Posted on 07/14/2015 3:02:58 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
My sole focus is to run as a Republican, Donald Trump told my Washington Examiner colleague Byron York last week, because of the fact that I believe that this is the best way we can defeat the Democrats. He went on, Having a two-party race gives us a much better chance of beating Hillary and bringing our country back than having a third-party candidate.
But when York asked if he would definitively rule out running as a third-party candidate, Trump said, Its not something Im thinking about right now. And as John Fund pointed out in National Review, it is something Trump has thought about in the past.
He made a feint at getting Ross Perots Reform-party nomination back in 1999. And while Trump recently called Clinton the worst secretary of state in the history of our nation, somehow overlooking James Buchanans feckless stint in the Polk administration, he also contributed to her Senate campaigns and has called her a terrific woman.
The fact is that Trump, as a national celebrity and a non-politician often at odds with both parties, has the capacity to launch an independent candidacy scoring double digits in polls, just as Perot did in 1992 and Colin Powell could have done in 1995.
That should scare not only Republicans but also Democrats. History tells us that third-party candidacies have reshuffled the political deck and disrupted seemingly stable political alignments in unanticipated ways.
Consider the Populist movement of the 1890s that came during a 25-year period when partisan competition was as close as today and divided government as much the norm, though with Republicans usually holding the presidency and Democrats usually with congressional majorities.
The Populists supported inflationary silver currency and aid to farmers, and the 1892 Populist nominee carried most electoral votes in the plains and mountain states (all admitted to the Union by Republicans).
As a national celebrity and a non-politician often at odds with both parties, Trump has the capacity to launch an independent candidacy scoring double digits in polls. In 1896, Democrats nominated the pro-silver, pro-farmer William Jennings Bryan, but in reaction the Northeast and industrial Midwest swung to the pro-gold-standard Republican William McKinley. Republicans won seven of the nine next presidential elections.
Half a century later, in 1948, Strom Thurmonds States Rights Democratic candidacy destabilized the national Democratic partys majority coalition. Thurmonds 39 electoral votes didnt defeat Harry Truman, but Thurmond helped to detach the South from its traditional Democratic allegiance. Democratic nominees carried all the Confederate states 17 times before 1948. None ever has again.
George Wallaces third-party candidacy in 1968 advanced that process at the presidential level. But his 1964, 1972, and 1976 campaigns in the Democratic primaries provided a template for conservative Democrats to win congressional and state races in places that tilted Republican presidentially. That delayed Republicans capture of majorities in the U.S. House until 1994.
Ross Perots candidacy in 1992 came after Republicans won five of the six previous presidential elections, and after George W. Bush carried 40 states in 1988. But Perots spring campaign de-partisanized the critique of Bush, as deputy Democratic chairman Paul Tully told me at the time, in a way no Democrat, certainly not a little-known young governor of Arkansas, could have done.
But when Perot abruptly withdrew from the race, on the Wednesday of the Democratic National Convention, Bill Clintons standing in the polls rose 25 points in one day surely a record that will never be beaten. Democrats won four of the next six presidential elections.
But their leftish policies, in Clintons first two years and Barack Obamas two terms, have helped produce Republican majorities in nine of the next House elections and have resulted in the polarization of the electorate that so many pundits lament and which is the last thing Perot promised.
What could be the consequences of a third-party Trump candidacy? Immediate speculation is that it would cost Republicans the votes of many conservatives disgruntled with the partys officeholders and angry about immigration, trade, and Common Core. Thats certainly plausible.
But Trump might also siphon votes of non-college whites from Democrats in states where their support was high enough to produce Obama victories. Examples include Iowa, New Hampshire, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota. All voted 54 percent or less for Obama in 2012, and altogether they have 84 electoral votes.
The present close partisan balance and polarization will not last forever. And Donald Trump seems like just the kind of guy who could disrupt it in ways no one now can anticipate.
Michael Barone is senior political analyst for the Washington Examiner.
BS! A third party run by Mr bad hair would certainly help the Dems and guarantee them the WH.
Perot thought the same thing.
A lot of those disaffected Democrats like Bernie Sanders more than Donald Trump, and the Democrats who do like Trump are ones who might otherwise have voted Republican.
One major party or the other can muster at least 33% of the vote in pretty much all the states and that's enough to win in a three-way race.
Third party Trump might come in second in some states (as Perot did in Maine and Utah), and for a third party candidate that's very good, but I don't see him winning the election.
I don't think that Trump will ever allow the possibility of such an outcome. I just think he will pull the plug before he lets anyone judge him with a ballot. I think he is preparing a path for Cruz.
But, we'll see.
BS! A third party run by Mr bad hair would certainly help the Dems and guarantee them the WH.
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________
I, and millions of other Americans, HATE Mitch McConnell, John Boehner and Karl Rove as badly as we hate Hillary Clinton, Harry Reid and Barack Obama. So, to put it bluntly.... WE DON’T GIVE A SH*T!
I think Trump could actually win third party.
Perot thought the same thing.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Ross Perot is no Donald Trump. Besides, it was a different time and a different landscape of the nation in 1992. A lot has changed in the last 24 years.
Of course I do. He's no spring chicken (this is likely his last hurrah) , he's probably met most of his personal goals in life, he doesn't like to lose (as a 3rd party he would) and so he'll want something for the cool $100 million he's invested of his own money in the race. And, again, there's the ego. How many people have made VP in their lives?
I really think he’d rather be Sec. of State of Sec. or Commerce.
Sure, party and ideological lines have hardened a lot.
The average Democrat was more likely to vote for a Republican or conservative a quarter century ago than today.
The last generation wasn't as left-wing or politically correct as this one.
I would (give a sh*t) if if it means we get Hillary instead of Cruz!
I would (give a sh*t) if if it means we get Hillary instead of Cruz!
.................................................
I don’t think you have to worry about that. Trump won’t run third party if Cruz wins the nomination.
Hope you are right.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.