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Everything rests on the third-party vote Double-haters could decide the election

The Democrats are bound to ramp up their attacks on RFK Jr (Emily Elconin/Getty Images)

The Democrats are bound to ramp up their attacks on RFK Jr (Emily Elconin/Getty Images)


July 25, 2024   4 mins

With Joe Biden replaced by Kamala Harris as the Democratic nominee, what will happen come November? If history is a guide, the chances of the party holding on to the White House may have increased. Not, it must be said, because of Harris’s charisma or intellect, but because her candidacy could minimise Democrat defections to third-party candidates. In a race between two unpopular candidates, this might make all the difference.

Over the past three decades, the Republican Party has done relatively poorly in its bids for the White House. This is partly because, apart from when his son won 50.7% of the popular vote in 2004, no Republican has won an outright majority since George H.W. Bush in 1988. Even worse, George W. Bush in 2000 and Donald Trump in 2016 won the White House despite losing the overall popular vote. Fortunately for Trump, in the latter instance, independent candidates won 5% of the national share, biting into the Democratic vote. But four years later, that figure fell to 1.5% — allowing Biden to win even though Trump’s popular vote also increased.

What about 2024? For months, it has seemed that the defection of the anti-war Left from the Democrats to RFK Jr, Jill Stein, Cornel West and other protest candidates would help Trump in November. But a Harris candidacy could, in fact, minimise defection.

This is partly due to circumstances that came to light even before Biden stepped aside. By choosing Vance as his running mate, Trump has crafted a populist ticket which, on issues such as trade and immigration, might benefit third-party candidates such as the Libertarian nominee, Chase Oliver. As well as being a former Democrat, Oliver’s support for an unlimited number of non-criminal immigrants joining the workforce could win the vote of some traditional free-market Republicans.

But there are other, more important factors that could simultaneously stop Democratic defections — and chief among them is the centrality of identity politics to American progressive ideology. Put simply, it is unlikely that those who voted in protest against Biden — an old white man — would also vote against a female black and half-Asian Democratic nominee.

What of Harris’s policies? One of the great sports of American politics is pretending that the detailed policy positions or voting records of presidential candidates matter. But the truth is the vast majority of Americans will vote for a party regardless of its nominee. And many of the swing voters who are undecided at this late stage are what political scientists and pollsters rather kindly call “low-information voters” who pay little attention to politics. Such “disengaged voters” — predominantly less educated, lower-income, and young — have little knowledge of party positions and do not follow political news. One study suggests that voters who are poorly informed about the positions of the parties are more likely than better-informed voters to be influenced by a candidate’s looks.

“One of the great sports of American politics is pretending that the detailed policy positions or voting records of presidential candidates matter.”

If policy positions are not necessarily the basis of political success, neither is favourable media coverage. The editors and reporters of the American mainstream media organs, such as The New York Times, The Washington Post, and National Public Radio (NPR), are overwhelmingly Democratic in partisanship. Having helped to cover up Biden’s debility since the 2020 campaign, the Left-leaning American press no doubt will pivot now and portray Harris in the most flattering light possible, while demonising Trump and Vance as sinister neo-fascists who would replace democracy with dictatorship if they were elected.

Of course, the credibility of the mainstream media has been damaged by their promotion of bogus claims in recent years: about Russia’s influence on the 2016 election, the origins of Covid, and falsehoods about Biden’s health and mental acuity. Biden’s disastrous debate performance exposed their mendacity. In any event, most of the Democratic press’s audience consists of partisan Democrats — not the low-information swing voters which both presidential campaigns will try to reach. The exception to the generally limited influence of the media on public political opinion may, however, be live, televised debates. With no intermediaries engaging in spin, Americans can view candidates directly for a prolonged time. It was, after all, Biden’s shockingly poor debate performance that ultimately drove him from the race.

Harris can hardly do worse. She has often been ridiculed for her meandering syntax as well as her laugh. But Harris wouldn’t be debating a slick, conventional politician. Instead, her debate rival would be a man who often veers off into preposterous boasts or rambling anecdotes. Harris may, in fact, benefit from how Trump is often as inarticulate as she is.

This is crucial. By historical standards, all of this year’s presidential candidates — Trump, Biden, and possibly now Harris — have been extremely unpopular, marking a sharp rupture with the previous performances of Obama and even Biden at the beginning of his term. Indeed, political scientists and pollsters have identified a new breed of American swing voter, the “double hater”, who despises both parties and their candidates and makes up 14% of the electorate this year. In this environment, presidential races are unpopularity contests. According to one study, one in three voters this year is motivated by opposition to the other candidate. The winner can be widely loathed as long as the loser is loathed even more.

