Anderson also said he supports strengthening Second Amendment gun rights, and returning power to local governments and school boards.

Anderson said voters need to change their attitudes about the two-party system.

"We will become viable and we will start winning offices once people break out of that mindset that they only have two choices," Anderson said. "People should vote their conscience. Otherwise they're not really being represented."

Michael White, Green Party

Michael White, a Green Party candidate, spent 20 years as a physician in the U.S. Navy and U.S. Air Force before going into private practice in La Crosse.

He said his top priority is the environment.

"Climate change is real. There is no Planet B. It is a building and immediate problem," White told WPR.

He said if elected, he would have Wisconsin go on record supporting the Paris climate accord, which President Donald Trump rejected.

"There are 13 states in the United States that are independently working to live up to the Paris climate accord, independent of the federal government," White said. "Wisconsin is not one of them, but Minnesota is."

White said he would also use his power as governor to bring down the cost of medical care and prescription medicine.

"I am a physician, and I am watching the cost of medicine and the cost of medications go through the roof for my patients." White said. "We are getting ripped off by the drug companies and our leaders in both parties have failed to do anything about it."

White’s other priorities include getting corporate money out of politics, raising the minimum wage and finding more money for education, according to his website.

White said he was convinced to run by 2016 presidential candidate Jill Stein "in order to keep the Green Party in the political dialog." He denied claims by some Democrats that Stein’s candidacy hurt Hillary Clinton in Wisconsin.

"Jill Stein got 32,000 votes in Wisconsin. Had they all voted for Hillary, Hillary would have won the election. That's a true statement," White said. "However, why do people conclude that those people would have voted for Hillary if they weren't voting for Jill? Some of them wouldn't have voted. Some of them may have voted for Trump."