New York – Chagrined Anti-Trump Republicans Seek To Recruit Third-Party Candidate

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    U.S. Senator Ben Sasse (R-NE) speaks at the American Conservative Union 2016 annual conference in Maryland March 3, 2016.   REUTERS/Gary Cameron/File photoNew York – Now that Donald Trump is the last man standing in the Republican presidential race, his critics in the party are intensifying their search for a candidate they could back as a serious third-party alternative.

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    Political operatives are courting donors, calling potential candidates and developing legal contingency plans for overcoming onerous ballot qualification laws.

    “This is as much as anything a battle for the future of American party politics,” said Republican strategist Joel Searby, who is working with conservative writer Bill Kristol, among others, to identify a third-party candidate for the Nov. 8 presidential election.

    The group Conservatives Against Trump, which includes blogger Erick Erickson, has been holding calls and meetings to discuss third-party candidates as well as other options to stop the New York billionaire from winning the White House.

    The hurdles for a third-party candidacy are high. No independent candidate has ever won a presidential election, although some have played spoilers. But the efforts by the Republican groups underscore the unusual divisiveness of Trump’s candidacy within Republican ranks ahead of a likely general election fight with Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton.

    Trump’s opposition to free trade is at odds with the views of many Republicans, especially in the party’s business wing. Many of Trump’s critics also find his rhetoric offensive, including his call to temporarily bar Muslims from entering the country and his comment describing Mexican immigrants to the United States as rapists and drug dealers.

    Some Republicans say they worry that any third-party candidate would only siphon votes away from Trump and help Clinton win the election.

    Ralph Nader’s run as the Green Party candidate in the 2000 presidential election has been blamed by some Democrats for the razor-thin loss of Democratic nominee Al Gore to George W. Bush. Ross Perot’s independent candidacy in 1992 was seen by some Republicans as contributing to President George H.W. Bush’s loss to Democrat Bill Clinton.

    One outcome, although rare, may be that no candidate crosses the necessary threshold of 270 votes in the U.S. Electoral College. In that case, the vote for the next president would pass to the U.S. House of Representatives, currently controlled by Republicans.

    Deborah DeMoss Fonseca, who recruited donors for former Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush and is working with Conservatives Against Trump, said her group was trying to find a candidate who would be high-profile enough to compete with Trump and Clinton.

    NO EASY TASK

    But finding a candidate of that caliber who would be willing to run is no easy feat. Searby’s group has reached out to former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and James Mattis, a retired U.S. Marine Corps general, among others, but both declined after discussions.

    Republican U.S. Senator Ben Sasse of Nebraska has emerged as a favorite of the Republicans seeking a third-party candidate. Kristol has had warm words for him.

    Sasse, a freshman lawmaker and former Bush administration official, is a strong critic of Trump and has called for an alternative candidate to him. But he says that person should be someone other than him.

    On Wednesday, the morning after Trump emerged as the presumptive presidential nominee, phones at the office of Libertarian Party candidate Gary Johnson were ringing off the hook with calls from small-government Republicans who feel they cannot get behind Trump.

    But as a Libertarian, Johnson holds views on some issues, such as the legalization of marijuana, that are antithetical to the views of some Republicans.

    In March, former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, an independent, said he had considered jumping into the race as a third-party candidate but opted against it, saying he feared it would only serve to help get Trump elected.

    “The possibility for a third party to succeed are slim to none,” said Julian Zelizer, a presidential historian at Princeton University. “The structure of American politics have consistently made it impossible for third parties to gain ground.”

    One of the biggest obstacles to a third-party run is simply getting on the ballot in enough states to mount a viable campaign.

    Texas requires more than 79,000 signatures from voters who did not participate in either primary. Its deadline is Monday. Among other states, North Carolina’s deadline is the end of May, and Illinois and Florida in mid-July.

    “A third-party candidate is a pipe dream,” said Republican strategist Tony Fratto, who worked in Bush’s administration and strongly opposes Trump. “What’s going to happen is Hillary Clinton is going to win big. It won’t be close.”


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    12 Comments
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    Boochie
    Boochie
    7 years ago

    Leave it to Republicans to shoot themselves in the foot

    bennyt
    bennyt
    7 years ago

    What a waste of time and money! A third-party alternative doesn’t stand a chance against Trump at this point. Trump is a runaway freight train and will come to a grinding halt only at the White House.

    yankee96
    yankee96
    7 years ago

    another group of under qualified misfits looming on the horizon

    7 years ago

    From their point of view a 3rd party candidate offers a chance to allow republican senators and congressmen who are vulnerable and up for reelection a saving grace. Many up for reelction are doomed if they do doomed if they don’t with Trump. They can’t support Trump because it will disenfranchise many voters who are anti trump . Neither can they support Hilary as that would anger their base. But they can support a 3rd party candidate who is not republican and still argue that he/she stands for our values.
    So will the 3rd part candidate win? No. But it offers a safety net for vulnerbale republicans and allows the party to maintain it majorty.

    kenyaninwhitehouse
    kenyaninwhitehouse
    7 years ago

    I guess they are also bought by Soros.

    yonasonw
    Member
    yonasonw
    7 years ago

    This idea will both give Republicans a chance to vote for someone other than Hillary, while at the same time assuring a thrashing defeat for Trump…Oh bliss…what a wonderful time to be a Proud Democrat… 1964 all over again…and then some.

    SandmanNY
    SandmanNY
    7 years ago

    Why would anyone be a proud Democrat today in America? The party is overrun by liberals, socialists, people who are diametrically opposed to principles of morality and decency – to anything the founders of the country stood for. Thanks to Democrats, the US kills 1.5 million children a year in utero – a system that has put African-Americans in negative growth! I have no great love for the wishy-washy Republicans either, by the way. I think both sides of the aisle are bought and paid for by corporate and private interest brokers (Soros = tzuros). Demos and Repubs graduate from the same liberal colleges, so they are ideologically the same. I’m voting for Trump. He’s not for sale, has a track record of accomplishment, and has the spine to stand up to the idiots who created this mess.

    chaimyhirsch
    chaimyhirsch
    7 years ago

    No analist ever predicted that Trump will get this far, the party couldn’t stop him in the primaries, what makes them think they can stop him now ?

    Just get used to the fact that this is what the people want !

    The time of Lords and Kings is over…