Centrist 'No Labels' group to move ahead with US presidential bid,
sources say
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[March 08, 2024]
By Jarrett Renshaw
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The centrist group No Labels is expected to
announce on Friday it will move forward with a presidential bid for
November's U.S. election, but will stop short of naming candidates, two
sources familiar with the matter said.
Friday marks the beginning of the most critical stretch for the centrist
group since it announced its shift from Washington bipartisan
cheerleader to a presidential party hoping to seize on America's
dissatisfaction with the likely nominees from the nation's two major
political parties.
The presidential race narrowed this week, after Republican Nikki Haley
and Democrat Dean Phillips ended their respective bids, following
nominating contests in 15 states. Democratic President Joe Biden is
expected on Thursday during his State of the Union address to sharpen
distinctions between himself and his Republican challenger, former
President Donald Trump.
No Labels will not name its presidential and vice presidential picks on
Friday, when roughly 800 delegates meet virtually in a private meeting.
Instead, the group is expected to roll out a formal selection process
next week for potential candidates who would be selected in the coming
weeks, the sources said.
No Labels did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The group initially planned to hold an in-person convention in March
where potential candidates were expected to convince delegates to
nominate them to the ticket. But the plan was scrapped after leaders
questioned the cost and whether a candidate would want to risk being the
subject of public humiliation if defeated, according to multiple
interviews with party officials.
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The White House is seen at sunset in Washington, U.S. March 6, 2021.
REUTERS/Erin Scott
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In the past months, No Labels staff has been vetting potential
delegates to root out any potential saboteurs who support either
Biden or Trump and who want to disrupt their efforts. The effort
underscores the tightrope the group is trying to walk by hoping to
make it a grassroots movement while allowing the leaders to maintain
some control.
No Labels officials promised that the group would only move forward
if they believed they had a viable path to victory and wouldn't play
the role of "spoiler." But Friday's decision will likely do little
to stifle criticism - largely from Democrats - that the party has no
chance and will only tip the scales toward Trump.
"(No Labels') nomination is a path only to embarrassing defeat that
could serve as a spoiler that returns Trump to power," said Matt
Bennett, co-founder of Third Way, a center-left think tank.
The Democratic Party's primary opposition research organization,
American Bridge, in January hired prominent election attorney Marc
Elias to help thwart these outsider bids, among other things.
(Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw; additional reporting by Stephanie
Kelly; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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