Justin Amash Abandons Third-Occasion Presidential Bid

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Justin Amash Abandons Third-Occasion Presidential Bid

Consultant Justin Amash of Michigan introduced on Saturday that he wouldn't pursue the Libertarian Occasion’s nomination for president, bringing an


Consultant Justin Amash of Michigan introduced on Saturday that he wouldn’t pursue the Libertarian Occasion’s nomination for president, bringing an finish to his prolonged flirtation with a third-party candidacy that would have launched a brand new component of uncertainty into the race between President Trump and former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr.

Among those challenges, he said, is the difficulty of campaigning and qualifying for the ballot in all 50 states during a pandemic that has brought much of the country’s public life to a halt. He added that it would be difficult to raise money in the middle of a severe economic downturn.

“I continue to believe that a candidate from outside the old parties, offering a vision of government grounded in liberty and equality, can break through in the right environment,” Mr. Amash said. “But this environment presents extraordinary challenges.”

A poll taken this month by Monmouth University suggested Mr. Amash could have started a presidential candidacy that made a small but not insignificant imprint on the campaign. In a two-way race between Mr. Trump and Mr. Biden, the poll showed Mr. Biden ahead by 9 percentage points. With Mr. Amash included, Mr. Biden led by a slightly smaller margin of 7 percentage points.

In the poll, about four in five voters said they had no opinion of Mr. Amash.

On Saturday, Mr. Amash acknowledged that “polarization is near an all-time high,” leaving even less room than usual for options outside the traditional party system.

Mr. Amash said he would remain supportive of the Libertarian Party, though his exit from the presidential contest left the group without any White House contenders of even modest political stature. The small-government group welcomed Mr. Amash with open arms in April, when he became the only member of Congress to have ever been a member of the party.

In the past few elections, the Libertarians have nominated former Republican officeholders for the presidency. In 2016, a ticket composed of two former Republican governors, Gary Johnson of New Mexico and Bill Weld of Massachusetts, collected about four and a half million votes — a bit more than 3 percent of the popular vote.



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