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How Kennedy Jr. can make 1st debate stage under stringent Biden-Trump rules

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has long argued that the biggest hurdle of his presidential campaign is the perception that independent candidates can’t win. He has looked to the debates as a singular opportunity to stand alongside Joe Biden and Donald Trump in front of a massive audience.

Quick Read

  • Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Seeks Debate Stage Access: RFK Jr. aims to join the presidential debates to challenge Joe Biden and Donald Trump, facing stringent criteria under a new debate schedule agreed by the Biden and Trump campaigns.
  • Debate Qualification Criteria: Kennedy must secure ballot access in states contributing at least 270 electoral votes and achieve 15% in four reliable national polls to be invited to the first debate on June 27, as set by CNN.
  • Current Ballot Status: Kennedy has confirmed ballot placement in Delaware, Oklahoma, and Utah, totaling 16 electoral votes. He is also the nominee of minor parties in California, Hawaii, and Michigan, potentially increasing his total to 89 electoral votes.
  • Signature Collection Challenges: Kennedy’s campaign reports sufficient signatures collected in several states (Idaho, Iowa, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Texas), potentially adding up to 112 electoral votes, though these are pending official confirmation.
  • Strategic Ballot Access Tactics: Facing stringent submission and validation requirements, Kennedy has used various strategies, including allying with minor parties and forming his own party in some states, to secure nominations and meet ballot access requirements.
  • Deadline Pressures: The campaign is strategically timing the submission of signatures to limit scrutiny and challenges from opponents, particularly from the Democratic National Committee.
  • Funding for Ballot Access: Nicole Shanahan, Kennedy’s vice presidential nominee, has injected $8 million of her own funds into the campaign to support ballot access efforts, part of a broader $15 million strategy to ensure Kennedy’s presence on the debate stage.

The Associated Press has the story:

How Kennedy Jr. can make 1st debate stage under stringent Biden-Trump rules

Newslooks- PHOENIX (AP) —

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has long argued that the biggest hurdle of his presidential campaign is the perception that independent candidates can’t win. He has looked to the debates as a singular opportunity to stand alongside Joe Biden and Donald Trump in front of a massive audience.

But to make the first debate stage, he’ll have to secure a place on the ballot in at least a dozen more states and improve his showing in national polls in one month.

With a famous name and a loyal base, Kennedy has the potential to do better than any third-party presidential candidate since Ross Perot in the 1990s. Both the Biden and Trump campaigns, who fear he could play spoiler, bypassed the nonpartisan debate commission and agreed to a schedule that leaves Kennedy very little time to qualify for the first debate.

Publicly, Kennedy is expressing confidence that he will make the stage.

Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. speaks to supporters during a campaign event, Sunday, April 21, 2024, in Royal Oak, Mich. (AP Photo/Jose Juarez)

“I look forward to holding Presidents Biden and Trump accountable for their records in Atlanta on June 27 to give Americans the debate they deserve,” he posted on the X platform.

CNN has said candidates will be invited if they’ve secured a place on the ballot in states with at least 270 votes in the Electoral College, the minimum needed to win the presidency, and have hit 15% in four reliable polls published since March 13. The criteria mirror those used by the Commission on Presidential Debates, the nonpartisan group that has organized debates since 1988, except the commission’s first debate would have been in September, giving Kennedy more time.

Kennedy doesn’t appear to have met the polling criteria yet, although he has reached 15% or higher in at least two polls meeting CNN’s standards.

The ballot access hurdle is even tougher.

State officials have confirmed Kennedy’s place on the ballot in Delaware, Oklahoma and Utah, which have just 16 electoral votes between them. In California, Hawaii and Michigan, minor parties have selected Kennedy as their nominee, in effect offering up existing ballot lines, though the states have not formally affirmed Kennedy’s position. Adding them would bring Kennedy’s total to 89 electoral votes, though it’s not clear that his position in those states would meet CNN’s criteria.

In this combination photo, President Joe Biden speaks in Milwaukee, March 13, 2024, left, and former President Donald Trump speaks in New York, Jan. 11, 2024. A new poll conducted April 4-8 from the AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research finds that more than half of U.S. adults think Biden’s presidency has hurt the country on cost of living and immigration. Meanwhile, nearly half think Trump’s presidency hurt the country on voting rights and election security, relations with foreign countries, abortion laws and climate change. (AP Photo)

Kennedy’s campaign says he has collected enough signatures in Idaho, Iowa, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio and Texas, states with 112 electoral votes in total. But he has either not submitted the signatures or they have not yet been affirmed by state election officials.

Those states still only add up to 201 electoral votes.

Independent candidates like Kennedy face a labyrinth of laws that vary wildly from state to state but generally require hundreds or thousands of signatures and compliance with strict deadlines.

The patchwork of laws is littered with pitfalls. And the Democratic National Committee has pledged to scrutinize Kennedy’s submissions for mistakes that could keep him off the ballot or at least tie up his campaign’s time and money.

From left, to right, Jacob Strumwasser, Nicole Shanahan, Presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Cheryl Hines stand together on stage during a campaign event, Tuesday, March 26, 2024, in Oakland, Calif. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)

Kennedy, in turn, has resorted to secrecy and creative tactics in a sort of cat-and-mouse game to get on the ballot before his critics can thwart him. In California, Delaware and Michigan, Kennedy allied with little-known existing parties and received their nominations. In Hawaii, he formed his own political party to nominate him, and he’s pursued a similar strategy in Mississippi and North Carolina.

Elsewhere, he’s waiting to turn in signatures until the deadline to limit the time for critics to pore over them in search of errors. Getting on the debate stage next month would almost certainly require him to change his strategy and submit the petitions he’s sitting on as soon as possible.

Signatures are due in New York by May 28, which would get Kennedy 28 votes closer if they’re affirmed in time. He could then try to make an all-out push in a bunch of states with relatively easy requirements — many require 5,000 or fewer signatures, but they generally don’t bring many electoral votes — or focus on bigger states, such as Illinois with 19 electoral votes or Florida with 30.

Further complicating matters, some states aren’t yet accepting filings from potential independent candidates and won’t before the first debate.

Kennedy’s vice presidential nominee, Nicole Shanahan, who is divorced from Google co-founder Sergei Brin, committed $8 million from her personal fortune for ballot access, the campaign announced Thursday, declaring their $15 million effort “fully funded.”

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