I'm not sure American politics allows for this.
In theory, it could work to have new parties in places where one party is currently dominant. A green party candidate could run in San Francisco. A libertarian candidate could run in rural Texas. And it might be better if the major parties don't have majorities in Congress, and have to make coalitions. Granted, the main history of this in the United States is rather ugly. The Dixiecrats ran for President with the hope of denying the Republicans 270 electoral votes, and playing kingmakers in the electoral college. They could easily have demanded segregationist concessions.
A difference in American politics though is that ordinary voters can vote in primaries. If you think your Democratic congressman is too much of a squish, you can support someone else in a primary, where one person's vote matters more.
There's more interest in national politics than ever before, which makes it really hard for a third party to win locally. A Democratic state senator in California can associate themselves with the Biden administration, even if it's not going to matter much for his role in passing local legislation.
Boehner regrets impeachment because it was politically unpopular. He doesn't necessarily think it was morally wrong.
It is worth noting Clinton wasn't impeached for having an affair with a subordinate half his age, but for perjury.
The DeSantis and Rand Paul stories are exxagerated.
I posted this before, but a Tampa Bay Times reporter covered this, and thinks the evidence doesn't match the left-wing talking point.
Rand Paul's wife's investment of under $15,000 in a stock that is worth less now than when she bought it probably isn't enough money to sway anyone's vote.I've seen quite a few tweets about Gov. DeSantis and donations he has received from the CEO of a hedge fund, Citadel, that is invested in Regeneron. I looked into the accusations a bit. Here are some important facts.
Regeneron already sold all ~1.5 million doses of its monoclonal antibody cocktail to the U.S. government, per a spokesperson. DeSantis is now urging COVID-positive Floridians to avail themselves of this treatment. Doesn't much matter to Regeneron (financially) if they do.
Citadel is not in the top 100 of Regeneron's shareholders, according to the NASDAQ. Citadel has ~$38 billion in assets, and it owns about ~$36 million worth of Regeneron shares.
The Citadel did increase its position in Regeneron by ~38k shares, or ~193 percent, in the second quarter, per NASDAQ. But that quarter ended June 30, when cases and hospitalizations weren't skyrocketing in Florida.
Finally, some are saying DeSantis has downplayed vaccines in favor of Regeneron. Florida is 20th in vaccination rate per capita, according to the CDC, and it's the most vaccinated state that voted for Trump in 2020.