We are just months away from the Iowa caucuses and less than a year away from the 2024 presidential election. As we get closer to Election Day, there’s growing attention on how third-party candidates could impact the race. First, let’s take a trip down memory lane to 2016.
Imagine the impact third-party votes could have in next year’s race.
During that election year, third-party candidates collectively won around 4% of the vote in Pennsylvania and 6% of the vote in Michigan and Wisconsin. This accounted for more than 100,000 votes, which was enough to sway the presidential race and hand Donald Trump an Electoral College victory over former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
Now imagine the impact third-party votes could have in next year’s race. Let’s face it: There are Americans who don’t want to vote for either Republicans or Democrats, and it shows in the data. Gallup recently found that 63% of American adults agree with the statement that the Republican and Democratic parties do “such a poor job” of representing the American people that “a third major party is needed.”
I do not doubt Gallup’s data, but the chance of a third-party candidate winning the presidency in real life remains highly unlikely in 2024. So is a third-party candidate really a threat to President Joe Biden or former President Donald Trump, who remains the Republican frontrunner by a wide margin? Kate Degruyter, senior communications director of Third Way, recently told me about a strategy that the “No Labels” movement could use in order for Trump to win.
“What we think their new plan is, to try to deny either Biden or Trump a path to 270 votes. If that were to happen, that is likely to trigger the 12th Amendment that would throw the vote of the 2024 election to the House of Representatives. In that crazy scenario, what would happen is the House would vote by delegation. Right now, Republicans control 26 delegations. So that would mean it would win in the most…
Read the full article here