Anti-Trump Republicans face major challenge in launching third party
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[February 12, 2021]
By Tim Reid, James Oliphant, David Morgan and Joseph Ax
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A group of former
Republican officials considering a new center-right political party to
counter former President Donald Trump's influence would face steep
challenges in shaking up a U.S. political system that has favored
two-party rule throughout its history.
Reuters exclusively reported on Wednesday that more than 120 Republicans
- including former elected officials, along with former administrators
under Trump and former presidents Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush and
George W. Bush - met virtually on Feb. 5 to discuss forming a third
party or a new center-right faction.
Two of the most prominent anti-Trump Republicans in Congress - Rep. Liz
Cheney of Wyoming and Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois - rejected the
idea of a breakaway party in statements to Reuters on Thursday. Other
Republican critics of Trump expressed similar skepticism - arguing a
third party would accomplish little beyond splitting the votes of
conservatives and helping Democrats get elected.
The resistance to a third party among some of Trump's toughest
Republican critics underscores the extreme difficulty of such a
political revolt. Such an effort would require walking away from the
Republican Party's massive political infrastructure - staff, money,
connections and data on donors and voters - that would take years if not
decades to build from scratch.
An upstart party would also have little chance of succeeding without a
charismatic leader who could capture the loyalties of millions of
disaffected voters, said Alex Conant, a Republican strategist who was a
senior advisor to the Republican primary campaign of Marco Rubio, a
Senator from Florida, in 2016.
"If somebody was going to start a third party that was going to gain
some traction, it would be Trump" and not his opponents, said Conant.
Kinzinger joined the Feb. 5 video conference of the anti-Trump group and
spoke for about five minutes, a spokeswoman told Reuters. But the
congressman wants to "reform the party from within," she said. He has
recently formed a new political action committee to support Republican
primary challengers running against pro-Trump House Republicans such as
Matt Gaetz, of Florida, and Marjorie Taylor Greene, of Georgia.
A spokesman for Cheney told Reuters in a statement that she opposes "any
effort to split the party," saying it would only make it easier for
Democrats to enact policies that conservatives oppose.
Both Cheney and Kinzinger were among just 10 House Republicans, a small
minority, who voted to impeach Trump on a charge of inciting the Jan. 6
insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.
A more likely outcome of an anti-Trump movement would be for centrist
Republicans to try to purge Trumpism from within its own ranks, said
David Jolly, a former Republican congressman from Florida who recently
quit the party in protest of Trump and declared himself an independent.
A party of center-right conservatives could never create a broad enough
coalition to win national elections, Jolly said. And Trump has
effectively undercut his more moderate opponents among Republican
voters, he said, by ridiculing them as "Never Trumpers" and "RINOs"
(Republicans in Name Only).
"It's just impossible to escape the 'never Trump' label," he said.
Others argue it would be much harder to wrest power over the Republican
Party from Trump.
"Let's not kid ourselves; we are not going to change this party," said
Jim Glassman, a former undersecretary of state under George W. Bush.
Glassman gave a five-minute presentation on the Feb. 5 call advocating
for a new party. Any effort to reclaim the party would be "a
soul-deadening slog," he told participants.
He told Reuters on Thursday that he sees the Republican Party as now
thoroughly in thrall to Trump - and beyond repair.
"I thought, if Trump lost by 7 million votes, there may have been a
chance to do that," he said in an interview. "But events since the
election have made clear that's not going to happen."
Asked on Wednesday about the discussions for a third party, Jason
Miller, a Trump spokesman, said: "These losers left the Republican Party
when they voted for Joe Biden."
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Rotunda of the U.S. Capitol is seen behind a statue of former
President George Washington, before the second impeachment trial for
former President Donald Trump, at the Capitol in Washington, U.S.,
February 9, 2021. REUTERS/Al Drago
SPLIT ON STRATEGY
Glassman believes there are enough Republican donors who are
disgusted with Trump and willing to finance a new party. He believes
a new conservative party could also attract maybe one fifth of
Republican voters who disapprove of Trump, along with some
independents and Democrats. Further, he said, running third-party
candidates in House and Senate races would force the Trumpist
candidates to tack to the center in general elections and temper the
shrill partisanship of those races.
Many people at the Feb. 5 virtual gathering agreed with Glassman. In
a poll of participants, about 40% of those in attendance supported
creating an entirely new party, according to one source with direct
knowledge of the discussions. About 20% favored creating a faction
within the party, and an equal number supported creating a faction
outside the party, though it remained unclear exactly how such an
independent faction would operate.
While they disagreed on strategy, participants in the meeting said,
attendees united on the need to organize and advocate for a return
to "principled conservatism" that prizes the rule of law and
adherence to the Constitution, ideals they believe Trump has
violated.
Among the group at the Feb. 5 meeting was Elizabeth Neumann, former
deputy chief of staff in the Department of Homeland Security under
Trump. She's enraged at Republican lawmakers' continued support for
Trump in the wake of his stolen-election claims, which she had
repeatedly warned - before the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol riots - could
lead to violence. Now she wants to politically target the lawmakers
who voted, in the hours after the deadly insurrection, to overturn
the presidential election result - and she's open to any strategy
that might work.
"I hear arguments that we should break off and form a new party, or
we should stay inside the party. There will come a time when this
crystallizes," Neumann told Reuters on Thursday. "At the moment, I'm
more focused on the individual people and holding them accountable."
HISTORY OF THIRD-PARTY FAILURES
Historically, third parties have generally failed in U.S. elections,
particularly at the presidential level, often serving more as
spoilers than true contenders.
Theodore Roosevelt, a charismatic war hero, had served two previous
terms as president but lost in 1912 when he ran as a Progressive -
or "Bull Moose" - Party candidate, finishing second, with more votes
than the Republican candidate, in a three-way race ultimately won by
Democrat Woodrow Wilson. That was the last time any third-party
candidate won more votes than either of the two major party
presidential candidates.
More recently, the most successful third-party candidate was Texas
billionaire Ross Perot, whose self-financed Reform Party campaign in
1992 earned him 19% of the vote in a race won by Democrat Bill
Clinton, who unseated incumbent Republican President George H.W.
Bush.
In other cases, supporters of losing presidential nominees have
blamed third-party candidates for siphoning off voters. In 2016,
some backers of Democrat Hillary Clinton were frustrated by Green
Party candidate Jill Stein, whose percentage of the vote was greater
than Clinton's margin of defeat in key states.
Republican Senator Rand Paul, asked about the prospects for a new
party, told Reuters: "That'd be a good way to allow the Democrats to
always win."
Texas Republican Senator John Cornyn laughed when asked by Reuters
about a possible third party.
"More power to 'em," he said.
Cornyn, however, predicted shared opposition to President Biden's
agenda will hold Republicans together. He said he hopes life in the
Republican Party will return to something more normal in Trump's
absence.
"It's made us all a little crazy," Cornyn said.
(Reporting by Tim Reid, James Oliphant, David Morgan and Joseph Ax;
writing by Brian Thevenot; editing by Soyoung Kim and Brian Thevenot)
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