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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Trump, Carson have until spring to launch third-party runs

Stephen Ohlemacher Associated Press

WASHINGTON – Donald Trump and Ben Carson could dangle the possibility of independent runs for president well into the primary season next year, but they can’t wait forever.

State filing deadlines would give the two Republicans until about March to launch independent or third-party campaigns, experts said. That would give a well-financed campaign enough time to gather sufficient signatures on petitions so the candidate could appear on the ballot in every state.

Starting next summer would be too late.

“Ross Perot in 1992 didn’t start petitioning until March,” said Richard Winger, editor of Ballot Access News. “He was on the ballot in every state.”

Perot, a Texas businessman, got 19 percent of the vote in 1992 and Bill Clinton was elected president with 43 percent.

An independent or third-party run by either Trump or Carson would be a nightmare for Republican leaders.

If either take that step, the chances of winning the presidency would be a longshot. But one could siphon enough votes from the Republicans to hand the election to the Democrats.

“If you think about a Trump-Carson exit, then you’re talking about 51 percent of the current Republican electorate, based on the polling,” said Walter Stone, a political scientist at the University of California at Davis.

Both Trump and Carson have pledged to support the Republican nominee for president, though Trump, the billionaire real estate mogul, has reserved the right to launch an independent bid if he feels he has been treated unfairly.

Carson raised the prospect of leaving the Republican Party on Friday after a report GOP leaders had discussed the possibility of a contested convention if Trump fared well in party primaries.

Launching an independent campaign for president isn’t as simple as holding a press conference and coming up with a catchy name for your new political party.

States have set up a legal maze of different deadlines and requirements that makes it challenging for even well-funded campaigns to get on the ballot in every state.

Texas has the earliest deadline – May 9 – to file as an independent candidate for president. However, several states have deadlines in March if the candidate forms a minor party.

“Our ballot access laws are a mess,” Winger said.

In all, he says, the candidate would need support from about 600,000 voters across the country to get on all ballots.

Trump could manage that, Winger said. And Carson probably could, too.

But could either of them win the presidency as a third-party candidate?

Probably not, said Stone, the political scientist.

“The infrastructure of American politics is so tied to the two-party system that it is hard to overcome that,” Stone said.

Third-party candidates might poll well early in the campaign. But if they are not winning, their supporters might start worrying they could be wasting their vote. Or worse, Stone said, handing the election to the opposing party.