JackPK
blame telegram
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Imagine that 2000 repeats itself and you wake up the morning after the election to discover that all those people voting Jill Stein and Gary Johnson have thrown the election to Trump.
It's just that I sort of like bringing up the underdog in this sort of conversation.
It's just that the underdog isn't likely to make much headway this late in the game. Like opal said, I fear that votes for all of those third parties are not going to count for much this time.
On top of that, another reason third partiers (at least in the US system of government) are a dubious place to put your presidential vote even in the best of years: as we've seen with the most recent six of Obama's eight years, a president can barely do anything of substance if Congress isn't willing to cooperate. Sure, you can dream of a third-party president, but if you're truly dedicated to opening up our politics to more than two parties, you need to be doing the footwork in congressional, state, and local elections — especially in the years in-between presidential elections — to try to establish a groundwork for your party to build on.
The thing I probably despise most about the Libertarians and the Greens alike is that they show up once every four years, shout a lot about how unfair the system is, and then proceed to disappear for midterm and local elections and implicitly hand full control over to the same gerrymandering corruption that they rail against on presidential election years.
There's a reason that mainstream Republicans were basically forced to accept the Tea Party as part of the GOP, and that's because grassroots Tea Partiers had succeeded in sweeping a significant number of local and congressional elections, meaning that if it had spun off into its own full-fledged third party, it could have actually gotten enough traction to threaten the two-party system.
EDIT: And on that topic, I just found a pretty prescient article on the similarities and differences between Nader's spoiling Green Party run in 2000 and Sanders' now-somewhat-supportive Democratic Party run in 2016. It also incorporates a decent rundown of the events of 2000 and their ramifications in the current election, for those of you too young to remember 2000 firsthand.
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