How Robert F. Kennedy junior’s effect on the election has shifted
Historically, polls have tended to overstate the strength of third parties

Kamala Harris and Donald Trump are sure to be on the ballot in November in all 50 states. Not so all the would-be candidates from third parties. Several such candidates have been facing the distraction of lawsuits that seek to stop them competing in some states.
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This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Spoiler alert”
United States August 24th 2024
- San Francisco Democrats are embracing “law and order” politics
- Police are killing more Americans than ever. Where’s the outrage?
- How Robert F. Kennedy junior’s effect on the election has shifted
- Behind the surge in migrants crossing America’s northern border
- NASA insists that two astronauts are not “stranded” in space
- Where crashing cars is the point
- History will judge Joe Biden by Kamala Harris
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Why Larry Hogan’s long-odds bid for a Senate seat matters
He offers conservatives a pragmatic path beyond Trumpism

Polarisation by education is remaking American politics
The battle for Pennsylvania is a test case for new coalitions of Democrats and Republicans

Checks and Balance newsletter: Partisan positions have changed drastically over the past 50 years
Kamala Harris and Donald Trump converge as much as they differ
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Three factors laid the ground for its destructiveness
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