Chattanooga Times Free Press

SHOULD JOE MANCHIN RUN FOR PRESIDENT?

- Ross Douthat

In the emotional life of the liberal mediaspher­e, there was so little space between the release of The New York Times/Siena poll showing President Joe Biden losing to Donald Trump handily across a range of swing states (doom! doom!) and the Democratic overperfor­mance in Tuesday’s elections (sweet relief!) that one of the striking features of the polling passed with relatively little comment.

This was the remarkably strong showing for Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s independen­t candidacy. When added to the swing-state polls, Kennedy claimed 24% of registered voters against 35% for Trump and 33% for Biden.

That number is notable along two dimensions: first, for showing Kennedy drawing close to equally from both likely nominees rather than obviously spoiling the race for one or the other; second, for its sheer Ross Perotian magnitude, its striking-distance closeness to the major party candidates.

Yet I don’t see a lot of people entertaini­ng the “Kennedy wins!” scenario just yet, and for good reasons: Most notable third-party candidates eventually diminish, he may be artificial­ly inflated by his famous name, and his crankishne­ss is so overt that many voters currently supporting him in protest of a Biden-Trump rematch may well abandon him after a light Googling.

The world being strange, we shouldn’t take this convention­al wisdom as gospel. But if we assume that Kennedy’s 24% is mostly about people seeking a third option rather than explicitly supporting his worldview, the immediate question is whether someone else should try to fill that space.

Someone like, say, Joe Manchin, the West Virginia senator who spiced up his announceme­nt bowing out of a reelection bid with some talk about “traveling the country” for a movement to “mobilize the middle.”

There is already a potential vehicle for a Manchin candidacy in the No Labels movement, along with an effort to draft Manchin and Mitt Romney to run together, with Romney at the top of the ticket.

But the ideal ticket would probably lead with Manchin. For an independen­t run, his branding as a moderate with strong ideologica­l difference­s with the left seems stronger than Romney’s branding as a conservati­ve with strong moral difference­s with Trump.

When elites pine for a third-party candidate, they usually imagine someone like Michael Bloomberg, a fiscal conservati­ve and social liberal. But the sweet spot for a third-party candidate has always been slightly left of center on economics and moderate to conservati­ve on cultural issues — and that describes Manchin better than it does most American politician­s.

The West Virginian could run, authentica­lly, as an unwoke supporter of universal health care, fiscal restraint and a middle ground on guns and abortion.

But is it worth the effort? Stipulate that Kennedy will remain in the race and hold on to some share of the vote that might otherwise be available to a third-party moderate. Then the question becomes whether both Trump and Biden could fall below their 35% and 33% levels in the Times/Siena poll, giving Manchin a plurality of the popular vote and a chance at an Electoral College win.

In a polarized landscape, that kind of mutual GOP and Democratic collapse seems unlikely. But if you were drawing up a scenario for it to happen, it might resemble the one we’re facing — in which one candidate seems manifestly too old for the job and the other might be tried and convicted before the general election.

The Trump-friendly polling may change. But it’s entirely possible to begin an independen­t candidacy and then suspend it (just ask Perot) if the situation looks entirely unpropitio­us — which is what I’d advise Manchin to consider, if the donors and infrastruc­ture are there: a patriotic attempt, to be abandoned if it’s going nowhere but to be seen through if enough of the country desires a different choice.

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