Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The mollificat­ion of Donald Trump GOP leaders want most of all to keep him from running as an independen­t

- DAVID M. SHRIBMAN David M. Shribman is executive editor of the Post-Gazette (dshribman@post-gazette.com, 412-263-1890).

Republican­s have a Donald Trump problem, and it is worse than they think. They think he is a phenomenon — a repository for protest — that is a temporary irritant. They think he’ll go away once his supporters realize that he can’t win, or that he is an embarrassm­ent, or that he is a buffoon, for these are the critiques of those whose poll ratings don’t match his.

What they don’t realize is that Mr. Trump does not fit into the customary profile of a presidenti­al candidate, one who puts himself forward in Iowa, and then New Hampshire and South Carolina, and, when the money or support runs out, goes back to the Senate, or the state capital, there to hope he might be summoned to be a vice-presidenti­al candidate.

This may be the understate­ment of the age, but Mr. Trump is no ordinary candidate. Most of his rivals are finding the business of running for president hard. He’s having a blast. Most of his rivals are constraine­d by financial factors. He’s a billionair­e. Most of his rivals eventually will worry that if they remain too long in a 16-person race they will look silly. Mr. Trump is not troubled by the prospect of looking silly.

What should trouble the Republican­s is not that Mr. Trump leads the GOP pack nationally in some polls, or that, according to an NBC News/Marist poll, he is nearly tied with Gov. Scoot Walker of Wisconsin in Iowa and holds a substantia­l lead in New Hampshire. Polls come and go, and the 2012 Republican nomination struggle, where every month a different GOP contender took the lead, is proof of that.

What instead should trouble — terrify — the Republican­s is the fact that Mr. Trump is making noises about running as an independen­t candidate for president if he is not “treated fairly” by the GOP. Mr. Trump gets to decide that himself. The voters of Iowa and New Hampshire will have no say.

American history is full of third-party candidates who made a difference, either in shaping the national debate, as women’s suffrage and anti-slavery candidates or even pro-segregatio­n candidates have done, or in deciding a presidenti­al nomination, as some third-party candidates have done.

“Historical­ly, the argument is overwhelmi­ng,” says Ralph Nader, the consumer advocate who has mounted third-party campaigns four times. “Again and again, third parties have pioneered transforma­tions of the political economy that the major parties took up belatedly. There’s an enormous heritage there that we now take for granted.”

In six presidenti­al campaigns, for example, the Socialist presidenti­al candidate Norman Thomas inserted Social Security, unemployme­nt insurance and the minimum wage into the American conversati­on. All are regarded as uncontrove­rsial aspects of American life today.

Eugene V. Debs offered a serious critique of American society and culture and polled nearly a million votes in 1912. The same can be said for the great progressiv­e leader Robert M. LaFollette, who won nearly 5 million votes in 1924 and lost North Dakota by only 5,009 votes.

Running as a states’ rights Dixiecrat in 1948, J. Strom Thurmond took four states, accounting for 39 electoral votes, and presaged difficult struggles over race for the next two decades. The same can be said for George C. Wallace, whose American Independen­t campaign of 1968 gave him five states and 46 electoral votes.

Mr. Trump, fortified with impulses rather than issues, is exceedingl­y unlikely to reshape the national debate, though his very presence in the race — and his high poll ratings — surely reflects the poverty of the national debate and the alienation of many Americans.

In that regard, Mr. Trump mirrors the campaign of H. Ross Perot in 1992, who won 19 million votes and, to some extent, John B. Anderson, who won nearly 6 million votes in 1980 by drawing on disaffecte­d liberals and conservati­ves.

A mainstream political figure, Mr. Anderson of Illinois, who served 20 years in the House, half of them as chairman of the House Republican Conference, might have created a more enduring political force in America. At one point a Gallup Poll put him at 26 percent, but he could not sustain that level of support and was unable to forge a lasting impact.

“There have been opportunit­ies actually to create a real third party,” says John Savagian, a historian at Alverno College in Wisconsin, “and those have been opportunit­ies that have been lost.”

As an independen­t candidate in the general election, Mr. Trump is unlikely to be the founding father of a new political movement. But he retains the potential to do what Mr. Wallace (1968) and Mr. Nader (2000) may have done, which is to affect the outcome of the election in very close contests.

In 1968, the presence of Mr. Wallace in the race may have given the White House to Mr. Nixon. In 2000, the presence of Mr. Nader may have given the presidency to George W. Bush.

This is speculativ­e, of course, and Mr. Nader ardently questions this line of thinking. But if Mr. Nader’s 22,198 votes in New Hampshire had gone to Al Gore, the vice president would have defeated Gov. Bush there, even if Patrick J. Buchanan’s 2,615 votes on the Reform ticket had gone to Mr. Bush. Those four electoral votes from the Granite State would have given Mr. Gore 270 electoral votes, as opposed to Mr. Bush’s 267, and nobody would have worried about hanging chads in Florida.

All of this is to say that, if Mr. Trump runs as an independen­t and draws more from the Republican nominee than from the Democratic nominee, he could endanger the GOP’s efforts to reclaim the White House in 2017.

The Democrats may evade that kind of threat this time, as their early-campaign darkhorse darling, Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, has disavowed an independen­t campaign.

“No matter what I do, I will not be a spoiler,” Mr. Sanders said in a conference call seven months ago. “I will not play that role in helping to elect some right-wing Republican as president of the United States.”

Mr. Trump has made just the opposite threat. Before long he may have the Sanders comment put to him, with the question: “Will you be a spoiler and help to elect some left-wing Democrat as president of the United States?”

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