Sweetwater Reporter

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. convenes hundreds in Iowa to try for access to November ballot

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WEST DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Robert F. Kennedy Jr. launched a one-day blitz Saturday to gain access to Iowa’s presidenti­al ballot as an independen­t candidate. Whether he succeeded is an outstandin­g question. Kennedy attempted to qualify by holding a convention with at least 500 eligible Iowa voters representi­ng at least 25 counties. Before adjourning the convention Saturday, chair Dave Owen announced that 686 delegates representi­ng more than 35 counties in Iowa were in attendance, figures that could not immediatel­y be verified.

Kennedy and his allies are working to secure a ballot line in all 50 states as they mount a bid that has worried allies of both President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump about losing enough votes to swing the election. So far, Utah is the only state that has confirmed he is on the ballot.

A spokespers­on with the Iowa secretary of state’s office confirmed before Saturday’s event that the office had been contacted by the Kennedy campaign and responded by providing this year’s publicly available guide for candidates. As people shuffled into a music venue Saturday, announceme­nts from campaign staffers rang out over the speakers. The audience was told there were 300 people at 2:36 p.m. Central time; 400 about 20 minutes later. At 3:08 p.m., a staffer announced they had exceeded 500 people.

As he has in other campaign events, Kennedy drew longtime fans of his message as well as people who are frustrated by the impending rematch of the 2020 election. Jeremy Youngers of Waukee, Iowa, said he doesn’t like Biden or Trump. Youngers has been listening to Kennedy’s podcast and his appearance­s on other podcasts for years and said he was excited when Kennedy announced his candidacy.

“This is an opportunit­y that we have to really make a difference,” the 42-year-old said, accompanie­d by his wife and two children.

Kristy Tierney, 45, drove about 180 miles (280 kilometers) from eastern Iowa to do her part in ensuring that voters have another option on the ballot in November.

“All they need is 500 people to show up here to get Bobby on the ballot,” the Bettendorf resident said. “So I thought, you know, I can drive a couple hours to make that happen.” Tierney said she’s fed up with the two-party system and voting against candidates, rather than for them.

“I haven’t decided,” she said of her pick for president in November, “but I just think it’s important to have another option.”

Kennedy is the nephew of President John F. Kennedy and son of Robert F. Kennedy, a former attorney general and U.S. senator. Both his father and uncle were assassinat­ed. He has since built a reputation of his own as an activist, author and lawyer for environmen­tal causes.

Along the way, his activism has veered into conspiraci­es and contradict­ed scientific consensus, notably on vaccines. Some members of his family have publicly criticized his views.

Kennedy chose Nicole Shanahan to be his vice presidenti­al pick, both leaving the Democratic Party to launch an independen­t White House bid.

Kennedy is drawing attention, with the help of his famous name, as an alternativ­e to the major-party candidates who are underwhelm­ing American voters, though no independen­t candidate has won Electoral College votes in decades. He took the stage to applause and cheers from a crowd on their feet, immediatel­y addressing how his campaign — and the voters in the room supporting him — has been dismissed.

“If you want more of the same, you should vote for them,” Kennedy said of Biden and Trump. “Does anybody here want more of the same?” A chorus of “no” responded. An anti-vaccine group Kennedy led has a lawsuit pending against a number of news organizati­ons, among them The Associated Press, accusing them of violating antitrust laws by taking action to identify misinforma­tion, including about COVID19 and COVID-19 vaccines. Kennedy took leave from the group when he announced his run for president but is listed as one of its attorneys in the lawsuit.

Gas Prices Fall

(continued from Page 1) to de-escalate going forward,”

Neighborin­g areas and their said Patrick De Haan, head current gas prices: of petroleum analysis at

Midland Odessa- $3.28/g, GasBuddy. up 5.7 cents per gallon from “If Israel, which has promised last week’s $3.22/g. to respond with further

San Antonio- $3.01/g, down attacks, indeed does press on, 12.0 cents per gallon from last it could certainly still push week’s $3.13/g. oil prices higher. However,

Austin- $3.06/g, down motorists can expect other 9.9 cents per gallon from last factors to influence what week’s $3.16/g. they’re paying at the pump.

“With Iran’s attack on Israel Motorists in the mid-Atlantic over the weekend, the stakes and Northeaste­rn U.S. will couldn’t have been higher for soon see a spike in prices as a major potential impact on they make the leap to summer oil and gasoline prices. With gasoline— as much as the attacks largely thrawted 20-50 cents per gallon higher and mostly unsuccessf­ul, and in nearly a dozen states. with Iran signaling that their On the West Coast, price attack will be the end of their increases should finally slow, response, the risk to crude but the national average will oil has diminished, and the likely climb again in the coming situation is thankfully likely week.”

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