Qualified New York political parties
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Qualified_New_York_political_parties an entity of type: WikicatNewYorkElections
In New York State, to qualify for automatic ballot access, a party must have qualify every two years by receiving the greater 130,000 votes or 2% of the vote in the previous gubernatorial election or presidential election. In years with a gubernatorial election or presidential election a party must run a gubernatorial candidate (as well as a lieutenant governor candidate, although the state will accept petitions without a lieutenant governor candidate if no other candidate challenges them) or a presidential candidate to be eligible for automatic ballot access; if 130,000 voters vote for that candidate on their party line, they have qualified the party for the next two years until the following presidential or gubernatorial general election whichever one comes first. A party that is not qua
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Qualified New York political parties
xsd:integer
13623198
xsd:integer
1120844556
rdf:langString
Andrew Cuomo
rdf:langString
Eliot Spitzer
rdf:langString
Howie Hawkins
rdf:langString
Mario Cuomo
rdf:langString
Carl McCall
rdf:langString
George Pataki
rdf:langString
John Faso
rdf:langString
Carl Paladino
rdf:langString
Peter Vallone
rdf:langString
Rob Astorino
rdf:langString
Marcus Molinaro
xsd:double
-14.07
xsd:integer
-9
xsd:double
-7.62
xsd:double
-6.77
xsd:double
-2.07
xsd:double
-1.22
xsd:double
-1.13
xsd:double
-0.24
xsd:double
-0.1
xsd:double
1.75
rdf:langString
+0.02
rdf:langString
+0.07
rdf:langString
N/A
rdf:langString
−0.10
rdf:langString
−0.11
rdf:langString
+1.12
rdf:langString
+1.10
rdf:langString
+4.87
rdf:langString
−0.51
rdf:langString
+0.40
rdf:langString
+1.52
rdf:langString
+0.94
rdf:langString
+1.09
rdf:langString
+5.82
rdf:langString
+2.37
rdf:langString
+6.94
rdf:langString
+3.57
rdf:langString
−10.32
rdf:langString
+30.41
rdf:langString
+20.20
rdf:langString
−21.51
rdf:langString
−11.44
rdf:langString
−3.46
rdf:langString
Democratic Party
rdf:langString
Green Party
rdf:langString
Working Families Party
rdf:langString
Republican Party
rdf:langString
Liberal Party of New York
rdf:langString
Conservative Party of New York
rdf:langString
Conservative Party of New York State
rdf:langString
Independence Party of New York
rdf:langString
New York State Right to Life Party
rdf:langString
Green Party of New York
rdf:langString
Libertarian Party of New York
rdf:langString
Women's Equality Party
rdf:langString
Serve America Movement
rdf:langString
New York Tax Cut Now Party
rdf:langString
Stop Common Core Party
xsd:double
0.89
1.04
1.09
1.1
1.12
1.21
1.29
1.33
1.39
1.41
1.57
1.65
1.66
1.77
1.83
2.02
2.03
3.15
3.22
3.32
3.44
3.56
3.87
3.97
4.12
4.19
4.37
4.49
4.86
4.99
6.33
6.6
7.43
7.76
14.7
25.35
27.72
31.5
32.36
32.44
32.59
34.31
41.55
43.8
46.86
47.08
47.37
54.53
56.08
56.37
62.85
xsd:integer
51294
51325
51367
52533
53802
54040
56683
59928
63518
67750
77762
77915
90533
90816
92001
95716
106008
126244
146646
154487
155184
168654
176848
184419
190661
217490
232264
238578
250634
295657
328605
348727
364056
386010
654016
1105681
1234951
1290017
1443531
1518992
1811672
1824581
2085407
2156057
2223264
2272903
2610123
2740864
2949141
3158459
4844975
rdf:langString
In New York State, to qualify for automatic ballot access, a party must have qualify every two years by receiving the greater 130,000 votes or 2% of the vote in the previous gubernatorial election or presidential election. In years with a gubernatorial election or presidential election a party must run a gubernatorial candidate (as well as a lieutenant governor candidate, although the state will accept petitions without a lieutenant governor candidate if no other candidate challenges them) or a presidential candidate to be eligible for automatic ballot access; if 130,000 voters vote for that candidate on their party line, they have qualified the party for the next two years until the following presidential or gubernatorial general election whichever one comes first. A party that is not qualified may run candidates by completing a petition process. Parties are also allowed to cross-endorse candidates, whose votes are accumulated under electoral fusion, but any parties must cross-endorse both the governor and lieutenant governor candidates for fusion to apply. Parties that are already qualified must issue a Wilson Pakula authorization if they cross-endorse someone not enrolled in that party; there are no restrictions (other than that the candidate must be eligible for office) on who can be nominated on a non-qualified ballot line, as these lines are determined by filing petitions. For statewide and special elections, automatic ballot access means that no petitions have to be filed to gain access to a ballot line, and party organizations can endorse candidates through their own conventions (this does not apply to legislative candidates, who still must petition onto the ballot regardless of party endorsement, but are only required to collect a third of the signatures required of non-qualified parties). Qualified parties also are the only parties eligible to hold primary elections in the state-run primary elections. In addition to determining whether they automatically qualify for the next four years, this also determines the order on the ballot; qualified parties are ranked in order of gubernatorial votes, with the party having the most votes atop the ballot. The threshold for automatic ballot access was originally 50,000 votes every four years during the gubernatorial election. The current threshold was adopted in 2020 prior to the 2020 presidential election. The adoption of the current threshold has led to legal challenges from parties that qualified for automatic ballot access under the previous threshold but not the current one. Parties that do not qualify automatically can petition their way onto the ballot. For statewide candidates, this requires 45,000 signatures, and requires 500 signatures in at least half of the congressional districts in the state. The Socialist Workers Party regularly used this approach to appear on the ballot before abandoning its ballot-access efforts in 2010, then stopped running statewide candidates entirely in 2018. These parties also are not eligible to run primaries, and the first person to submit 15,000 signatures automatically gets the party line. (Sam Sloan attempted to use this tactic to take the 2010 and 2014 Libertarian gubernatorial nominations from that party's nominee, this before the Libertarians gained ballot access in 2018, but failed for lack of signatures.)
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
24449