Sen. Joe Manchin, the moderate West Virginia Democrat who has yet to decide whether to run for reelection next year or mount a long-shot third party bid for the White House, said Thursday that he's "thinking seriously" about becoming an independent.
Manchin has long flirted with the idea of leaving the Democratic Party, something he reiterated on Hoppy Kercheval's radio show on Thursday, saying he's "absolutely" considering it.
If Manchin became an independent and caucused with Democrats, the chamber would still have a 51-49 Democratic majority. If he decided not to caucus with Democrats, he would lose his chairmanship of the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, so he's unlikely to go that route.
"I would think very seriously about that. I've been thinking about that for quite some time," he said when asked if he'd become an independent. "I haven't made any decisions whatsoever on any of my political direction. I want to make sure that my voice is truly an independent voice."
In the interview, Manchin tried to portray both parties as beholden to their most extreme voices, while also suggesting there could be room for a third party presidential candidate if President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump are the only two choices.
"They are going off the Richter scale, both sides, so I'm -- Hoppy, I just can't, I can't accept either party, to be honest with you, right now," he said.
Manchin added: "I'm thinking seriously, what's the best -- for me, I have to have peace of mind, basically. The brand has become so bad, the 'D' brand and 'R' brand. In West Virginia, the 'D' brand, because it's national brand. It's not the Democrats in West Virginia, it's the Democrats in Washington or the Washington policies of the Democrats."
If Manchin announces that he is running for reelection in 2024, he'll will have a difficult road in a state that Trump resoundingly carried twice.
Manchin, who appeared at an event for the third party group "No Labels" last month, also pushed back on the idea that a third party candidate would help Trump's chances of taking back the White House. "I don't see that favoring either side because you just can't tell how this is going to break," he said.
He added, "If we can create a movement, a party that people understand, we could have a voice, we can make a big, big splash, and maybe bring the traditional parties of the Democrat, Republican Party (to) what they used to be, back to what they should be today."