When Biden was the presumptive nominee, Democrats ran a negative campaign based on vilifying Trump and his Republican supporters rather than emphasising the policies of the Biden administration. We can expect that if the unpopular Harris replaces the unpopular Biden, the Democrats will double down on demonising not only Trump and Vance but also RFK Jr and other independent candidates who threaten to prevent an anti-Trump coalition from uniting behind the new Democratic nominee. The American presidential race following Biden’s withdrawal is going to be very nasty indeed. Welcome to the most important unpopularity contest on the planet.


Michael Lind is a columnist at Tablet and a fellow at New America. His latest book is Hell to Pay: How the Suppression of Wages is Destroying America.


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Jim Veenbaas
Jim Veenbaas
1 month ago

I have no doubt that Harris can win the election. I’m a bit skeptical of this analysis though. I would be surprised if Chase Oliver gets any support from open border republicans. Hell, I’ll be surprised if he gets widespread support from libertarians. Harris might generate more support from the Hamas wing of the party, but she might lose even more Jewish supporters and democrats who strongly support Israel.

Benjamin Greco
Benjamin Greco
1 month ago

No one is talking about the one thing that is bound to influence the election, the onslaught of political attack ads that will hit the airwaves in the fall. All the Democrats have to do is replay the highlights of Trump’s first term and I think the election will swing to Harris. I can’t what for the ad that replays for the American people the events of Jan 6th over and over again. Or the one with the tape of Trump asking the Georgia election official to find him 1700 votes. And of course, the one where he suggests the American people mainline bleach to cure Covid. And maybe even one where he talks about grabbing p***y, that will be a hoot. Once the American people are reminded what Trump’s first term was like they won’t want a second one.

Unwoke S
Unwoke S
1 month ago
Reply to  Benjamin Greco

And all the Republicans need do is play Matt Orfalea’ latest video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GJmE54AXo3I

RR D
RR D
1 month ago
Reply to  Benjamin Greco

What cave have you been living in for the past 3.5 years? Everyone in the US has seen all of that ad nauseum and they still prefer Trump.

Benjamin Greco
Benjamin Greco
1 month ago
Reply to  RR D

It’s different when it’s a 60 second ad playing several times a day on your TV. It won’t influence any of the true believers like the one here, but the election is about the 10% who still think.

Stephen Kristan
Stephen Kristan
1 month ago
Reply to  Benjamin Greco

“And of course, the one where he suggests the American people mainline bleach to cure Covid.”
Another canard by an ineducable. Not that it will do any good, but here’s the debunking:
Biden exaggerates Trump’s pandemic comments about disinfectants, UV light

Jim Veenbaas
Jim Veenbaas
1 month ago
Reply to  Benjamin Greco

I’m gobsmacked that someone who obviously reads independent publications is still trotting out the bleach narrative, and the p***sy narrative. These have long been debunked.

By the way, there is no shortage of clips the GOP can use to frame Harris as the left wing loon she really is – defund the police, EVs, open borders etc…

Benjamin Greco
Benjamin Greco
1 month ago
Reply to  Jim Veenbaas

Debunked? It’s on tape!

Jim Veenbaas
Jim Veenbaas
1 month ago
Reply to  Benjamin Greco

What he was clearly telling about were women who hang around celebrities.

Micael Gustavsson
Micael Gustavsson
1 month ago
Reply to  Jim Veenbaas

He talked about what he could do to women who hang around celebrities, being a celebrity himself. How does that make it better?

Courtney Maloney
Courtney Maloney
1 month ago
Reply to  Benjamin Greco

“I can’t what [sic] for the ad that replays for the American people the events of Jan 6th over and over again.”
Please do. Every second of footage from every camera.
“Or the one with the tape of Trump asking the Georgia election official to find him 1700 votes.”
The unmistakable odor of “very fine people” haunts this claim.
“And of course, the one where he suggests the American people mainline bleach to cure Covid.”
The only explanation I can conjure in justification of still attempting to peddle such exhausting, quarter-baked drivel is some bizarre projection of disappointment that the quarter-baked drivel posited didn’t free you from the mask you’re definitely still wearing, including alone in your car, today.
“And maybe even one where he talks about grabbing p***y, that will be a hoot.”
“p***y” is transphobic. “Bonus hole” or bust, big 0t.

Terry M
Terry M
1 month ago
Reply to  Benjamin Greco

Trump talks terribly. But his actions as President were laudatory. And his brave defiance of the Donkey assassin on June 23rd put him on another level.
(In Pennsylvania many Democrats were urged to register Republican so they could vote for Dr. Oz in the primary who was sure to lose in the general election.)

