Independent and third party candidates have always held a larger than life image, chiefly due to the larger than life personalities of the three most successful presidential candidates outside of the big two - Teddy Roosevelt, Ross Perot and Ralph Nader.
Alternative presidential candidates in the United States have not fared well throughout history and their popularity has only lessened over the past decades. The U.S. political system has been dominated by the Democratic and Republican parties for a century and a half, and the last third party candidate to win a presidential election was Zachary Taylor of the Whig Party in 1848. The hegemony of the two major parties was only really threatened once since, in 1912, when Teddy Roosevelt split from the GOP to form the Progressive Party and finished a distant second behind eventual winner, Democratic President Woodrow Wilson.
Former Democratic Alabama Governor George Wallace, running on the American Independent Party ticket in 1968, was the last third party presidential candidate to win the electoral votes of a state. He received 13.5% of the popular vote and 45 electoral votes from southern states. Other noteworthy third party campaigns include Reform Party nominee Ross Perot with 8% of the popular vote in 1996, and Green Party nominee Ralph Nader with 2.7% in the 2000 election. Significant independent presidential campaigns include those of John Anderson with 6.6% of the vote in 1980 and Ross Perot with 18.9% in 1992.
Independents and third parties candidates are at a disadvantage compared to their Democratic and Republican peers - from a financial, organizational and captive voter base perspective. As Americans’ disdain for both the administrative and legislative branches of government builds, an opportunity for a 2016 presidential candidate other than a Democrat or Republican may be developing on the horizon.
Major third parties in the U.S. include the
Constitution Party,
Libertarian Party and
Green Party. Together, they account for just over one million registered members, or less than 1% of those registered with the Democratic and Republican parties. The number of self-identified independent voters in the United States, however, now accounts for about 30% of registered voters. This rise in voter political independence may very well be due to disillusionment with the two-party system, and independent voters have now become a target deemed necessity for modern day presidential campaigns.
A number of independent and third party candidates have already declared their candidacy for the 2016 presidential election. These candidates face the huge challenge of gaining legitimate recognition in the mainstream media, and routinely declare and commence their campaigns much earlier than more established candidates to build a supporting constituency. Although they may lack the national prominence, they have the will and a goal of becoming the next president of the United States.
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