The Sun (Lowell)

Many voters weary about a Biden-trump rematch

Third parties hope they can fill the gap

- The Associated Press

PHOENIX >> The 2024 presidenti­al election is drawing an unusually robust field of independen­t, third party and long shot candidates hoping to capitalize on Americans’ ambivalenc­e and frustratio­n over a likely rematch between Democrat Joe Biden and Republican Donald

Trump.

Those looking to blaze a new path to the White House range from members of Congress to a prominent academic and a scion of one of the county’s most prominent political families.

Their odds are exceedingl­y long.

George Washington was the only person to win the presidency without a party affiliatio­n. An incumbent hasn’t lost his party’s presidenti­al nomination since Democrats passed over Franklin Pierce in 1856. Abraham Lincoln’s election in 1860 marked the last time someone from a new party — in his case, the Republican Party — won the White House.

But with the United States deeply divided and somewhat anxious about the prospect of another Biden-trump campaign, third party candidates insist voters are restless enough to defy history.

“This is really fertile ground now for independen­t politics,” Jill Stein, the Green Party nominee in 2012 and 2016, said in an interview. “There’s so much hunger for a principled politics, a politics of integrity, and for options outside of the two zombie candidates that are being forced down our throats, and the two zombie political parties.”

Little-known candidates with no chance of victory run every year and sometimes piece together enough votes to make a difference in close races, even if they don’t win. But the activity this fall has been notable.

Stein, a physician and environmen­tal activist, announced this month that she will make her third bid for the presidency in 2024, reversing course from her earlier decision to remain on the sidelines next year and support Cornel West, a scholar and progressiv­e activist with a loyal following on the left. West announced last month that he no longer was running under the Green Party banner, but as an independen­t.

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