Nancy Wallace is a long time national and local environmental activist, a lifelong resident of Montgomery County, and a Green Party member since 2003. She is running for U.S. House of Representatives, MD Congressional District 8, which runs from Gaithersburg south to DC. She recently spoke at the Green Party National Meeting about her candidacy and priorities.

Campaign Priorities

Climate Change

Most candidates in our region have climate change somewhere in their platforms—but Wallace sees climate as the top priority: “I support declaration of an emergency. It’s World War III and our habits and our apathy are the enemy—along with the corporate-Wall Street perpetual growth paradigm. And I find that resonates across the spectrum of voters.” Wallace will maximize the use of solar energy—much like she’s already done at her own Bethesda home—and promote federal help for all 50 states to transition to 100% renewables within 5 years. She proposes a national “Climate Change Corps,” modeled on the 1930s Civilian Conservation Corps that helped stop the Dustbowl and the Great Depression, to provide 100% employment in climate-transition projects.

Culture of Violence

From actual violence in our homes and streets, to violence in our entertainment, Wallace sees many opportunities to move away from the normalization of violence we see in society today. “It’s our whole culture of dominance that’s been here for 400 years,” Wallace says. “We need to say it, name it, and shift our paradigm.” She advocates funding local mental health priorities, training children in peaceful conflict resolution, applying movie-type violence ratings to video games with age limits, promoting women’s political leadership, increasing funding for programs stopping violence against women, and reducing the military as our major foreign policy approach. “Federal policy should be funding caring and compassion, not violence and domination.”

Wealth Redistribution

In America today, 10% of the population owns 50% of property while the bottom 50% of the population by wealth own only 3%. Wallace’s platform calls for trusted solutions, such as reinstating various capital gains taxes, and creative new solutions, such as a housing “musical chairs” day when whatever housing you are residing in on that day becomes yours to own. She pioneered the concept of a new type of “fair mortgage” where the owner and the mortgage company get paid at the same rate each month, instead of the banks getting all their profit up front; this builds equity quickly for the owner, rebuilding wealth in the middle class.

Men’s Contraception

Wallace first got involved in advocating for men’s modern, reversible contraception in 2014 and cofounded the non-profit research organization Male Contraception Initiative. “From a human rights standpoint, men have a fundamental right to control their reproductive decisions equivalent to women’s rights. And it helps women’s survival rates and children’s survival just as much as it helps men.” In a country where more than 37% of pregnancies are still unintended, Wallace sees safe, effective, and reversible men’s contraceptives as a means to improve child welfare, women’s health, and men’s rights all in one program. Her platform calls for major funding to active research efforts through Phase III clinical studies, prioritized review by regulatory agencies, and education of men on their right to “fatherhood by choice.”

“Delighted to Have a Tough Opponent”

This will be Wallace’s third run for Maryland’s Congressional District 8, going up against 5-term Democrat Rep. Jamie Raskin. What does she bring to the table and why is this run different? “Rep. Raskin and I are fundamentally different, not just in our policy positions, but ethically and in temperament as well,” says Wallace. Like the entire Green Party, Wallace eschews corporate money, instead focusing on actual constituents and their needs. “The voters here and across the country want a candidate and a party they can believe in, that is ethical, doesn’t take corporate funds, and puts people above partisan politics. They really want something different,” says Wallace. “Voters feel so disconnected and their daily struggles ignored, that just getting out there and talking to voters, by someone who’s genuine and doesn’t take corporate money really touches them.”

One example where Raskin has failed constituents is in his refusal to denounce the desecration of the African Moses Cemetery in District 8—while Wallace is a strong advocate for memorialization and reparations for the descendants of those interred. Wallace will “give the majority of voters in Montgomery County a bold, scientifically-based advocate for the climate emergency, provide women’s leadership towards peace and child-centered public policy, from a candidate who truly cares about them and their daily challenges for survival,” she says. “Our district wants a bold voice with new solutions, not just blaming the Republicans for everything. We need to stop the ‘us vs. them’ fight mentality that Raskin displays in his committee hearings and instead put our energy into building a peaceful, sustainable society.”

Support the Campaign

“You get the politics you pay for,” says Wallace. “Support corporate-free candidates—like me!” Wallace is asking supporters to give $25 in 2025 and $26 in 2026 to sustain social media outreach to young, poor, disenchanted, and struggling voters who need a new path for government. Keep up with Wallace in the community through social mediadonate, or get involved in the campaign. 

View video of Wallace’s remarks at the Green Party National Meeting August 1, 2025:

 

Above: Nancy Wallace engages with a future constituent at a local fair

A headshot photograph of Nancy Wallace. She is white with curly blond hair to her shoulders and smiling. She is wearing a green collared shirt over a white tshirt and standing in front of trees.

Nancy Wallace

A pamphlet explains Nancy Wallace’s platform for U.S. Congress 2026

A white woman in a blue hat and shirt and black pants holds a maroon sign with yellow letters saying "Desecration is Racism Save Moses Cemetery! bethesdaafricancemeterycoalition.net" She stands on the grass lawn in front of some landscaping in the front yard of a tan multistory house with a pointed roof. Three staff/guests are visible in the background at the house's front door.

Nancy Wallace can be found all around Montgomery County promoting Green Party initiatives. Here, she advocates for memorialization and preservation of Moses Cemetery in front of a Democratic Party fundraiser.