, published on November 1, showed that nationwide among Muslims, 42.3% planned to vote for Stein, 41% for Harris, and 9.8% for Trump.[13]
Campaign
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Announcement
On November 9, 2023, Stein announced her third bid for president.[14]
Developments
Stein took part in a presidential debate hosted by the Free & Equal Elections Foundation on February 29, 2024, alongside Party for Socialism and Liberation nominee Claudia De la Cruz, fellow Green candidate Jasmine Sherman, and Libertarian candidates Chase Oliver and Lars Mapstead.[15][16]
Stein and two campaign staff members were among more than 80 individuals arrested by local police on April 27 at Washington University in St. Louis while protesting the Israeli invasion of the Gaza Strip as a part of the nationwide protests on university campuses. According to Stein on Twitter, she and the other protestors were held at the St. Louis County Jail until 2 a.m. the next day.[17] Stein criticized the university's handling of the protest, accusing the administration of violating their freedom of speech.[18]

The campaign announced on May 26 that it had accrued enough delegates to secure the Green Party nomination.[19]
Some Republicans have been boosting Stein's candidacy in the hopes that she attracts voters away from Kamala Harris.[20] Stein's campaign paid over $100,000 to Accelevate, a Republican-connected signature gathering enterprise operated by Trent Pool and Pool's brother, to assist with ballot access for Stein's 2024 campaign.[21] That firm had also been paid over $10 million for assistance with qualifying Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s presidential campaign for help with ballot access in the same election.[22][23]
On October 24, Stein once again participated in a debate hosted by the Free and Equal Elections Foundation, alongside Chase Oliver and Constitution Party nominee Randall Terry.[24]
Vice presidential selection
Stein reportedly considered offering the nomination to Dearborn, Michigan mayor Abdullah Hammoud, although he would be too young to be inaugurated as vice president.[25] On August 16, she announced Rudolph "Butch" Ware as her running mate.[26]
Kentucky
In Kentucky, the Green Party was not on the ballot; instead Stein ran under the banner of the Kentucky Party.[27][28] Ware was replaced on the Kentucky ballot as Stein's vice-presidential candidate by Florida activist Samson LeBeau Kpadenou.[29]
Reception
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Endorsements
Organizations
Local officials
- Kshama Sawant, former Seattle City Council member (2014–2024) (Revolutionary Workers)[34][35]
Individuals
- Susan Abulhawa, writer and human rights activist[36][better source needed]
- Tariq Ali, activist, writer and public intellectual[37]
- Medea Benjamin, founder of Code Pink[38][39]
- Caitlin Durante, American writer and comedian[40]
- David Duke, Neo-Nazi and former Imperial Wizard, Knights of the Ku Klux Klan[41] (Disavowed)[42]
- Jeffrey Sachs, Columbia University professor[43]
- Roger Waters, co-founder of Pink Floyd[44]
Calls by European Green parties to drop out
On November 1, the European Greens released a statement, signed by representatives from 16 European countries, asking Stein to drop out of the presidential election and endorse Kamala Harris, arguing that "Harris is the only candidate who can block Donald Trump and his anti-democratic, authoritarian policies."[45][46] Stein's team said it was disappointed that "one group of Greens [would] tell another to stop participating in democracy" and that it "would never betray our legion of supporters – and the many supporters who have already cast votes – by abandoning our mission now".[45]
Ballot access
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Not on ballot
The Democratic Party has fought to exclude Stein from the ballot in a number of states.[21] The Wisconsin Supreme Court decided against hearing the lawsuit brought forward by the Democratic National Committee against Stein. The lawsuit was described as an attempt to remove her from the Wisconsin ballot. As of August 2024 she remained on the ballot in Wisconsin.[49]
![]() | This article needs to be updated. (April 2025) |
Stein's campaign was represented at the Supreme Court by Jay Sekulow, a former lawyer to Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, to get on the Nevada ballot, while Democrats fought to keep Stein off due to their belief that she would be a spoiler candidate. The Supreme Court rejected Stein's application in a one-sentence order without comment or dissent.[50] The Associated Press reported on the Republican efforts to help Jill Stein get on the ballot and compared it to Republican attempts to place Cornel West and his campaign on the ballots of swing states in the belief that West would act as a spoiler candidate.[51]
totals | 2024[52] | 2020 | 2016[53] | 2012 | 2008A[54] | 2004A | 2000B | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
States (& DC) | 51 | 42 (42) | 45 (46) | 47 (48) | 45 (46) | 48 (49) | 43 (44) | 47 (48) |
Electoral Votes | 538 | 454 (454) | 511 (514) | 519 (522) | 486 (489) | 525 (528) | 486 (489) | 510 (513) |
Alabama | 9 | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot | On ballot | Write-in | Write-in | On ballot |
Alaska | 3 | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot | On ballot |
Arizona | 11 | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot |
Arkansas | 6 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
California | 55 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
Colorado | 9 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
Connecticut | 7 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | Write-in | Write-in | On ballot | On ballot |
Delaware | 3 | Write-in | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
