The Boston Globe

Kennedy super PAC says he will be on Ariz., Ga. ballots

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A super PAC supporting independen­t presidenti­al candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said it has collected enough signatures for his name to appear on the ballots in Georgia and Arizona, two battlegrou­nd states that will help determine who wins the presidency.

The group, American Values 2024, said on its website as of Wednesday morning that it had collected 20,188 signatures in Georgia, well above the 7,500 required there, and an additional 62,605 signatures in Arizona, more than the 42,303 threshold in that state.

While Kennedy faces long odds in Georgia and Arizona, his presence on the ballot could affect which candidate carries the states in a matchup between President Biden and former president Trump.

Arizona and Georgia played critical roles in Biden’s win over Trump in 2020. Biden defeated Trump in Arizona by a little more than 10,000 votes and by nearly 12,000 votes in Georgia.

The PAC aligned with Kennedy has pledged it will spend $15 million to help him get on ballots across the country. The Democratic National Committee has accused Kennedy of violating federal election law with the effort. The DNC alleged in a complaint to the Federal Election Commission that the super PAC cannot take unlimited funds, independen­tly collect signatures, and then transmit them to the campaign.

Amaryllis Fox Kennedy, Kennedy’s campaign manager and daughter-in-law, said the allegation­s are “a nonissue being raised by a partisan political entity that seems to be increasing­ly concerned with its own candidate and viability.” She said the PAC has yet to submit signatures to the campaign.

An email sent to the PAC on Wednesday morning was not immediatel­y returned.

Kennedy has said he is confident he would get his name on every state’s ballot, but he offered few details about how.

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