No Labels won’t run a third-party campaign after trying to recruit a centrist presidential candidate
NEW YORK (AP) — The No Labels group said Thursday it will not field a presidential candidate in November after strategists for the bipartisan organization failed to attract a high-profile centrist ...
No Labels had another high-profile recruit turn down their offer to be at the top of a presidential ticket as the third-party organization continues to search for a candidate in 2024. The centrist ...
In an unsurprising yet unusual maneuver, the nonpartisan group No Labels has announced a decision by a group of “delegates” from around the country to move forward with a 2024 presidential ticket, ...
THE ‘NO LABELS’ JOKE. How do presidential candidacies start? Most begin with the ambitions of one person — one governor or senator or, in Donald Trump’s case, one real estate mogul and reality TV star ...
No Labels is taking another step toward forming a bipartisan presidential ticket in November's general election. The centrist group announced the formation of a committee to vet candidates for the ...
People with the group No Labels hold signs during a rally on Capitol Hill in Washington, July 13, 2013. The third-party presidential movement No Labels plans to meet on March 8, 2024, amid fierce ...
No Labels, the nonprofit trying to lure a third-party candidate to run for president this year, should consider rebranding itself as "No Candidate." In the two weeks since the group's intentionally ...
The centrist group No Labels is abandoning plans to form a third-party presidential unity ticket for this year's election. "Americans remain more open to an independent presidential run and hungrier ...
As they vet candidates for a potential third-party presidential ticket, No Labels is reaching out to former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie. A source in the two-time Republican presidential candidate's ...
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