Florida | 29 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
Georgia | 16 | On ballot | Write-in | Write-in | Write-in | Write-in | Write-in | Write-in |
Hawaii | 4 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
Idaho | 4 | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot | On ballot | Write-in | Write-in | Write-in |
Illinois | 20 | Write-in | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot |
Indiana | 11 | Not on ballot | Write-in | Write-in | Write-in | Write-in | Write-in | Write-in |
Iowa | 6 | Write-in | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
Kansas | 6 | Not on ballot | Write-in | On ballot | Write-in | Write-in | Write-in | On ballot |
Kentucky | 8 | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot | On ballot | Write-in | Not on ballot | On ballot |
Louisiana | 8 | On ballot | Not on ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
Maine | 4 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
Maryland | 10 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
Massachusetts | 11 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | Not on ballot | On ballot |
Michigan | 16 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
Minnesota | 10 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
Mississippi | 6 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
Missouri | 10 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | Not on ballot | Write-in | Not on ballot | On ballot |
Montana | 3 | On ballot | Not on ballot | On ballot | Not on ballot | Write-in | On ballot | On ballot |
Nebraska | 5 | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot | Not on ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
Nevada | 6 | Not on ballot | Not on ballot | Not on ballot | On ballot | On ballot | Not on ballot | On ballot |
New Hampshire | 4 | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot | Write-in | Write-in | Write-in | On ballot |
New Jersey | 14 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
New Mexico | 5 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
New York | 29 | Write-in | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot |
North Carolina | 15 | On ballot | On ballot | Write-in | Write-in | Write-in | Write-in | Not on ballot |
North Dakota | 3 | Not on ballot | Write-in | On ballot | On ballot | Write-in | Not on ballot | On ballot |
Ohio | 18 | On ballot, not count | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot |
Oklahoma | 7 | Not on ballot | Not on ballot | Not on ballot | Not on ballot | Not on ballot | Not on ballot | Not on ballot |
Oregon | 7 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
Pennsylvania | 20 | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot | On ballot |
Rhode Island | 4 | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
South Carolina | 9 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
South Dakota | 3 | Not on ballot | Not on ballot | Not on ballot | Not on ballot | Not on ballot | Not on ballot | Not on ballot |
Tennessee | 11 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
Texas | 38 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | Write-in | Write-in | On ballot |
Utah | 6 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot |
Vermont | 3 | Write-in | On ballot | On ballot | Write-in | Write-in | Write-in | On ballot |
Virginia | 13 | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot |
Washington | 12 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
West Virginia | 5 | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot |
Wisconsin | 10 | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot |
Wyoming | 3 | Write-in | Write-in | On ballot | Write-in | Write-in | Write-in | Write-in |
District of Columbia | 3 | Not on ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | On ballot | Write-in | On ballot |
Results
The ticket garnered 861,142 votes or 0.55%, the second highest of her three campaigns, beating her 2012 run but falling short of her 2016 bid.[55][56] This was the first election since 2000 where the Green Party placed third place in the popular vote. Jill Stein also won 22% of Dearborn, Michigan, coming in third place behind Harris, who won 28%, and Trump, who won 47%.[57] In all swing states, Trump's margin of victory exceeded the combined totals of Harris's and Stein's votes, and Stein's candidacy had no impact on Harris' electoral performance.[58][59]
She received 1.07% of the vote in Maine, her best state by percentage.[60] Stein also received over one percent of the vote in Maryland and California.
Exit polling from the Council on American-Islamic Relations found that 53% of Muslim-American voters supported Stein. In Michigan, 59% of Muslim-American voters supported Stein. In Maryland, 81% of Muslim-American voters supported her.[61][62]
See also
Notes
- Stein on the ballot in:
- Alabama (9, Independent)[47]
- Alaska (3, as Independent)[47]
- Arizona (11)[47]
- Arkansas (6)[47]
- California (54)[47]
- Colorado (10)[47]
- Connecticut (7)[47]
- Florida (30)[47]
- Georgia (16)[47]
- Hawaii (4)[47]
- Idaho (4, as independent)[47]
- Kentucky (8)[47]
- Louisiana (8)[47]
- Maine (4)[47]
- Maryland (10)[47]
- Massachusetts (11)[47]
- Michigan (15)[47]
- Minnesota (10)[47]
- Mississippi (6)[47]
- Missouri (10)[47]
- Montana (4)[47]
- Nebraska (5)[47]
- New Hampshire (4)[47]
- New Jersey (14)[47]
- New Mexico (5)[47]
- North Carolina (16)[47]
- Oregon (8)[47]
- Pennsylvania (19)[47]
- Rhode Island (4)[47]
- South Carolina (9)[47]
- Tennessee (11, as Independent)[47]
- Texas (40)[47]
- Utah (6)[47]
- Virginia (13)[47]
- Washington (12)[47]
- West Virginia (4)[47]
- Wisconsin (10)[47]
- Stein disqualified states:
- Ohio (17, as Independent)[48]
References
External links
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