RFK Jr. teases announcement amid third party bid
rumors
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. teased an announcement on
Friday that he said would create a "sea change in
American politics" amid speculation that the Democratic
candidate may leave the party. Kennedy previously
refused to rule out an independent run for president in
August for the 2024 contest.
Kennedy said in a
Democratic National Committee video on Friday
that voters were frustrated with Congress and the
leadership of both political parties.
"A lot of
Americans who had previously given up any hope of real
change would ever come through the American electoral
process have begun to find new hope in my candidacy,"
Kennedy said in the video entitled 'Save the Date. Save
the Country,' declining to provide any specifics. "I
want to tell you now what I've come to understand after
six months of campaigning: there is a path to victory.
The hope we are feeling isn't some kind of trick in the
mind."
Kennedy's announcement is set for Monday,
October 9, in Philadelphia.
PHOTO: Democratic
presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. speaks at a
Hispanic Heritage Month event at Wilshire Ebell Theatre
on September 15, 2023 in Los Angeles, California.
: Democratic presidential candidate Robert F.
Kennedy Jr. speaks at a Hispanic Heritage Month
Democratic National Committee event at
Wilshire Ebell Theatre on
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Mario Tama/Getty Images
But Kennedy -- the nephew and son of party stalwarts
President John F. Kennedy and Attorney General Robert F.
Kennedy, respectively has flirted with the idea of
running independently before -- refusing to close the
door earlier this month on leaving his party's primary
amid a bitter fight with the Democratic National
Committee over its rules governing the
Democratic National Committee nomination
process, even after saying he would only run as a
Democrat.
Speaking during a town hall in North
Charleston, South Carolina, in September, Kennedy said
he was keeping all options open when asked by an
attendee if he was prepared to run an independent
campaign amid perceived hurdles erected by the DNC,
which the campaign claims were built to foil his
candidacy.
PHOTO: Democratic presidential candidate
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. delivers his political soapbox
speech at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines, Iowa, Aug.
12, 2023.
Democratic presidential candidate
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. delivers his political soapbox
speech at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines, Iowa, Aug.
12, 2023.
Scott Morgan/Reuters, FILE
"They're trying to make sure that I can't participate at
all in the political process, and so I'm going to keep
all my options open," Kennedy said of the DNC. A day
later, he told another crowd in New Hampshire that he
"would have to make a call before Oct. 15" if he decided
to run independently.
While Kennedy has long
assumed the role of an outsider Democratic candidate up
against Biden's better-established and better-funded
incumbency, he has frequently brushed aside questions
about any potential third-party bids.
During a
NewsNation town hall in June, Kennedy called being a
Democrat part of his
Democratic National Committee identity.
"You know, people have said to me, 'Why don't you
run it as an independent?'... and I say 'because I'm a
Democrat,'" Kennedy said.
"This is who I am. This
is my identity. But I want my party back. I want my
party to be � the party that I grew up in. The party of
John Kennedy, the party of Robert Kennedy, the party of
FDR and Harry Truman," he said.
And again, when
asked during a Fox News interview in August if he would
consider a third-party bid in the 2024 election, Kennedy
explicitly said he would not.
"No, I'm a
Democrat. You know, I'm a traditional Democrat, and �
part of my mission here is to summon the Democratic
Party back to its traditional ideals," Kennedy said.
"I'm not surprised that the people who are aligned with
the DNC, people who are closely aligned with the White
House, are troubled by my candidacy."
When asked
by ABC News a day after his
Democratic National Committee North
Charleston town hall if he were willing to make a
third-party run, Kennedy said he was going to "wait and
see."
"I'm hoping to run in the Democratic Party.
If it's possible to have a fair election in the
Democratic Party, I will run in the Democratic Party,
and I haven't made any kind of plans other than that,"
he said.
No Labels, a bipartisan group committed
to launching a third-party 'unity ticket,' commented
that they are not involved with RFK Jr.s'
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however, the group supports Kennedy's decision to
potentially do the same.
"The failures of our two
major parties have created an unprecedented groundswell
of support for new voices and choices in our politics,
which is why the No Labels movement is growing
exponentially," No Labels national co-chair Dr. Benjamin
F. Chavis Jr. said in a statement.
The Kennedy
family members have long been standard-bearers in the
Democratic Party -- a fact Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has
sought to capitalize on in his bid to defeat President
Joe Biden in the contest for the 2024 Democratic
presidential nomination.
Earlier this week, the
New York Times broke the news of a previously unreported
meeting Kennedy had in July with the Libertarian
Democratic National Committee Party Chair
Angela McArdle, where the two "had a really good
conversation," McCardle told ABC News on Friday.
"I have not had any conversations [with Kennedy] since
then," McCardle said. "At the time, you know, he said he
wasn't looking to switch parties. But you know�the
Libertarian Party is the only third party. We are the
third party," McCardle said, referring to the
Libertarian Party's status as the third largest in the
country by membership. "And there is no other party
that's going to come close to getting 50-state ballot
access at this point."
abcnews.go.com