Kennedy family endorses Biden in blow to RFK Jr.
WASHINGTON – Members of the Kennedy family, one of the most iconic names in Democratic politics, formally endorsed President Joe Biden’s reelection bid Thursday in a rejection of their relative Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who is running for president as an independent.
The endorsement, which the Kennedy family made official at an afternoon Biden campaign rally in Philadelphia, is not a surprise. Several Kennedys had already made their support for Biden known, including by appearing with the president during a St. Patrick’s Day celebration at the White House last month.
Yet the showing of more than a dozen members from the families of President John F. Kennedy and Robert F. Kennedy gives an important boost for Biden as his allies work to keep Robert F. Kennedy Jr. from pulling voters away from Biden.
“Donald Trump is running to take us backwards, attacking the most basic rights and freedoms that are core to who we are as Americans,” Kerry Kennedy, daughter of Robert F. Kennedy and the younger sister of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., said at the rally. “A vote for Joe Biden is a vote to save our democracy and our decency. It is a vote for what my father called for, in his own presidential announcement in 1968 − ‘our right to the moral leadership of this planet.’ ”
Biden considers Robert F. Kennedy, the late former attorney general and U.S. senator from New York, his political hero and displays his bust in the Oval Office.
Among the Kennedys in attendance were former U.S. Reps. Joe Kennedy II and Joe Kennedy III, who currently serves as Biden’s United States special envoy for Northern Ireland.
Others included Beth Kennedy, Christopher Kennedy, Maxwell Taylor Kennedy, Vicki Strauss Kennedy, Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, Kerry Kennedy Meltzer, Max Meltzer, Ted Kennedy Jr., Stephen Kennedy Smith, Peter
McKelvy and Rebeca McKelvy.
Even before Thursday’s endorsement, several Kennedy family members publicly opposed Robert F. Kennedy’s candidacy.
“Bobby might share the same name as our father, but he does not share the same values, vision or judgment,” Kerry Kennedy and three other siblings − Joseph Kennedy II, Rory Kennedy and Kathleen Kennedy Townsend − wrote in a statement after their brother announced his independent bid last October. “We denounce his candidacy and believe it to be perilous for our country.”
In an interview on CNN this month, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. addressed the criticism of his family members. “I’ve got a big family. I don’t know anybody in America who’s got a family who agrees with them on everything,” he said.
Kennedy currently has the support of 11.7% of likely voters nationally, according to a RealClearPolitics average of polls, enough to swing outcomes in battleground states − and Democrats are taking the threat seriously.
The Democratic National Committee brought on a legal team to scrutinize Kennedy’s efforts to make it on the ballots in key swing states, and expanded campaign operations to paint Kennedy as a radical conspiracy theorist who is getting boosted financially by a Trump super PAC’s largest donor.