Andrew Yang, losing candidate for president and New York City mayor, is one of the founders of the Forward Party. Rob Kim/Getty Images
In June 2022, Gallup asked participants in a U.S. survey about their party membership. โIn politics,โ pollsters asked, โas of today, do you consider yourself a Republican, a Democrat or an independent?โ
The largest segment of participants โ 43% โ said they were independent. Republicans and Democrats represented 27% each.
Note the lower case โiโ in independent. That means itโs not a party, as the Democrats and Republicans are. Actual political parties have policies, they have big bank accounts, they have organizations in every state, and they have a place on the ballot in elections.
But if the leaders of a new, centrist political party whose formation was announced on July 28, 2022, accomplish their goal, the โForward Partyโ will attract many voters who no longer identify as Democrats or Republicans and it will become a force for moderation - and an institution - in U.S. electoral politics.
โHow will we solve the big issues facing America?โ the founders said at a news conference. โNot Left. Not Right. Forward.โ
Here are three stories from The Conversationโs archives that analyze the chances of third-party success at changing the U.S. political system.
The Founding Fathers didnโt think highly of political parties, with Alexander Hamilton, second from right, saying they were a โmost fatal disease.โ Stock Montage/Getty Images
โAlexander Hamilton called political parties a โmost fatal disease,โโ Cohen writes. โJames Madison renounced the โviolence of faction,โ and George Washington feared that an overly successful party would create โfrightful despotism.โโ
Still, parties persisted as the vehicles of electoral politics in the country, evolving into the current two-party system from a variety of parties that emerged and died over the past 200 years. An upstart third party is unlikely to dislodge the status quo, Cohen says.
โThe modern Republicans and Democrats are unlikely to go the way of the Whigs, Federalists and Anti-Federalists, regardless of recent political earthquakes.โ
โThe American electoral system is the primary reason why the U.S. is the sole major democracy with only two parties consistently capable of electing public officials,โ writes Hershey. โVotes are counted in most American elections using plurality rules, or โwinner take all.โ Whoever gets the most votes wins the single seat up for election.โ
But in many other democracies, Hershey says, multiple political parties can thrive because of a different system of electing representatives. For example, Hershey writes, there are widely used systems that award seats proportionally to the percentage of votes a party wins.
โIn the Netherlands, for instance,โ writes Hershey, โeven a small โthirdโ party called the Party for the Animals โ composed of animal rights supporters, not dogs and cats โ won 3.2% of the legislative vote in 2017 and earned five seats, out of 150, in the national legislature.โ
If that system existed in the U.S., that would mean even a small party would be smart to run Congressional candidates, because even if the party only got 5% of the vote, โthey could win 5% of the stateโs U.S. House seats.โ
But a caveat: Those voters who call themselves โindependent,โ or say theyโre disappointed by or disillusioned with political parties, are still influenced by vestigial party sentiment. Pollsters find, writes Hershey, โthat most of these โindependentsโ actually lean toward either the Democrats or the Republicans, and their voting choices are almost as intensely partisan as those who do claim a party affiliation.โ
Tamas, who has written a book on U.S. third parties, says that they tend to emerge when Democrats and Republicans are politically polarized โ something that has happened periodically since the Civil War. That polarization between parties means โlarger groups of voters end up being not represented by either one, and the intense contention between them also increases political dissatisfaction.โ
For the 50 years after the Civil War, the two parties were very polarized. Third parties were โaggressive and strongโ during that period, Tamas writes.
But their aim wasnโt to make themselves an institution in a new, multiparty democracy โ as the Forward Partyโs leaders hope now.
For example, the Greenback Party in the 1870s and the Populist Party in the 1890s both aimed, via electoral victories, to force the major parties to adopt policies supporting โpoor farmers and opposing business monopolies.โ The Populist Party was especially successful in pressing the Democrats to embrace those positions.
Tamas predicted in 2021 that a new, centrist third party would emerge โ very much like the party that made its debut on July 28. He noted that challenging the Trump-influenced GOP would be a main focus of such a party.
โThe new party could gain strategic advantages by fielding candidates in local and state elections in more moderate places where some Republican candidates have nevertheless chosen to follow their party to the extreme,โ he writes.
But even if the Forward Party raises money and fields successful candidates, it may not be long in the U.S. political landscape.
โThe Progressive Party existed for less than a decade, for example,โ Tamas writes. โBut by strategically winning the votes of moderate conservatives and thereby undermining Republicansโ electoral goals, even if briefly, a new third party could stop the GOP from hurtling farther down an extreme and undemocratic path.โ
The 10 Senate seats most likely to flip in November
1. Pennsylvania
Updated
2. Nevada
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3. Georgia
Updated
4. Arizona
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5. Wisconsin
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6. New Hampshire
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7. North Carolina
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8. Florida
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9. Ohio
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10. Colorado
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The analysis: Some glimmers of optimism for Democrats
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With more than half of this year's competitive Senate matchups set, the overall electoral environment remains consistent: President Joe Biden's poor approval numbers, combined with a pervasive sense that the country is headed in the wrong direction, are weighing down Democrats looking to maintain control of Congress.
But bruising Republican primaries and the US Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade last month offer a few -- albeit potentially ephemeral -- glimmers of optimism for Democrats.
Any big Supreme Court-related development can raise the stakes of Senate races because of the chamber's role in confirming future justices. But last month's ruling that found there was no longer a federal constitutional right to an abortion could drive even more attention to the Senate since it's Congress that would set any future nationwide abortion policies.
Pressed on how to respond to the ruling in an interview with CNN's Dana Bash last month, Vice President Kamala Harris repeatedly said, "There's an election happening."
For Democrats or Democratic-leaning voters, especially those feeling uninspired by Biden's first term so far, the ruling could motivate them to vote this fall. It remains to be seen, however, how much of that energy is sustainable and to what degree the ruling also persuades independents or moderate Republicans to vote Democratic. In the immediate term, the elimination of federal abortion rights has resulted in Democratic outside groups such as Planned Parenthood Votes and Women Vote!, the super PAC arm of EMILY's List, going up on the air attacking Republicans.
Another bright spot for Democrats, underscored by the abortion issue, is that the Senate playing field includes states such as Nevada, New Hampshire and Colorado that have recently voted blue. In fact, seven of the 10 races on this list of seats most likely to flip are in states Biden won in 2020.
The addition of Colorado at No. 10 on this latest ranking, however, speaks to the challenging national environment for Democrats. Economic issues -- high inflation and gas prices this summer travel season -- are still weighing on voters and are often cited as their most pressing concern. Republicans have also tried tapping into Americans' post-pandemic anxieties about safety, with ads suggesting Democrats are soft on crime. Some Democratic candidates have worked to get ahead of those attacks early by featuring uniformed police in their own spots and directly refuting the idea of "defunding the police."
Besides Colorado's appearance on the list, the biggest change to this month's ranking is Nevada and Georgia trading places. It may seem somewhat counterintuitive, especially in this era of hyper-nationalized elections and considering Nevada is a more Democratic state than Georgia. But the change was driven by the candidate matchups in the two states, as things stand now. The ranking is based on CNN's reporting, fundraising and advertising data, and polling, as well as historical data about how states and candidates have performed.