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Crowded GOP field could benefit front-runner, UB expert says

By RACHEL STERN

Published June 22, 2015 This content is archived.

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James Campbell.
“With a big field, I think what could be decisive is how quickly the field thins out. ”
James Campbell, UB Distinguished Professor
Department of Political Science

There will be close to 20 Republican candidates in the presidential primary race, and that could actually help the front-runner, according to UB political scientist James Campbell.

“With a big field, I think what could be decisive is how quickly the field thins out,” says Campbell, UB Distinguished Professor in the Department of Political Science. “Whoever establishes some early advantage — probably Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio or Scott Walker — is likely to benefit from the field staying crowded longer.”

Campbell, a nationally known political forecaster, says a big field makes the campaign less volatile. It prevents strong opposition to the front-runner from forming around one single candidate — instead, support will spread thin around several other candidates.

But the large field has created a challenge for the Republican debates.

Both Fox News and CNN have announced they will limit the first two major debates to candidates who rank in the top 10 in national polls.

“I hate to see deserving and accomplished candidates locked out of the debates at the campaign’s beginning by some arbitrary inclusion rules,” Campbell says. “There might not be a statistically significant poll difference between being 10th and being 11th. Being shut out of a debate is pretty devastating for a candidate.”