Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s campaign announced Tuesday that he has qualified to vote in the general election in Nevada.
President Kennedy: “Today marks the end of the primary election and the beginning of the general election.” Said Announced in a press release on Tuesday. “Almost 70% of Americans don’t want a rematch between Trump and Biden after 2020. They want to vote for someone who represents hope and healing. They want to vote for someone with an inspiring vision for America. .”
Former President Trump’s landslide victory in the Super Tuesday election has made it almost certain that he will become the Republican presidential nominee, while President Biden is seeking re-election. Kennedy has argued that the unpopularity of both Republican and Democratic candidates makes his candidacy more likely in 2024.
The Kennedy campaign has collected more than 15,000 signatures in the Silver State, according to a press release.
President Kennedy will “confront Presidents Biden and Trump on the issues that matter most to Americans, from making housing and health care affordable to ending forever wars and unraveling the corporate grip on government.” I’m looking forward to it.”
The average Hill/Decision Desk poll of the Kennedy-Biden-Trump matchup has Kennedy leading both candidates by more than 25 points, with Kennedy at 11.4 percent, Biden at 37.9 percent, and Trump at 41 percent. ing.
According to the Associated Press, Utah Elections Director Ryan Cawley announced that the state would be the first state to give Kennedy access to the ballot after the Kennedy campaign reached its goal of 1,000 signatures by the March deadline. Utah Elections Director Ryan Cawley said.
There are concerns among both Democrats and Republicans about how Kennedy will influence the 2024 election, with many Democrats pointing to Kennedy’s anti-vaccine comments and flirtation with conspiracy theories. There is.
The Republican National Committee (RNC) published a list of “23 reasons” to oppose him and sought to portray him as a “typical Democratic politician.”
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