Martin M
Martin M
1 month ago
Reply to  Benjamin Greco

Yeah, and not only those, but they can play all the nasty things JD Vance said about Trump as well.

Nik Jewell
Nik Jewell
1 month ago

Either Trump or Harris offers more of the same corporatocracy. With RFK Jr., there is a chance of something different.
The claims that Trump will save the US from the UN/WHO/WEF may have a small amount of mileage, but it appears that instead you are getting the US version, with Fink (!!) or Dimon (!), and Musk and Thiel (!!!) behind the scenes. Thiel is Palantir; never forget this.
The benefit of Trump over Harris, for the overseas observer, will be an assault on wokery, but an assault that will probably turn out to be just as illiberal as the woke themselves.
With RFK Jr you just might get something different. Vote positively for him, not negatively, US voters!

T Bone
T Bone
1 month ago
Reply to  Nik Jewell

I respect RFK. If it were Trump vs RFK I would consider voting for RFK. But since he was purged from the Party the choice becomes a binary between Trump and Harris.

I trust Trump more to unleash industry and Economic growth and stabilize both the globe and domestic security. The Democrats are fiscally Incompetent and promote a command economy full of economic mandates, redistributive equity, debt forgiveness for favored groups and price caps.

In addition, everything they do is run through unelected bureacrats in the Administrative State. A topic RFK understands well, which is why I’m almost certain Trump would bring Kennedy on board.

Nik Jewell
Nik Jewell
1 month ago
Reply to  T Bone

Why would Kennedy, who wants to destroy the corporatocracy, join it?

T Bone
T Bone
1 month ago
Reply to  Nik Jewell

Trump is interested at growing the Economy at a much faster rate than growing the government. You can do that different ways. You can try to gut the entrenched bureacracy or you can incrementally shrink it and install people that understand economic growth and the location of waste. Kennedy understands the location of waste. I could be wrong but I think he’s a Patriot and would accept.

I agree that Fink would be unacceptable btw

Mary Bruels
Mary Bruels
1 month ago

Remembering the 1992 election when a 3rd party candidate (Ross Perot) garnered 19% of the votes and thereby swung the election to Clinton, voting for RFK Jr may do the same thing for Harris. In which case, God help the US.

RR D
RR D
1 month ago
Reply to  Mary Bruels

See above.

Micael Gustavsson
Micael Gustavsson
1 month ago
Reply to  Mary Bruels

You are assuming Ross Perot voters would have voted for Bush if he hadn’t been running.

George Venning
George Venning
1 month ago

As undemocratic as the UK’s treatement of minor parties is, the US system is positively psychotic in its approach to them. Quite aside from issues of ballot access, the structures of US presidential elections virtually guarantees that a vote for a third party is a vote for whichever candidate you hate the most.
That being the case, the fact that 14% of Americans are resorting to what amounts to electoral self-harm, is a pretty dire indictment of the state of US politics.
This is not (as it is always portrayed) a self-indulgent protest by wayward voters who “ought” to be voting for the closest available major party (Green voters for the Dems and Libertarians for the Republicans). These are voters know the consequences of their actions. The fact that they vote this way anyway shows that they are implacably opposed to the major parties. If 14% will vote third party under these conditions, imagine how many would vote for something else in a fair (electoral) fight.
Even in the UK, polling suggests that almost 50% of would-be Green voters “lent” their votes to Labour at the last election. Without those tactical votes, Labour would have managed only 28% of the vote. Would it even have been able to form a Government? Has Labour displayed one iota of gratitude? No, it berates the remainder for not having voted tactically enough.
If the Republicans had made a deal with Ross Perot they’d have obliterated Clinton. There would have been no NAFTA. There might well have been fewer foreign adventures. Our world would be unrecognisable.
Huge swathes of the population in both the US and the UK are unrepresented and have been for decades. I don’t know what to call the thing we live under but it is at best, a managed democracy.

RR D
RR D
1 month ago
Reply to  George Venning

The idea that Perot cost Bush the election is not supported by polling at the time. Exit polls show that, of those who would have voted at all in Perot’s absence from the ballot, more favored Clinton.

Ethniciodo Rodenydo
Ethniciodo Rodenydo
1 month ago
Reply to  RR D

That was also my conclusion when I looked at it but I could be wrong

George Venning
George Venning
1 month ago
Reply to  RR D

Fair comment, perhaps I’m over my skis on that point.

Even so, political systems that positively work to exclude the views of large minorities within the electorate should be avoided.

Tyler Durden
Tyler Durden
1 month ago

Whatever happens it will be the last stand for identity politics, and may even prove its greatest victory.

