DNC attacks Jill Stein in new ad claiming that a vote for the Green Party candidate is a vote for Donald Trump.
The ad comes as the Harris campaign has repeatedly accused Stein of being “propped up” by Republicans in an attempt to swing the election in Trump’s favor.
Democrats launched a six-figure ad in Wisconsin Friday, highlighting how Stein could hand Donald Trump the White House.
Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose’s office disqualified the Green Party presidential nominee after getting a withdrawal letter from Stein’s running mate. But Stein’s campaign claims the letter was written behind the candidate’s back.
Democrats are arguing in a new pitch to swing state voters that a vote for Green Party nominee Jill Stein would only help elect former President Trump. An ad released Thursday says Stein was “key” to Trump’s victory in the battleground states in 2016 that clinched him the presidency and is “not sorry” for it,
The ad cites reporting out of the Wall Street Journal that says Republicans are boosting Stein and quotes Trump saying he likes Jill Stein.
Not only is she helping Trump win—she’s destroying a once-noble party that could be doing good in this country.
The Abandon Harris campaign endorsed Green Party candidate Jill Stein in the 2024 presidential election. The campaign accuses Kamala Harris of supporting genocide.
Jill Stein has said she would have to look at the charges and sentences of January 6 rioters to determine whether she would pardon them or not. Hundreds of MAGA supporters have been handed sentences for their part in breaching the U.S. Capitol in an effort to overturn the President Joe Biden 's 2020 election win.
The Green Party ticket with Stein and Butch Ware is the only one in this election that aims for policies truly meant to address and combat this climate emergency. These include but aren’t limited to nationalizing the railroad and energy systems, a ban on fracking, coast-to-coast high-speed rail, green union jobs and reducing the military budget.
Jill Stein, 2024 Green Party candidate for president, sits down with Newsweek for a live reader interview and Q&A at 11 a.m. on Monday, Oct. 7. Watch the livestream above, or take part in the conversation at Newsweek's YouTube page.