You’d think midterms would be a great time to get your name out there and run high profile candidates to win House districts led by charlatans…

  • @assassin_aragornOP
    link
    126 months ago

    Third parties should be running House candidates and putting ads on airtime for them. You aren’t going to win an election if it’s based on people doing research instead of you doing heavy advertisement.

    Third parties should try doing anything noteworthy to get attention. The parties and their candidates don’t deserve anything intrinsically.

    • @mycodesucks
      link
      96 months ago

      There’s plenty else they could be doing… outreach in off-years, for example. Start on campuses building awareness and building the kind of word-of-mouth and grassroots supporters you really need for a campaign. Having your name on the ballot isn’t enough. Having rallies isn’t enough. You can’t ask the people to come to YOU, and the media certainly won’t give you any coverage… you have to reach out to THEM.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      86 months ago

      Third-party candidates don’t have much money. They typically don’t have corporate donors and dark money funneling in, and individual contributions simply aren’t enough.

      • @mycodesucks
        link
        76 months ago

        That is true… of a traditional campaign. But we live in an era where people can get millions of devoted followers by twerking on a webcam. A savvy third party that uses the internet effectively to build followers and then spreads into the greater population through word of mouth could conceivably work. Heck, it’s not all that different from how Trump managed to build his base.

        I’m not sure exactly what such a thing would look like for a third party candidate with some kind of scruples, but it shouldn’t be IMPOSSIBLE.

    • @rayyy
      link
      76 months ago

      Third parties should be running House grassroots candidates and developing a support system. That’s how the teabaggers took control. Of course they had the financial backing of wealthy conservatives.

    • @Phegan
      link
      -26 months ago

      But then the argument would be “we lost this house seat because of the 3rd party”

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        56 months ago

        Not when the seats are heavily garrymandered, anyway, and only one party is normally running in that district. Gerrymandering can be an opportunity.

        • @assassin_aragornOP
          link
          26 months ago

          Some third parties have a thesis that their message is inherently superior to the other parties and would win simply by the virtue of being morally right. Gerrymandered districts are the perfect opportunity for them to prove that.