No Labels, which pitches itself as a centrist movement to appeal to disaffected voters, has secured a considerable amount of funding and is working behind the scenes to get on Presidential ballots across the country. The group has yet to announce a candidate, but “most likely we’ll have both a Republican and Democrat on the ticket,” Pat McCrory, the former governor of North Carolina and one of the leaders of No Labels, tells David Remnick. Senators Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema are reportedly under consideration, but McCrory will not name names, nor offer any specifics on the group’s platform, including regarding critical issues such as abortion and gun rights. That opacity is by design, Sue Halpern, who has covered the group, says. “The one reason why I think they haven’t put forward a candidate is once they do that, then they are required to do all the things that political parties do,” she says. “At the moment, they’re operating like a PAC, essentially. They don’t have to say who their donors are.” Third-party campaigns have had significant consequences in American elections, and, with both Donald Trump and Joe Biden historically unpopular, a third-party candidate could peel a decisive number of moderate voters away from the Democratic Party.
Plus, three New Yorker critics—Doreen St. Félix, Alexandra Schwartz, and Inkoo Kang—discuss why so many scripted and reality shows use psychotherapy as a central plotline.
Percival Everett and the Reinvention of Mark Twain’s Jim
Trump’s Authoritarian Pronouncements Recall a Dark History
March Madness 2024: College Basketball at a Crossroads
Judith Butler Can’t “Take Credit or Blame” for Gender Furor
In “Great Expectations,” Vinson Cunningham Watches Barack Obama’s Rise Up Close
Bradley Cooper Contends for Best Actor in “Maestro”
What Biden Is Thinking About the 2024 Election
Kara Swisher on Tech Billionaires: “I Don’t Think They Like People”
Lily Gladstone on Holding the Door Open for More Native Actors in Hollywood. Plus, the Brody Awards
Ty Cobb on Trump, Putin, and the Death of Alexey Navalny
For Brontez Purnell, “Memoir Is Fiction—I Don’t Care What Anyone Says”
“Pod Save America” ’s Jon Lovett on Trump: “The Threat of Jail Time Sharpens the Mind”
Jacqueline Novak Is Giving Audiences “Everything She’s Got”
Can Memes Swing the 2024 Election? Plus, Michelle Zauner on “Crying in H Mart”
Sheila Heti Talks with Parul Sehgal About “Alphabetical Diaries”
Jonathan Blitzer on the Battle over Immigration; and Olivia Rodrigo Talks with David Remnick
From In the Dark: The Runaway Princesses
For Journalists, “Gaza Is Unprecedented,” and Deadly
The Oscar Nominee Cord Jefferson on Why Race Is so “Fertile” for Comedy
Pramila Jayapal: Biden’s “Coalition Has Fractured”
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Should This Exist?
Without Fail
Hannibal Buress
Longform
Conversations