There is the rub, having worked for Perot twice and probably the only member left of the Reform Party in Georgia, it will be awful hard to form a third party. Independents are more diverse with their politics than one would think. They are anything but moderate. Most are fiscally conservative and socially liberal, but you have a sizable bunch that are the other way. There are way more different political philosophies than in either the republican or democratic party. But the one thing they have in common, they are getting fed up with the major parties and in their view, they end up voting for the lesser of two evils or the least worst candidate.
But most buy into this mantra espoused by the two major parties that a vote for a third party candidate is a wasted vote, he can't win. Until independents get away from that mindset, there will be no viable third party. Then too you have the election laws written by the Republicans and Democrats as a mutual protection act. Then there is the money problem, corporations, wall street etc. donate hundreds of millions to the two major parties and none to third parties. Last year Romney spent a billion, Obama spent a billion, the next candidate in line was Gary Johnson who spent 3 million.