Dayton Daily News

RFK Jr. wants rare 3-way presidenti­al debate

- By Brendan Rascius Tribune News Service

WASHINGTON — Independen­t candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has said he should be included in this year’s presidenti­al debates with President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump — a three-way matchup that would be nearly unpreceden­ted in debate history.

Three debates are scheduled to take place before the November election, the first of which is set for Sept. 16, according to the Commission on Presidenti­al Debates (CPD), the nonprofit that organizes them.

Biden and Trump have not yet formally committed to them, but both have signaled their willingnes­s to debate each other in recent weeks.

Kennedy, an environmen­tal attorney who formally ran for the Democratic primary nomination, told Fox News on May 1, “I should have a spot in those debates.”

He’s also singled out Trump in particular, challengin­g him to a head-tohead discussion at the Libertaria­n party convention in late May.

But, history is not on Kennedy’s side.

Since the first televised presidenti­al debate in 1960, only one set of election year debates has featured a thirdparty candidate alongside the two major party nominees.

And since then, the requiremen­ts to get on stage have become stricter, according to historians.

The first and only threeway presidenti­al debates to be hosted were held in the lead-up to the 1992 election. Independen­t candidate Ross Perot joined Republican President George H.W. Bush and Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton, the Democratic nominee, for three debates hosted by the CPD.

“Perot was invited to take part because his high polling numbers made it impossible to exclude him,” Michael Kazin, a presidenti­al historian at Georgetown University, said.

In June 1992, 52% of voters held a favorable view of Perot, a business magnate, according to Gallup.

Ultimately, Perot lost the general election to Clinton, garnering 19% of the popular vote but no electoral college votes.

While Perot ran again in 1996, he did not meet the criteria to qualify for the debates, Thomas Balcerski, a presidenti­al historian at Eastern Connecticu­t State University, said.

“Perhaps it is a good comparison to RFK Jr. who similarly has been excluded from prime time,” Balcerski said.

Perot sued the CPD in September 1996, seeking to force his way onto the debate stage and claiming his exclusion was unconstitu­tional and that it only served to prop up the two-party system, according to The New York Times. The commission said he was excluded because he “did not have a realistic chance of winning the election,” according to the outlet.

However, a federal court dismissed the case in October 1996, saying Perot lacked jurisdicti­on, according to CNN.

Today, the CPD has three requiremen­ts candidates must meet to qualify for the debates.

First, they must be allowed to hold presidenti­al office under the Constituti­on.

They must also “appear on a sufficient number of state ballots to have a mathematic­al chance of winning a majority vote in the Electoral College; (and) have a level of support of at least 15 percent of the national electorate, as determined by five national public opinion polling organizati­ons.”

The 15% threshold has been criticized by some in recent years for being to restrictiv­e, including Sen. Bernie Sanders, who, in 2016, said it was “probably too high,” according to Politico.

Whether Kennedy meets all of the qualificat­ions is not clear.

He told CNN in April that he would have “no problem” getting on the ballot in every state. So far, he’s qualified for ballot access in five states: California, Delaware, Hawaii, Utah and Michigan, the outlet reported.

He has also reached double-digit support in polls placing him in a three-way matchup with Biden and Trump. In an April Harvard Center for American Political Studies-Harris poll, Kennedy garnered 12% support against Trump’s 44% and Biden’s 38%.

“Mr. Kennedy will definitely be on the debate stage,” Stefanie Spear, his press secretary, told the New York Post in November. “Americans deserve transparen­cy and a chance to see their candidates share their vision for the country.”

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