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Come November 2024, it could take as little as the No Labels ticket winning one state to prevent either major-party candidate from receiving 270 electoral votes, forcing one of these scenarios to ...
No Labels has consistently turned to one polling firm to make that case: HarrisX, whose parent company is owned by Jacobson’s husband, Mark Penn. Penn’s longtime deputy, Dritan Nesho, has ...
Damon Townsend ran as a No Labels Party candidate for Secretary of State of Washington State in the August 6, 2024 primary. [105] He finished fourth with 5.02% of the vote. [106] Richard Grayson ran as a No Labels Party candidate for U.S. Representative from Alaska in the August 20, 2024 primary and finished tenth with 0.13% of the vote. [107]
But Salon’s Steve Kornacki shows that in 1980 “Anderson finished with just 5.7 million votes on Election Day -- or 6.6 percent of the vote. Reagan's margin over Carter? 8.4 million votes, or 9 ...
A No Labels candidate could collect enough electoral votes so that neither of the two major party candidates wins the 270 needed to capture the presidency outright.
No Labels will host a meeting on March 8 in which supporters will discuss the potential of running a third-party ticket in the 2024 election. The event will include 800 delegates representing the ...
The two candidates spent most of the debate attacking Biden and the DNC, rather than each other. [24] At one point, the moderator had to interject to get the candidates to draw contrasts with each other on stage. [25] Both candidates criticized several state Democratic parties for actions taken to make it more difficult for them to get on the ...
Larry Hogan, the former governor of Maryland and a moderate Republican who has been critical of Donald Trump, stepped down last month from the leadership of the third-party movement No Labels, a ...