Dayton Daily News

RFK Jr. announces his VP choice

- By Meg Kinnard

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has picked Nicole Shanahan, a California lawyer and philanthro­pist who’s never held elected office, to be his running mate in his independen­t bid for president, he announced Tuesday.

An unconventi­onal choice, Shanahan, who is 38, brings youth and considerab­le wealth to Kennedy’s long-shot campaign but is little known outside Silicon Valley.

Shanahan leads the Bia-Echo Foundation, an organizati­on she founded to direct money toward issues including women’s reproducti­ve science, criminal justice reform and environmen­tal causes. She also is a Stanford University fellow and was the founder and chief executive of ClearAcces­sIP, a patent management firm that was sold in 2020.

Shanahan was married to Google co-founder Sergey Brin from 2018 to 2023, and they have a young daughter. She was raised in the San Francisco Bay Area, where Kennedy made his announceme­nt.

On Tuesday, Shanahan talked about her hardscrabb­le upbringing in Oakland, the daughter of a mother who immigrated from China and an Irish and German-American father “plagued by substance abuse” who “struggled to keep a job.” Touching on her family’s reliance on government assistance, Shanahan said that, although she had become “very wealthy later on in life,” she felt she could relate to Americans being “just one misfortune away from disaster.”

“The purpose of wealth is to help those in need. That’s what it’s for,” Shanahan said. “And I want to bring that back to politics, too. That is the purpose of privilege.”

Before the announceme­nt, Kennedy’s campaign manager and daughter-in-law, Amaryllis Fox Kennedy, praised Shanahan’s work on behalf of “honest governance, racial equity, regenerati­ve agricultur­e and children’s and maternal health.” She said the work “reflects many of our country’s most urgent needs.”

Kennedy, who said Monday in “The State of California” on KCBS radio that his VP search placed a priority on “somebody who could represent young people,” said Tuesday that Shanahan — who he said, like him, has “left the Democratic Party” — also shares his concerns about government overreach and his distrust in political parties’ abilities to make lasting change.

 ?? ERIC RISBERG/AP ?? Nicole Shanahan speaks at a campaign event for Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Tuesday in Oakland, Calif. Shanahan was named as Kennedy Jr.’s running mate.
ERIC RISBERG/AP Nicole Shanahan speaks at a campaign event for Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Tuesday in Oakland, Calif. Shanahan was named as Kennedy Jr.’s running mate.

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