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Because it leaves open the potential for a Democrat v. Republican v. New Party election (at whatever level, not just presidency) and that's likely to improve Republican chances. Where the progressive candidates are strong it's better for them to beat the centrist in a one on one then take on the Republican with their center-left voters. Where they're weak the most a three way contest does is maybe make the right win over the center.
There are many many races without real Republican challengers where a new party could challenge moderate Democrats from the left, but in those situations the Democratic primary is the real vote and you might as well just win there.
The potential is there, but I doubt it will come to that. The same potential was there for the Tea Party to spoil GOP races. Instead, the GOP became the Tea Party.
We need a Guillotine Party to drag the Democrats back to the people.
The Tea Party ran in Republican primaries. They aren't a new party.
A distinction without a difference. Whether they are a new party, or a sect within the old GOP isn't particularly relevant. The relevant part is that the GOP adopted their positions and rhetoric.
That's the whole thing this is all about. A new party competes against the main party in general elections. Otherwise, whatever the name says, it's just a caucus. The Democrats already have the Justice Democrats recruiting progressives to run in primaries. They also have the Working Families Party, which is closer to a real party than either the Justice Democrats or the Tea Party, but they still don't really compete with the Democrats outside of primaries (they go "head to head" in New York, but usually to represent votes for the same candidates).