Criticisms of Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein are as well-known as she is, but this election has seen them come from much more personal sources, including her own Highland Park High
Nobody was tuned in to the news, and the Green Party candidate declared victory while explaining that “the numbers actually don’t matter.”
Jill Stein, who previously ran for president in the 2012 and 2016 presidential elections, is on the ballot for the 2024 presidential election.
The Green Party candidate says Harris only has herself to blame for losing the Muslim vote in Michigan—and that Democrats have lost their credibility.
Huge majorities chose Democrats in the last two presidential elections in South Paterson, but that changed in 2024. Here's why.
HARRISBURG, Pa. (KDKA) — Pennsylvania voters have four choices for president on the ballot next Tuesday. One of those candidates, Jill Stein, says she offers a clear alternative to both Donald Trump and Kamala Harris.
Though she is unlikely to win the presidency, Jill Stein could have a noticeable impact on the 2024 presidential election.
For those who lived through the 2000 election, the math remains seared into memory: George W. Bush claimed Florida, and ultimately the presidency, by just 537 votes. Ralph Nader, running on the Green Party ticket, received 97,488 votes in the state. In New Hampshire, where Al Gore fell short by roughly 7,000 votes, Nader garnered more than 22,000.
Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein argued that Democrats “betrayed their base” and that the leaders of the party need to step aside to “allow a proper opposition” to fill in. “The Democrats have really lost credibility.
The spike in Jill Stein's support among the Muslim and Arab American communities has prompted Democrats to urge voters against backing the Green candidate.
"Donald Trump knows that Jill Stein is his key to the White House—that's why he praises her spoiler candidacy and why his MAGA allies are working to prop up her campaign," Democratic National Committee ( DNC) Senior Adviser Adrienne Watson said in a statement emailed to Newsweek.
For much of the 2024 campaign, Kennedy showed enough sustained strength in public opinion surveys to make both campaigns nervous. But since dropping out of the race in August and endorsing Trump, Democrats' third-party attention has focused on Stein, who is once again running as a Green Party candidate.