WASHINGTON (AP) — Michigan Rep. Justin Amash,
a high-profile critic of President Donald Trump who quit the GOP and
became an independent, announced Saturday he would not seek the
Libertarian nomination for the White House, weeks after saying he was
running because voters wanted an “alternative” to the two major parties.
In
deciding to drop out, he cited the challenges of trying to campaign as a
third-party candidate during the coronavirus pandemic.
“After
much reflection, I’ve concluded that circumstances don’t lend
themselves to my success as a candidate for president this year, and
therefore I will not be a candidate,” he said in one in a series of
tweets explaining his decision. He said “the new reality of social
distancing levels the playing field among the candidates in many
respects, but it also means lesser known candidates are more dependent
on adequate media opportunities to reach people.”
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Amash said he still thinks such a candidacy could prove successful in the future.
“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,” he tweeted. “But this
environment presents extraordinary challenges.”
Amash
would have faced nearly impossible odds of winning the presidency. But
third-party campaigns can have unpredictable consequences for the
Democratic and Republican candidates in the race.
In
2000, Ralph Nader’s Green Party presidential bid cost Democrat Al Gore
crucial support and was a contributing factor in Republican George W.
Bush’s narrow victory. Democrat Hillary Clinton’s 2016 loss to Trump has
been blamed in part on the support that Green Party candidate Jill
Stein picked up in states such as Pennsylvania.
Amash left the Republican Party last year and later supported Trump’s impeachment in the Democratic-led House.
In
announcing his intention in late April to seek the Libertarian
nomination, Amash said he wanted to represent the millions of Americans
who do not feel well represented by either major party.
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