Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia announced last week that he won’t be seeking re-election in 2024. Usually, the retirement of a coal-loving, conservative Democratic lawmaker deep in the pocket of the fossil fuel industry would be exciting news. But in this particular case, it marks a triple blow to Democrats.
First, Manchin represents an exceptional strategic advantage for Democrats that will be difficult for the party to regain once he leaves the Senate. Manchin is an anachronism: a senate Democrat from a blood-red southern state. Since the 1970s, both parties have grown more polarized and geographically segregated. Manchin’s hold on his seat since winning a 2010 special election is a relic from a bygone political era. While his conservatism played a chief role in curtailing some of the most important legislation of President Joe Biden’s time in office, he votes with the president the vast majority of the time and generally caucuses with his party in good faith. When he leaves the Senate, he will almost certainly be replaced by a conservative Republican in a state where Donald Trump trounced Hillary Clinton and Biden by around 40 points.
Manchin’s departure creates enormous complications for the Democrats’ narrow Senate majority.
Manchin’s departure creates enormous complications for the Democrats’ narrow Senate majority. During Biden’s tenure, Manchin’s vote has been indispensable to securing the president’s legacy-defining policies, from a massive aid package to help mitigate a Covid-racked economy to a historic climate bill to spending on major health care subsidies and IRS reform. With one fewer vote in the Senate, Biden’s list of accomplishments would run a lot shorter than it does now.
Republicans already have a structural advantage in the Senate, where relatively low-population red states are overrepresented. And in 2024, more than twice as many Democrats as Republicans will be up for re-election. That includes all three Democratic-held seats in states that voted for Trump in 2020: Manchin, Montana’s Jon Tester and Ohio’s Sherrod Brown.
The second blow to Democrats is that it appears that Manchin is actively considering a third-party presidential bid. In his video announcing he won’t run for re-election, Manchin said, “What I will be doing is traveling the country and speaking out to see if there is an interest in creating a movement to mobilize the middle and bring Americans together.” If he were to make a run, it would likely be in association with the centrist political organization No Labels, which has pitched the idea of a “unity ticket” to combat party polarization. The organization’s appetite for a potential spoiler run is unclear, but it appears possible: In July, the group’s co-chair said he saw a No Labels run as an “insurance policy” against a Biden-Trump rematch.








