1992: Hawai'i Green Party qualified for statewide ballot status in May 1992 In Hawai'i in 1992, the qualification criteria for statewide ballot status was to gather a number of petition signers equal to 1% of the number of registered voters in the state. (In 1999, Libertarians in Hawaii successfully persuaded the legislature to lower this threshold from 1%, to one-tenth of 1%.) In May 1992, the Hawai'i Green Party submitted over 8,000 signatures of petition signers, surpassing the 4,533 signature threshold needed to qualify as a statewide ballot status party. 1992: Hawai'i
Green Party retained its statewide ballot
status in November 1992. Linda Martin received 13.7% and 49,921 votes for U.S. Senate. This surpassed the 10% needed for the Hawai'i Green Party to retain its ballot status through the 1994 elections. 1996: Hawai'i Green Party retained its statewide ballot status in May 1996. In May 1996, the Hawai'i Green Party submitted over 7,500 signatures of petition signers, surpassing the 4,888 signature threshold needed to retain its statewide ballot status. 1996: Hawai'i
Green Party lost ballot status in
November 1996. Unfortunately for Hawai'i Greens,
the law's language specifically referred to 'petitioning', rather
than 'qualifying' for the ballot. Thus Linda Martin's 13.7% in
1992 did not count towards the Green Party's total. 1997: Hawai'i
Green Party regains its statewide ballot
status. With that ruling, the Green Party regained its ballot status through 2006. The only requirement for the Greens during this period is that they run candidates in each election. This same requirement that applies to all ballot status parties in Hawai'i enjoying the ten year exemption. 2006: Hawai'i Green Party lost statewide ballot status in November 2006 by failing to run any candidates in partisan races. 2008: Hawai'i Green Party regains its statewide ballot status. In June, the Hawai'i Green Party submitted more than twice the 663 valid petition signatures needed to gain ballot status (one tenth of one percent of the states registered voters.) 2010: Hawai'ii Green Party regains its statewide ballot status. In April the Hawai'i Green Party submitted more than twice the 692 valid petition signatures needed to gain ballot status |