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Casey's avatar

1 - my half joking solution to Columbus Day (the OG woke holiday made to recognize Italianx contributions to America) is to rename it Amerigo Vespucci day since he's a nice guy who made some maps and has the New World named after him

2 - CT also allows fusion voting and WFP also works with the state Democratic party on nominations

3 - I am going to re-up and slightly modify a comment made a few weeks back that was smacked around a bit because I used the word "breakup" in terms of the post-Trump GOP. It seems to me that the presidential competitiveness of the Trump GOP requires Trump's unique ability to activate low propensity voters and that no other GOP leader has that juice. Even if Trump wins this election I think there will be another election in 2028. I think the odds of a pretty nasty post-Trump reckoning within the GOP are high and they risk becoming more akin to the California GOP but at a national level. In California you have quasi-one party rule, but as we Borers know there's growing factions of YIMBY vs NIMBY, process vs results, etc. Is the future of American politics California? What happens if post-Trump the GOP realizes it just isn't competitive nationally? Or, how does the GOP emerge from Trump as a competitive party? What does that party look like?

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Apoorva Bhide's avatar

I have thought for a while that the best way for a US third party would be to not jump into the high-profile, high-visibility presidential race where everyone has an incentive to punch on you left and right as a spoiler. Instead, you'd target specific seats in Congress that are winnable and only run there on a focussed agenda, then create a workable small coalition of high-leverage votes in Congress to drive that agenda (in a knife's edge majority like the current US house has, you'd effectively be a swing block). This would probably give you a high profile to drive the conversation, and you would basically build up the infrastructure over a decade before ever wading into a presidential race.

Why do both major US small parties (libertarian and green) struggle to break into the US house?

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