Kennedy holds event to qualify for November ballot
April 14th, 2024 by Ric Hanson
(Des Moines, Iowa [via the Iowa Capital Dispatch] – Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. called for voters to reject the two-party system and support him for president at an Iowa event Saturday aimed at getting on the state’s general election ballot. Speaking to a crowd of more than 700 at Val Air Ballroom in West Des Moines, Kennedy said he was asked earlier in the day about a recently published New York Times/Siena College poll that found he had only 2% of support in the general election. “Do you think if I only had 2% support that this big a crowd would come in here today?” Kennedy said.
He said other polls, like the November 2023 Quinnipiac University poll, show he has growing popularity, and that popularity is reflected when he is listed as an option for the next president. That fight — to be listed and recognized as a candidate alongside President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump — is what brought Kennedy to Iowa. He is currently fighting for a spot on the general election ballot in multiple states – his campaign and supporting super PAC have also said they have collected enough signatures to be listed as a candidate in the November election in states including Nevada, New Hampshire, Michigan, Arizona and Georgia.
Typically, presidential candidates must get 3,500 signatures from at least 19 counties on a petition to qualify for the ballot. But the law also allows third-party presidential candidates to qualify by hosting a convention with at least 500 eligible Iowa voters from 25 counties attending who sign a form attesting they were at the event. With 686 voters from 35 Iowa counties in attendance, campaign staff said the event is expected to meet that requirement.
Both Democrats and Republicans have denounced Kennedy as a potential “spoiler,” hurting their chances in what’s expected to be a close race between Biden and Trump. Members of both major parties have also criticized Kennedy for promoting misinformation on issues like COVID-19. In a news release Friday, Iowa GOP Chairman Jeff Kaufmann called the candidate a “distraction” from the race between Biden and Trump.
Supporters of both Trump and Biden have expressed concerns about the potential impact Kennedy could have on the race, potentially drawing away crucial votes in what’s predicted to be a close race. According to reporting by USA Today, the Democratic National Committee has hired attorneys to monitor Kennedy’s endeavors to gain ballot access across the country, concerned about voters who would prefer an alternative to Biden. He said he was disappointed to see Democrats use “underhanded tricks” to try to keep him from being on states’ ballots.
Kennedy criticized both parties as fear-mongering, claiming they are working to dissuade voters from supporting his campaign. The candidate said Biden and Trump have “narrow” differences, largely on culture war issues like abortion, border security and transgender rights. He said that while these issues are important, the two presumptive nominees are ignoring important issues like the federal deficit, corporate influence on politics and declining health of Americans – a phenomenon he linked to “processed foods” and farming practices involving potentially dangerous chemicals.