New York Post

RFK’S LATEST THREAT TO JOE

- By DIANA GLEBOVA

Independen­t presidenti­al candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will be on the ballot in Michigan this November, likely making it harder for President Biden to keep the state in the Democratic column.

The Michigan Secretary of State’s Office confirmed to The Post on Thursday that Kennedy will be listed as a candidate in the Nov. 5 election after he and running mate Nicole Shanahan were nominated for president and vice president by the Natural Law Party of Michigan.

Kennedy, 70, was polling at 13% in the Mitten State, according to a survey conducted this month by Marketing Resource Group.

In a five-way matchup, the poll found former President Donald Trump received 37% support, President Biden got 34%, Green Party candidate Jill Stein got 2% and independen­t candidate Cornel West got 1%.

The survey also showed Kennedy edging Biden into third place among self-described independen­t voters, with Trump getting 33% of that demographi­c, RFK Jr. 22% and Biden 21%.

Kennedy also got 40% support among so-called “double-haters,” referring to potential voters who dislike both Biden and Trump. The 45th president was a distant second with 11% support in that demographi­c, followed by Biden with 10%

‘Most qualified’

Kennedy was scheduled to mark his ballot success by hosting a comedy show Sunday night in the Detroit suburb of Royal Oak, with former “Saturday Night Live” stalwart Rob Schneider headlining.

Biden, who won Michigan by fewer than 155,000 votes out of more than 5.5 million ballots cast in 2020, already faced an uphill effort to retain the state’s 15 electoral votes after more than 100,000 people cast “uncommitte­d” ballots in the Feb. 27 Democratic primary to protest the president’s handling of the war in the Middle East.

Kennedy is aiming to get on the ballot in all 50 states — a difficult task given the varying qualificat­ions needed for each contest.

The independen­t’s team maintains he’s already on the ballot in Utah and has enough signatures to qualify in Hawaii, Idaho, Iowa, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire and North Carolina.

“We have the field teams, volunteers, legal teams, paid circulator­s, supporters and strategist­s ready to get the job done,” said campaign press secretary Stefanie Spear. “We are exceeding all our benchmarks and will announce new states each week.”

But RFK Jr. — the son of onetime presidenti­al candidate Robert F. Kennedy Sr. and nephew of 35th President John F. Kennedy — won’t be getting any family votes.

No support from kin

More than a dozen members of the Kennedy family gave their formal endorsemen­t of President Biden’s re-election Thursday.

Those in attendance included RFK Jr.’s sisters Rory Kennedy, Kerry Kennedy and Kathleen Kennedy Townsend; his brothers Joseph P. Kennedy II, Christophe­r Kennedy and Maxwell Kennedy Sr.; nephew Joe Kennedy III; and cousin Edward Kennedy Jr.

RFK Jr. has said he intends to be a “spoiler” for both Trump and Biden and wants to pull votes away from both rivals.

He has run a campaign focused on his anti-COVID vaccine, antiwar and environmen­tal policies.

Both top party candidates have had their supporters attack Kennedy — with Trump’s super PAC Make American Great Again Inc. launching a “Radical F--king Kennedy” website Monday and more than a dozen Kennedy family members endorsing Biden on Thursday.

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