MSN  News
story by: Alexandra Jaffe
 
Independents  -wave of the  future?
 
October 11, 2014
 
 
As Americans sour on partisan sniping this election cycles, many are  
turning towards independent candidates as a better option.   
Now, with viable independents playing a role in two major races, it’s a 
shift  that might have seismic consequences in the battle for the Senate this 
fall and  beyond. 
Independents could serve as spoilers for Republicans in Kansas and South  
Dakota, seats that were supposed to be easy pickups for the GOP but have come 
on  the map due to the Republican candidates' surprising weakness in both 
races. If  the independent alternatives win, they could hold the key to 
control of the  Senate, wielding outsize influence for their states by 
parlaying 
their caucus  commitments into plum committee posts or commitments on votes 
for key  issues. 
It’s is indicative of a broader trend in American politics that's not  
confined to any one race or candidate, strategists and analysts say, and it's a 
 
movements that's only likely to grow in the coming years. 
The parties are the "the old model for politics," said Crystal Canney,  
formerly campaign spokeswoman for independent Maine Sen. Angus King's 
successful  2012 bid. “And you're going to see an increase in independents 
across the 
 country going forward,” she said. 
Independents, it seems, are the wave of the future. 
They're harnessing Americans' disillusionment with the parties, who are  
viewed increasingly poorly and as largely ineffective in voters' minds. 
Every few weeks, Republican leaders are asked to answer for another 
off-color  comment by a GOP lawmaker at the state or federal level. And the 
growing 
 perception of President Obama as weak on domestic and foreign policy has 
tarred  the Democratic Party by proxy. 
Susan Boardman Russ, who served as chief of staff to former independent 
Sen.  Jim Jeffords (Vt.), said she knows many Democrats and Republicans who 
simply  won't identify with a party because of its reputation.  
"It's more politically correct, they don’t want to be labeled with all  
Republicans who say crazy things, and truly Democrats, they're kind of  
discouraged with Obama. So they tend to identify themselves with independents," 
 
she said. 
Michael McDonald, a University of Florida political professor and elections 
 expert, has done studies that indicate another aspect prompting the rise 
of  independent candidates is the increasing polarization of the parties. 
"You can see in the data, when two parties become more ideologically 
distinct  from each other, you see a greater success rate for independent 
candidates," he  said. "These are moderates who are in the middle." 
Indeed, while the parties have become more partisan over time, the _Gallup_ 
(http://www.gallup.com/poll/15370/party-affiliation.aspx)  tracking poll 
most recently showed  those identifying as independents hit a record-high 47 
percent in September. 
That same survey also showed that when independents were asked which party  
they lean towards, more chose the Republican Party than the Democratic Party
.  That’s an indication more Republicans are dissatisfied with their party 
than  Democrats, so they’re turning to independents as an answer. 
That may be why this cycle independents are picking up traction in two  
deep-red states, McDonald suggested. 
"In recent election cycles, the Republican Party gets polarized further 
than  the Democratic Party" due to contentious primary fights, he noted. "So 
there are  more moderate Republican voters who find themselves disaffected 
from the  Republican Party." 
McDonald suggested if that partisanship subsides and moderation again takes 
 hold in the parties, Americans may return to being card-carrying party  
members. 
But it's difficult to see such a shift back to the center taking hold in 
the  near future. And Boardman Russ said that the exodus from the parties may 
be as  much caused by systemic and cultural changes in American politics, 
that are  unlikely to be reversed. 
Decades ago, she noted, "being part of a party was part of your social  
network, it was a family thing," and politics was more of a communal activity,  
with partisans gathering for social events like Republican bean suppers and 
 Democratic chicken dinners. 
"That just doesn't fit into the world anymore, so people don’t have that  
from-birth-to-death identification with the core of a party," said Boardman  
Russ.  
The decline of the party has also given independents a structural opening 
to  mount credible campaigns. With the rising influence of deep-pocketed 
outside  groups, and a wide range of media options for candidates to get their 
messages  out, independents aren't hindered as much by a lack of party 
apparatus or  money. 
And if Americans are experiencing an inexorable march away from the parties 
 and towards independents, the workings of Congress may see a 
transformation  too. 
Neither Kansas independent Greg Orman nor South Dakota independent Larry  
Pressler, who are both competitive with their Republican opponents in recent  
polling, have indicated who they'd caucus with if they're elected. 
But if they both win, they could join with the other two independents in 
the  Senate — Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Angus King of Maine — to create 
an  independent caucus that could hold immense power and influence over 
contentious  policy negotiations, and perhaps help break through the gridlock 
in  
Washington. 
Boardman Russ compared the potential independent caucus to the former "Mod  
Squad" group of five senators — which included Jeffords, Olympia Snowe and 
Susan  Collins of Maine, Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island and Arlen Specter of 
 Pennsylvania. They became extremely powerful by holding out their  votes 
in a bloc to win concessions and broker compromises — and ultimately  
encourage a culture of compromise in the Senate. 
"If one side was not cooperating, they would vote the other way just to 
make  the point. They tended to go with the side that seemed to be making the 
biggest  effort to forge some type of compromise," she said. 
That's exactly how Pressler thinks he and other independents would affect  
Senate business if he's elected this fall. 
"It may be a historic time in American politics. If there could be an  
independent caucus — I mean we'd still have to caucus with whichever side we  
chose to — but that could be a group that could work to end the poisonous  
disputes between Republicans and Democrats," the former GOP senator told The  
Hill in an interview this week.  
Pressler also suggested the four could make up a core of a 20-senator  
"centrist caucus," which could further help negotiate compromises on key 
debates 
 and get policies moving in the Senate. 
That possibility, that independents could work above the fray to actually 
get  things done, is part of both Pressler and Orman's sales pitch to voters. 
It’  something, Canney said, that voters are craving at a time of 
unprecedented  partisan bickering. 
“People as a whole are paying attention to what has happened with gridlock 
in  their state and in Washington, across the country,” she said. 
“They’re really, really tired of hearing, ‘I can’t get it done because of 
the  other side.’ So there’s a growing number of people who say, I don't 
care about  that stuff. Just get it done.”

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