In recent history SOutherners have been rather reluctant to vote third party. Perot scored worst there, so did Nader, so did Anderson.
Seems they lost interest in voting third parties after 1968...Or maybe it's because voting patterns are now so strongly determined by race.
Doesn't bode well for a third party candidate who's logical base in SOuthern. Let me once more remind you of what happened to Buchanan.
Southerners don't vote third party in great numbers because they see themselves, culturally and polticially, as an embattled minority. They quite rightly view the Republican Party, and its reliance on the South, as their vehicle for influencing a nation largely at odds with their desires. I don't think many will throw this precarious power away on someone as pointless as Moore.
He'd make a great senator though - easily doable down the road. Not unlike Ashcroft from my home state. But if he steps outside the Republican Party in the South he ends his career in public life - becomes just another crackpot like Buchanan or Nader.