National Post

No Labels won’t run presidenti­al candidate

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• The No Labels group said Thursday it will not field a presidenti­al candidate in November after strategist­s for the bipartisan organizati­on failed to attract a high-profile centrist willing to seize on the widespread dissatisfa­ction with President Joe Biden and Donald Trump.

“No Labels has always said we would only offer our ballot line to a ticket if we could identify candidates with a credible path to winning the White House,” Nancy Jacobson, the group’s CEO, said in a statement sent out to allies. “No such candidates emerged, so the responsibl­e course of action is for us to stand down.”

The announceme­nt leaves anti-vaccine activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as the most prominent independen­t candidate in the race.

No Labels’ decision, which comes just days after the death of founding chairman Joe Lieberman, caps months of discussion­s during which the group raised tens of millions of dollars from a donor list it has kept secret. While No Labels’ decision may disappoint people seeking a potentiall­y viable thirdparty option, it came as a relief to Democrats who have long feared that a No Labels ticket would undermine Biden’s coalition and help Trump, the presumptiv­e Republican nominee.

“Millions of Americans are relieved that No Labels finally decided to do the right thing to keep Donald Trump out of the White House,” said Moveon executive director Rahna Epting, a No Labels’ critic. “Now, it’s time for Robert Kennedy Jr. to see the writing on the wall that no third party has a path forward to winning the presidency. We must come together to defeat the biggest threat to our democracy and country: Donald Trump.”

Kennedy’s campaign had no immediate response, although he announced earlier in the week that he had qualified for the general election in five states, including swing states Nevada and North Carolina.

No Labels said it had qualified for the ballot in 21 states, but ultimately, the centrist group could not persuade a top-tier moderate from either party to embrace its movement.

No Labels delegates voted overwhelmi­ngly in March to launch the process of creating a bipartisan presidenti­al and vice-presidenti­al ticket. But by then, No Labels had been rejected, publicly and privately, by many Democratic or Republican candidates.

Former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley, who suspended her campaign for the GOP presidenti­al nomination last month, had said she would not consider running on the No Labels ticket. Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.VA., ruled out running and former Gov. Larry Hogan, R-MD., decided to run for U.S. Senate.

Last month, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a Republican candidate for president in 2024, said he wouldn’t run under the No Label banner, either.

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