The Vermont Secretary of State has posted a list of candidates for November 2022. See here, and then click on “General Election Candidate Listing.”
The Progressive Party is running its own member, David Zuckerman, for another term as Lieutenant Governor. He was the Lieutenant Governor 2016-2020, but then he didn’t run for re-election in 2020. Instead he ran for Governor, but he did not win.
The Progressive Party also has eight legislative candidates who are party members, the smallest number of its own member-candidates for the legislature that it has run since 1998. In 2020 it had 18 member-candidates for the legislature. Of course, it also cross-endorsed some Democratic nominees this year as it always does.
The Libertarian Party has a candidate for U.S. House, one member-candidate for the legislature, and it also cross-endorsed five Republican nominees for the legislature.
The Green Mountain Peace & Justice Party, formerly Liberty Union, has nominees for U.S. Senate and Lieutenant Governor, but none for any other federal or state office.
Are any of the Libertarian-Republican fusion nominees in Republican-leaning districts where they’re likely to win?
For what it’s worth, the national party’s bylaws appear to forbid such cross-endorsements, at least in the case where the candidate is a “member of another party.”