Lods, I was actually referring to:
By the way, those links show that both of those parties hardly allowed the public at large to vote - they rigged it so a Libertarian and Green would win.
Anyway, a Republican can run as an independent but the clock is ticking. Each State has different prerequisites for getting onto the ballot. There are differing filing dates and IIRC the one in Texas has either passed or soon will. There are various requirements to put together lists of supporting signatures from signatories living in that State who can't have voted in other primaries or caucuses in that State. So if Kasich were to run in those States, he'd need to sign up people who hadn't voted for him before. So it isn't easy.
But don't make the mistake of assuming that an independent candidate will cause the delegates to be split, leaving everyone short of 270 electoral college votes. Mostly*, each State's electoral votes all go to the candidate who receives the most votes, even if that candidate receives less than 50% of the vote. So even if the Libertarian, Green and Independent candidates draw away votes, the Republican and Democratic candidates will get all the delegates. The ONLY circumstance in which they might prevent one or tuther getting 270 is if one of them scores the most votes in one or more states. Neither Ross Perot nor Ralph Nader managed to win a state even though Ross Perot received 18.9% of the popular vote. There were 5 independent candidates earlier in the 20th Century who did manage to do so.
* Nebraska and Maine can split votes. Both award 2 electors to the popular statewide vote winner and then 1 elector to the winner of the popular vote in each congressional district (making an additional 3 in Nebraska and 2 in Maine).
The major threat of the third party candidates is that they can bleed votes from one of the main 2 candidates and swing the election to the other candidate. In 2000, Ralph Nader ran as a Green candidate and took votes away from Gore in Florida which handed Bush the election (although he disputes this analysis).
Clinton would love a Republican to run as an independent and Trump would love Sanders to run as an independent. In 1912, Teddy Roosevelt lost in the Republican primaries to Taft and then ran as an independent. He managed to win 88 Electoral College votes, kept Taft to just 8, and allowed the Democratic candidate, Woodrow Wilson, to romp home with 435.
- the Libertarian Party which has nominated Gary Johnson and Bill Weld as his running mate - click HERE; and
- the Green Party which has nominated Jill Stein and William Kreml as her running mate - click HERE.
By the way, those links show that both of those parties hardly allowed the public at large to vote - they rigged it so a Libertarian and Green would win.
Anyway, a Republican can run as an independent but the clock is ticking. Each State has different prerequisites for getting onto the ballot. There are differing filing dates and IIRC the one in Texas has either passed or soon will. There are various requirements to put together lists of supporting signatures from signatories living in that State who can't have voted in other primaries or caucuses in that State. So if Kasich were to run in those States, he'd need to sign up people who hadn't voted for him before. So it isn't easy.
But don't make the mistake of assuming that an independent candidate will cause the delegates to be split, leaving everyone short of 270 electoral college votes. Mostly*, each State's electoral votes all go to the candidate who receives the most votes, even if that candidate receives less than 50% of the vote. So even if the Libertarian, Green and Independent candidates draw away votes, the Republican and Democratic candidates will get all the delegates. The ONLY circumstance in which they might prevent one or tuther getting 270 is if one of them scores the most votes in one or more states. Neither Ross Perot nor Ralph Nader managed to win a state even though Ross Perot received 18.9% of the popular vote. There were 5 independent candidates earlier in the 20th Century who did manage to do so.
* Nebraska and Maine can split votes. Both award 2 electors to the popular statewide vote winner and then 1 elector to the winner of the popular vote in each congressional district (making an additional 3 in Nebraska and 2 in Maine).
The major threat of the third party candidates is that they can bleed votes from one of the main 2 candidates and swing the election to the other candidate. In 2000, Ralph Nader ran as a Green candidate and took votes away from Gore in Florida which handed Bush the election (although he disputes this analysis).
Clinton would love a Republican to run as an independent and Trump would love Sanders to run as an independent. In 1912, Teddy Roosevelt lost in the Republican primaries to Taft and then ran as an independent. He managed to win 88 Electoral College votes, kept Taft to just 8, and allowed the Democratic candidate, Woodrow Wilson, to romp home with 435.


