Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Ex-governor takes on post at No Labels

- By Steve Peoples

NEW YORK — Former Democratic Gov. Jay Nixon of Missouri is joining No Labels ’ increasing­ly contentiou­s effort to lay the groundwork for a moderate third-party presidenti­al ticket in the 2024 election.

He gives the embattled organizati­on another prominent ally amid escalating concerns from Democratic officials that the No Labels campaign could unintentio­nally help Republican Donald Trump return to the White House.

Nixon, a 67-year-old lawyer, is stepping back into national politics for the first time since leaving office in 2017 and will serve as No Labels’ director of ballot integrity. He said in an interview that he was drawn to the role after learning that well-funded groups aligned with Democrats were working to stop No Labels from securing ballot access in key states.

He said that those seeking to block the group’s right to appear on the presidenti­al ballot are attacking a pillar of American democracy.

“What do I say to those Democrats? I say, ‘You’re entitled to your opinion. But we are also entitled to use our constituti­onal and statutory rights to allow Americans to have another choice,’” Nixon said.

President Joe Biden and Trump have dominated the 2024 campaign conversati­on. But No Labels, a Washington-based group that promotes compromise, national unity and centrist policy solutions, has been preparing for the strongest third-party presidenti­al bid at least since Texas businessma­n Ross Perot earned nearly 19 percent of the popular vote in 1992.

Working with an operating budget of roughly $70 million, No Labels is taking steps to secure presidenti­al ballot spots in roughly 20 states this year; the group has done so already in Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Oregon and Utah.

While No Labels has yet to nominate candidates for president and vice president, its leadership insists there is a path to victory for a centrist third-party ticket.

The group’s critics across the Democratic Party are terrified No Labels will siphon votes that would otherwise go to Biden, who narrowly defeated Trump in 2020 with a coalition that included moderate Democrats, independen­ts and disaffecte­d Republican­s.

No Labels’ leadership has promised a series of checks and balances that would allow the organizati­on to withdraw its presidenti­al ticket if it appears the group’s participat­ion would help Trump win.

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