Sweetwater Reporter

The Democrats’ Trump Wannabee

- BY MONA CHAREN

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is causing eyebrows to arch all over the political world. The 69-year-old son of slain Sen. Robert F. Kennedy is a former environmen­tal lawyer turned vaccine conspiraci­st. On April 19, he announced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for president. His aim? To “end the corrupt merger of state and corporate power.”

Would you imagine such a platform attracting followers? Well, he’s been racking up some startling poll numbers. Fox News put him at 19%, and Emerson College found 21% support. Those are some impressive percentage­s for a challenger to a sitting president.

Let’s start with the name. About a dozen Kennedys have dotted the political landscape over the decades, and no other political family has matched their glamor or celebrity. But this is a different kind of Kennedy.

Let’s review. Just after Donald Trump was elected, a parade of notables trooped to Trump Tower to be interviewe­d by the president-elect: Kanye West, Rick Santorum, Sonny Perdue, Rick Perry, Omarosa Manigault, Mike Flynn. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was there, too. Odd, you might say, for a major Democratic figure? But not when you consider that he went off the rails decades ago and his manias about dark forces and evil schemes. It all fits smoothly into Trump’s own cracked obsessions. He was an early proponent and supersprea­der of the thoroughly debunked claim that childhood vaccines cause autism.

Perhaps you’ve heard of the crazed theory that Microsoft’s Bill Gates was implanting microchips into patients through vaccines? Thank RFK Jr. for giving it oxygen. He posted a YouTube video that accused Gates of developing this “injectable chip” to enable Big Tech to track people’s movements. RFK Jr. has also circulated the bogus notion that 5G alters human DNA, causes cancer and is part of a vast program of surveillan­ce. He does not believe Lee Harvey Oswald killed his uncle; he fingers the CIA. Not surprising­ly, he also believes that Sirhan Sirhan, convicted of killing his father, is innocent and has urged his release. Kennedy’s view of who murdered his father? Also the CIA.

Unsurprisi­ngly, when COVID hit, RFK Jr. was ready. On Dec. 6, 2021, he said that the COVID vaccine is “the deadliest vaccine ever made.” He published a book accusing Anthony Fauci and Bill Gates of being in cahoots to profit off vaccines and told a rally crowd in 2022 that things were worse today than during the Holocaust: “Even in Hitler’s Germany ... you could cross the Alps to Switzerlan­d. You could hide in an attic like Anne Frank did,” whereas “the mechanisms are being put in place that will make it so none of us can run and none of us can hide.”

RFK Jr.’s nonprofit has been banned from Instagram and Facebook for spreading disinforma­tion about COVID. He has wallowed in martyrdom, complainin­g that Big Tech is silencing him for “disagreein­g.”

One more item to complete this grim picture: RFK Jr. is anti-Ukraine, spouting Russian propaganda about provocatio­ns from “fascists” in Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s regime and American “neo-cons.” This is not out of character. A couple of decades ago, he was agog for Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez, who holds a record for the speed with which he plunged a reasonably prosperous country into chaos and destitutio­n (before posthumous­ly stealing the 2020 election for Joe Biden, of course).

It is difficult to imagine that his poll numbers will hold up once Democrats draw a bead on what he believes. But there is another audience that is proving quite receptive — Republican­s.

Benjamin Braddock, writing in The American Mind, a Claremont Institute outlet, praised RFK Jr., because “RFK Jr. is thus far the only announced presidenti­al candidate who has declared his intention to prosecute officials who betrayed the public trust in the course of the pandemic.” Of course. Jailing Fauci.

Over at National Review, Michael Brendan Dougherty notes mildly that some of RFK Jr.’s message “resonates” with him: “The government lies to us. The media lies to us.”

Just for the record, it isn’t “crony capitalism” RFK Jr. despises; it’s straight-up capitalism. He wanted to jail the Koch brothers before sending them to the Hague as war criminals. He described the Cato Institute, the American Enterprise Institute, ExxonMobil and a raft of other entities as “snake pits for sociopaths” before recommendi­ng treason charges against Southern Company and Exxon. Any fan of Hugo Chavez is not against “crony capitalism”; he hates the real thing.

RFK Jr., like Trump, has swum for decades in the cesspool of conspiraci­es, lies, baseless accusation­s and ginnedup outrage. We hardly pause to note it, because Trump has committed so many other outrages, but he cost tens of thousands of Americans their lives thanks to minimizing the seriousnes­s of COVID. RFK Jr., too, belongs in the select company of major figures who have used their power for harm. Perhaps he isn’t quite right in the head. Who knows? But the fact that he appeals to significan­t numbers of Americans, and particular­ly to those who have always been on the other side of the aisle, suggests that he is far from alone in that.

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