Los Angeles Times

This ‘double hater’ will not be told how to vote

She’s one of many who won’t pick Trump or Biden

- MARK Z. BARABAK reporting from roseville, calif.

By now Victoria Thompson has heard it many times. She’s crazy. She’s throwing her vote away.

Worse, those who loathe Donald Trump say she’s helping the unscrupulo­us ex-president reclaim the White House — even though she’s never voted for him and never will — by refusing to back Joe Biden’s reelection. Thompson is unabashed.

“I have no responsibi­lity to vote for the Democratic [nominee],” said the 63-yearold retiree, a Democrat for most of her life. “Their responsibi­lity is to the citizens. They should put forward a candidate that we want to vote for.”

People like Thompson, who can’t stomach Trump or Biden, are known as “double haters.” This election they’re all the rage. They very likely will decide the presidenti­al contest, with most coming around by November to support one of the two major-party nominees — even if it means holding their nose.

But millions like Thompson won’t cast a ballot for Trump or Biden under any circumstan­ces. Her choice is Robert F. Kennedy Jr., whom she considers the most electable of the alternativ­es, giving him a 30% chance of winning the White House.

“He’s got the name recognitio­n ... and because people are so unhappy with the choices, there’s a shot,” Thompson said over lunch this week in Roseville, the Sacramento suburb where she spent three decades working as a mail carrier.

Actually, most election handicappe­rs give Kennedy closer to a 100% chance of losing, but no matter. Thompson will support the political scion even if it means helping Trump beat Biden.

With a throaty laugh, she describes the unruly Republican’s four years in office as “a s— show.”

But she doesn’t see the aged Biden doing any better. “I think he’s just as corrupt as Trump,” Thompson said. “I think he’s just as self-serving.”

Things changed politicall­y for Thompson one night in December 2015 when she was in bed watching “The Tonight Show.”

Jimmy Fallon’s guest was independen­t Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who was waging a long-shot bid to snatch the Democratic nomination from Hillary Clinton, the favorite of the party establishm­ent.

Thompson had supported Democrats for president her entire life, save a 1992 vote for independen­t Ross Perot. She was largely fine with the results. “My 401(k) was going nuts” while Clinton’s husband, Bill, was in office, Thompson said with another deep laugh, “so I was happy.”

But disillusio­nment began setting in under President Obama, who promised all sorts of hope and change, including creation of a universal healthcare system that would cover every American. “And then,” Thompson said, “he didn’t give us any of it.”

Watching Sanders on late-night TV, Thompson felt something stir inside. He spoke of income inequality and a “corrupt campaign-finance system” and the way it favored special interests and the exceedingl­y well-off at the expense of average workers.

Thompson said she had never heard anything like that from Hillary Clinton.

She became a volunteer for Sanders’ campaign and put in long hours manning phone banks throughout the Sacramento area. She won election as a California delegate to the Democratic National Convention, and arrived in Philadelph­ia that summer with a brightly festooned banner she’d created. “President Bernie Sanders,” it boldly declared amid the flowers and vines.

She hoisted the banner in defiance when Clinton supporters, including Reps. Nancy Pelosi and Barbara Lee, showed up at a rowdy delegation breakfast. She shouted along with those who jeered Pelosi and others with cries of “Election fraud!”

Thompson’s political views are a stew of far-left conviction­s and conspirato­rial beliefs, which she explained at a pizza joint in Old Town Roseville.

She’s certain that Sanders would have beaten Clinton in California’s 2016 primary, if corrupt party officials hadn’t interceded. In fact, Thompson is convinced the entire nominating fight was rigged in Clinton’s favor and Sanders only yielded because he and his wife, Jane, were threatened.

(When Trump echoed claims the election was stacked in Clinton’s favor and called for an investigat­ion, Sanders told him to back off.)

The senator delivered a conciliato­ry speech the night Clinton was nominated and appeared before the California delegation, urging Democrats to rally behind her. But Thompson was unmoved.

“The way they cheated ... there was no way” she was “just going to roll over” and vote for Clinton, Thompson said. Instead, she cast her ballot for the Green Party candidate, Jill Stein.

Biden’s nomination in 2020 was the result of further Democratic chicanery, Thompson insists. Among other claims, she said the party “ran as many people as they could” — more than two dozen presidenti­al hopefuls — “to diffuse the vote” and once more deny Sanders the nomination.

(That, however, greatly overstates the power of the party and vastly understate­s the tug of individual ambitions.)

Thompson again voted for the Green Party nominee in 2020, though she no longer remembers his name. It was Howie Hawkins.

Thompson’s assertions may be farfetched, but she speaks for many when she laments the choice facing the country in November.

“I’m shocked that Trump can even run at this point,” she said of the all-but-certain GOP nominee, a view that many Democrats share. “I mean, he has all these legal problems ... so how’s it even possible? It shows how broken the system is.”

As for Biden, she’s convinced — along with many Republican­s — that he is well past his sell-by date and lacks the mental capacity to be president.

On top of that, she said, tapping a turquoise-colored fingernail for emphasis, “grocery prices are higher than they’ve ever been. Gas is high. People are barely making it month to month.”

Some may think Thompson is nutty for believing the things she does. Or say she’s foolish to vote for Kennedy or any other candidate with no chance to win, rather than settling for the least-bad alternativ­e and trying to stave off something worse. But none of that bothers her.

At least, Thompson said, when she puts her head on her pillow at night she’ll sleep with a clear conscience.

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