We the People Party is Now Qualified in Only One State, Oregon

Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. was on the ballot in some states as the nominee of the We the People Party, but now that the election is over, his party is not ballot-qualified in any state except Oregon. In Oregon, a new party gets the next two elections.

We the People would also be qualified in Wisconsin now if Kennedy had polled as much as 1% of the presidential vote in that state, but he only got .5%. He had fought to get off the ballot in Wisconsin so it is not surprising that he didn’t get 1% there.

Qualified Parties in Maryland for 2026 are Democratic, Republican, Green, and No Labels

Maryland now has four qualified parties, one fewer than before the election. The Green Party and the No Labels Party continue to be qualified, but the Libertarian Party went off the ballot for failing to poll 1% for President.

The Green Party and the No Labels Party each petitioned in 2024, and when a party petitions in Maryland, it gets the next two elections. The Green Party polled over 1% of the vote for president this year anyway, so it qualified two ways. But when a party polls 1% for President or Governor, it only gets one more election, so the Green Party’s accomplishment of getting over 1% for Jill Stein didn’t actually make a difference.

Under Maryland precedent, if a qualified party doesn’t file any reports, the State Board of Elections may remove it from qualified status. Ralph Nader’s Independent Party of 2008 was removed for that reason. So it is possible that No Labels will get removed from the ballot, but so far it is still there.

Georgia Libertarian Party Loses Statewide Qualified Status

The Georgia Libertarian Party, which has been ballot-qualified for all statewide office starting in 1988, is no longer qualified. The only statewide office on the ballot this year was president, and the party didn’t poll enough votes. The requirement is 1% of the total number of registered voters, which would have been about 80,000 votes.

Normally the party always stays on the ballot because it always gets enough votes for Public Service Commissioner, which is up every two years. But this year, because a U.S. District Court ruled that statewide elections for that office violate the federal Voting Rights Act, the state cancelled the election for that office. The Eleventh Circuit reversed the U.S. District Court and said statewide elections are legal, but by then it was too late for primaries for that office, and the terms of the two expiring members were extended. It is not clear when the next election for that office will be.

Nevada Libertarian Party Keeps its Qualified Status

The Nevada Libertarian Party retained its qualified status because it ran Jesse Walsh for County Commission, Clark County, Seat B. That is a partisan office. It also kept it in the U.S. Senate race, with 1.3%.

The law says the vote test for qualified status is 1% (for any partisan nominee, not just statewide nominees) of the total statewide vote for U.S. House.

Walsh was in a two-person race with a Democrat and polled 47,275, 37.14% of the total for that race. The vote test requires at least 12,393 votes for any party nominee.

New Mexico Green Party May Have Lost Qualified Status by 53 Votes

New Mexico defines a qualified party as a group that polls .5% for president or Governor. Unofficial returns show the Green Party has .494% for President, 53 votes short. But that may change when the results are final.

The other minor parties lost qualified status. They were the Libertarian, Socialism & Liberation, and Free New Mexico Parties.