The Providence Journal

Voters want choices, not echoes of the past

- Your Turn Gary Sasse Guest columnist

President Joe Biden recently said “democracy is on the ballot” in the 2024 presidenti­al election. A salient feature of democratic elections is providing voters with responsibl­e choices. So, why then are Democratic Party operatives running a malicious, no-holdsbarre­d campaign to stifle an attempt by No Labels, a nonprofit attempting to inject meaningful choice into the upcoming election by possibly offering a third choice for president?

Over the last two years, No Labels has polled tens of thousands of voters, and found that anywhere from 59 percent to 63 percent of voters said they would consider a moderate independen­t in the event of a TrumpBiden rematch. A majority of voters want presidenti­al leadership that can unite America and restore the optimism and can-do spirit that has historical­ly characteri­zed our nation.

This past July, the Liberal Patriot/YouGov 2024 tracking project found that “most American voters believe both parties have become too ideologica­lly extreme in terms of economic and cultural issues.” Ryan Clancy, chief strategist at No Labels, reported, “An estimated 55 percent of the American public view Donald Trump and Joe Biden unfavorabl­y.” As a result, there may be an historic opportunit­y for a pragmatic unity candidate to run a competitiv­e race. As the Brookings Institutio­n’s William Galston opined recently, “The country needs a new beginning, a reordering of policy and rhetoric in both parties.”

To give voters a choice, No Labels has undertaken the complex task of securing ballot access in all 50 states for a national bipartisan presidenti­al Unity ticket. The centerpiec­e of this effort is to provide voters a third choice if both parties nominate two candidates – Trump and Biden – who have not demonstrat­ed the ability to unite the country and effectivel­y address our challenges.

Unfortunat­ely, a coalition of Democratic operatives and some “Never Trumpers” have organized a vitriolic multi-faceted scare tactics campaign to cripple No Labels’

efforts to inject a third major candidate into the 2024 presidenti­al race. As the news website Semafor reported last month, their tactics include legal challenges, opposition research and threats to make potential candidates and donors politicall­y toxic if they support the No Labels Unity ticket.

In response, former Connecticu­t Sen. Joe Lieberman, a founding chairman of No Labels and a former vice presidenti­al candidate, said this past fall, “No Labels opponents in the political establishm­ent wrap themselves in high-flying rhetoric about protecting democracy when they are merely protecting their turf. This has been the two-party playbook for decades, and the resulting false binary choice has not served our country well.”

Two-thirds of Americans believe the country is headed in the wrong direction. A Pew Research Center poll recently found that support for both political parties is at a record low, and there is less confidence in our political institutio­ns. Given the growing immigratio­n crisis, spiraling national debt, escalating national security risks, and failing schools, the biggest risk we may face is doing nothing to right the ship of state.

No Labels proposes a pathway forward where “compromise” is not a dirty word, and working across the aisle replaces extreme partisansh­ip. No Labels national unity agenda is aimed at making governing a collective enterprise, not a battlegrou­nd of warring tribes. It aims to replace extreme partisansh­ip with problem-solving and limit the power of party stalwarts and their special interest allies to punish elected officials for not adhering to the party line.

In 2024, American voters deserve a new choice, not an echo of the past duopoly. As the Wall Street Journal recently editoriali­zed, voters “will have ample cause to consider a third-party alternativ­e − if No Labels can come up with one.”

Gary Sasse is chairman of No Labels Rhode Island and served as director of the Rhode Island Department­s of Administra­tion and Revenue and is the founding director of the Hassenfeld Institute for Public Leadership at Bryant University.

 ?? BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/TNS ?? A poll by No Labels has found that a majority of voters said they would consider a moderate independen­t in the event of a Trump-Biden rematch.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/TNS A poll by No Labels has found that a majority of voters said they would consider a moderate independen­t in the event of a Trump-Biden rematch.

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