Results of the 2020 Green Party presidential primaries
This article is missing information about Contests held after May 30, 2020. Please expand the article to include this information. Further details may exist on the talk page.(July 2020)
Current awarded delegate total: 357 delegates out of 358 delegates. [1]
205
98.5
5
11.5
9
2
1
7
½
17.5
Results by state
Minnesota caucus
The Green Party of Minnesota held its caucus (a non-binding straw poll which has no impact on choosing delegates) on February 25, 2020. Dario Hunter won the caucuses with 81.25% of the vote, however the delegates apportioned will be determined at the state convention in June.[48]
Minnesota Green Party presidential caucus, February 25, 2020[48]
Candidate
Votes
Percentage
National delegates
Dario Hunter
81.25%
TBD
Others
18.75%
TBD
Total
100.00%
6
Ohio caucus
Ohio Green Party presidential caucus, February 29, 2020 – June 2, 2020[58][non-primary source needed][59]Partial Results of Feb. 29: Mail and Online Voting Continues Until June 2
Candidate
Votes
Percentage
National delegates
Howie Hawkins
64
42.95%
3
Dario Hunter
51
34.23%
3
Dennis Lambert
13
8.73%
1
Sedinam Moyowasifza Curry
6
4.03%
0
David Rolde
6
4.03%
0
Susan Lochocki
2
1.34%
0
Chad Wilson
2
1.34%
0
Kent Mesplay
1
0.67%
0
Total
145
100.00%
7
California primary
County results — California
Hawkins
Hunter
Curry
Lambert
Tie
California Green Party presidential primary, March 3, 2020[4]
Candidate
Votes
Percentage
National delegates
Howie Hawkins
4,202
36.2%
16 estimated
Dario Hunter
2,558
22.0%
9 estimated
Sedinam Moyowasifza-Curry
2,071
17.8%
8 estimated
Dennis Lambert
1,999
17.2%
7 estimated
David Rolde
774
6.7%
3 estimated
Total
9,656
100.00%
43
Massachusetts primary
County results, excluding "No Preference" — Massachusetts.
Hunter
Hawkins
Curry
Tie
Massachusetts Green Party presidential primary, March 3, 2020[60][k]
Candidate
Votes
Percentage
National delegates
No Preference (Blanks & Other Write-ins)
979
60.4
7 estimated
Dario Hunter
224
13.8
2 estimated
Howie Hawkins
217
13.4
1 estimated
Sedinam Kinamo Christin Moyowasifza-Curry
141
8.7
1 estimated
Kent Mesplay
55
3.4
0
David Rolde
4
0.2
0
Total
1620
100.00%
11
North Carolina primary
North Carolina Green Party presidential primary, March 3, 2020
[6]
Candidate
Votes
Percentage
National delegates
Howie Hawkins
247
60.54%
4
No Preference
161
39.46%
0
Total
408
100.00%
4
Missouri primary
County results — Missouri.
Hawkins
Uncommitted
Hunter
Rolde
Tie
Missouri Green Party presidential primary, March 10, 2020[61]
Candidate
Votes
Percentage
National delegates
Howie Hawkins
170
33.27%
3 estimated
Uncommitted
149
29.16%
0
Dario Hunter
110
21.52%
2 estimated
David Rolde
82
16.05%
2 estimated
Total
511
100.00%
7
Illinois primary
Illinois Green Party presidential primary, March 14, 2020[9]
^Alaska, Louisiana, Montana, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont, Wyoming, and all of the territories of the United States have inactive Green Parties, as such, they are either ineligible or unable to send delegates to the Green National Convention
^In the below table, blank cells indicate the candidate was not a ballot option or approved write-in candidate. Shaded cells indicate candidates that are not officially recognized by the Green Party.
^The number of delegates apportioned is calculated by the percentage of votes received. Votes not cast for a “surviving candidate” or a candidate that received less than 14% of total votes cast, become uncommitted. As a result a single delegate was awarded to uncommitted.
^The Green Party of Rhode Island announced they will not be placing any candidates on their ballot line in the 2020 Presidential Election. The party will also only send no-preference observers to the Green National Convention.
^No candidates were on the DC Statehood Green Party Presidential Primary ballot, only a Write-In option was available, and Howie Hawkins was the only certified write in candidate.
^This primary election was held through ranked choice voting, the following are the results of the final round in which delegates were allocated.
^As a result of the three way tie in the preference vote, the Nebraska Green Party decided to send only 3 delegates to the GNC, instead of the 4 delegates they were credentialed.
^The Green Party of Minnesota held a Presidential Preference Caucus Straw Poll on February 25th 2020. Dario Hunter was the winner of this contest. Delegates will be awarded at the GPMN state convention on June 29
^The Louisiana Green Party decided to send only 2 delegates to the GNC, instead of the 4 delegates they were credentialed.
^The Massachusetts Secretary of State officially declared Hunter the winner as he was the candidate with the most votes. Nonetheless, the 'no preference' votes exceeded the votes of all candidates.
^The number of delegates apportioned is calculated by the percentage of votes received. Votes not cast for a “surviving candidate” or a candidate that received less than 14% of total votes cast, become uncommitted. As a result a single delegate was awarded to uncommitted.
^This primary was conducted under a system in which each person approve of more than one candidate per ballot, therefore votes reflect total number of ballots that approved of the candidate, and as a result reflect more approvals than ballots cast.
^ This primary was conducted under a system in which each person approve of more than one candidate per ballot, therefore percentages reflect the percentage of voters that approved of each candidate, and as a result do not add up to 100%.
^ This primary was conducted under a system in which each person approve of more than one candidate per ballot, therefore total reflects the number of ballots cast, not the number of approvals on all ballots.
^This primary was conducted under a system in which each person could cast a vote for more than one candidate, therefore percentages reflect the percentage of voters that approved of each candidate, and as a result do not add up to 100%.
^This primary was conducted under a system in which each person could cast a vote for more than one candidate, therefore percentages reflect the percentage of voters that approved of each candidate, and as a result do not add up to 100%.