Alex Lekas
Alex Lekas
1 month ago

 because her candidacy could minimise Democrat defections to third-party candidates.
For those ignorant of history, like this author, Kamala was soundly rejected by the Democrat base in 2020. Soundly. As in she dropped out before anything meaningful happened. Not one delegate pledged to her. That holds true today. Harris’ approval numbers are lower than Biden’s.
People hear the word salads and the cackling, they see the state of the border under her czarship, despite the media’s efforts in revisionist history to claim that she was not put in that role. Yes, she was. She was also designated as Biden’s point person on Ukraine and look how that turned out. I’m not sure if the author is trying to persuade us or himself.

Michael McElwee
Michael McElwee
1 month ago
Reply to  Alex Lekas

Yes, her “likability” is low, if that’s a strong enough word. My sense – which very well may be wrong – is that Pres. Trump’s “likability” is now higher than in the past. It’s hard to deny that he and his campaign are in a groove. I would say too that luck matters, and he’s had some.

Terry M
Terry M
1 month ago
Reply to  Alex Lekas

You are naive. The MSM is praising Kamala as if she were a savior who cured cancer and ended war forever. All her terrible positions, desgraceful history, and inane cacklings are being glossed over.They will continue their BS campaign right up to Nov 5. That’s how biased they are against Trump. And it just might work since so many people are emotional vegetables.

Mark epperson
Mark epperson
1 month ago

Not so fast. Harris is actually good at making points but is absolutely terrible at thinking on her feet and being competent at knowing the issues. Tulsi Gabbard destroyed her as well as a lot of other folks. The author is assuming Trump will be the same old “Donald” but if isn’t and scores some real points, Harris will begin to cackle and fold like a cheap suit. Plus, Gen Z and some millennials have had it with the media, tech companies, politicians of both parties. That to me is the wild care. RFK will make the difference and it will be interesting who votes for him. if Dems stay away out of digust, and if Trump can actually act presential. Interesting and absolutely critical time for America.

Courtney Maloney
Courtney Maloney
1 month ago

Wonder why I cannot post a comment in response to Mr. Greco’s wisdom.
Hmmmm

Terry M
Terry M
1 month ago

Put simply, it is unlikely that those who voted in protest against Biden — an old white man — would also vote against a female black and half-Asian Democratic nominee.
So, this person is a racist. The Dems also pick up the antisemites. It’s the party of anti-democratic hate-mongers.

M L Hamilton Anderson
M L Hamilton Anderson
1 month ago

From where we sit in Australia, Harris is a perpetual embarrassment on camera and on her feet anywhere. She is not presidential. She is (maybe) a shoe-in for head of the Parents Association at a local high school. The US needs to regain its esteem, its pride and its status in the world. I hope the Democratic Convention is an open one.

Martin M
Martin M
1 month ago

Who are you suggesting should be the Democrat nominee?

Anthony Taylor
Anthony Taylor
1 month ago

It’s so dispiriting to read so many ad hominem attacks on Harris, as if she’s some sort of devil figure. I guess “low information” voters may be swayed by the image of a witch stirring her cauldron, as she plots the demise of American society, but really, it’s just so juvenile and unnecessary.
Will she be a good and effective candidate? I, for one, don’t know yet, but I’m prepared to give her a chance to show me what she’s made of. She dropped out of the Iowa caucuses because she was making no traction with the delegates. It’s not the same scenario as the general election.
Are Trump voters put off him by paparazzi pictures of him in a golf cart, with 50 pounds of belly fat hanging out over his pants? No, of course not. They only think of the pictures when he’s looking trim, wearing his corset under his clothes. Image is everything – I get it.
Is it misogyny, racism, jealousy of a high achiever? All the above maybe and more besides. Maybe what is driving the other side crazy is that she’s not a Nepo-baby like Trump. Hmm, I wonder if that’s it?

Martin M
Martin M
1 month ago
Reply to  Anthony Taylor

Trump wears a corset? Well, I suppose even William Shatner wore one in Star Trek.

Liakoura
Liakoura
1 month ago

It should be the country’s 1,219,487 Covid-19 deaths, many due to Trump’s continual, consistent, irresponsible insistence that the virus infection was little more than a bad cold or a mild dose of flu, and that the virus would disappear as the weather got warmer. 
It’s this that should convince electors that the man is a danger in any position of authority,and certainly should never again hold the presidency of the United States of America.
Just listen to Bob Woodward’s book ‘Rage’ based on hundreds of hours of interviews with Trump and first-hand witnesses, as well as participants’ notes, emails, diaries, calendars and confidential documents.