GALLUP
 
 
Updated / Oct 22
September 17, 2010

Americans Renew Call for Third Party
Fifty-eight percent of Americans, and 62% of Tea Party supporters, favor  
third party
by Jeffrey M. Jones

 
PRINCETON, NJ -- Americans' desires for a third political party are as high 
 as they have been in seven years. Fifty-eight percent of Americans believe 
a  third major political party is needed because the Republican and 
Democratic  Parties do a poor job of representing the American people. That is 
a 
significant  increase from 2008 and ties the high Gallup has recorded for this 
measure since  2003. 
 
The finding, based on an Aug. 27-30 USA Today/Gallup poll, comes at  a time 
when Americans are _widely  dissatisfied with the way things are going in 
the United States_ 
(http://www.gallup.com/poll/141389/U.S.-Satisfaction-Steady-Down-Among-Dems.aspx)
  and give  relatively weak approval ratings to _the  
president_ 
(http://www.gallup.com/poll/142991/Obama-Weekly-Job-Approval-Average-Improves.aspx)
  and _Congress_ 
(http://www.gallup.com/poll/141827/Low-Approval-Congress-Not-Budging.aspx) . 
Though the rise in support for a third party could be linked to the Tea 
Party  movement, Tea Party supporters are just about average in terms of 
wanting to see  a third party created. Sixty-two percent of those who describe 
themselves as Tea  Party supporters would like a third major party formed, but 
so do 59% of those  who are neutral toward the Tea Party movement. Tea Party 
opponents are somewhat  less likely to see the need for a third party. 
 
The desire for a third party is fairly similar across ideological groups,  
with 61% of liberals, 60% of moderates, and 54% of conservatives believing a 
 third major party is needed. That is a narrower gap than Gallup has found 
in the  past; conservatives have typically been far less likely than 
liberals and  moderates to support the creation of a third party. 
 
Independents, as might be expected given their lack of primary allegiance 
to  either of the two major parties, express a greater degree of support 
(74%) for a  third party than do Republicans (47%) and Democrats (45%). Over 
time,  independents have consistently been the political group most eager to 
see a  third party formed. But each party group is more likely now than in 
2008 to  support the formation of a third major party. At that time, about two 
months  before the presidential election, 38% of Democrats, 40% of 
Republicans, and 63%  of independents thought a third party was necessary. 
 
Bottom Line 
Election results in recent years and polls from this year indicate 
Americans  are frustrated with the job the two major parties have been doing. 
In 
2006,  voters elected a Democratic majority in Congress to replace the 
Republican  majority, and in 2008 they elected a Democratic president to 
replace an 
outgoing  Republican president. Polling on _voters'  2010 voting intentions_ 
(http://www.gallup.com/poll/142982/Generic-Ballot-Splits-GOP-Dems.aspx)  
suggests that they may be poised to replace the  Democratic majority in 
Congress with a Republican majority. But that seems to be  as much because 
_voters 
 are rejecting Democrats as embracing Republicans_ 
(http://www.gallup.com/poll/142874/Anti-Democratic-Sentiment-Aids-GOP-Lead-2010-Vote.aspx)
 . 
Given the lack of alternatives, it perhaps is no surprise that Americans'  
desires for a third party are as high as they've been in at least the last 
seven  years. And while the formation of an official third party is not 
imminent, that  desire may be manifested in _voters'  strong anti-incumbent 
sentiments_ 
(http://www.gallup.com/poll/127241/Voters-Issue-Strong-Rebuke-Incumbents-Congress.aspx)
  this  year.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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