The Boston Globe

Biden and Trump allies are racing to define RFK Jr.

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Joe Biden’s allies are racing to blunt the presidenti­al campaign of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., casting his third-party effort as a stalking-horse bid designed to boost Donald Trump’s chances — even as his wide-ranging policy positions make him a threat to both.

Kennedy injected new urgency into the Democratic effort this month by securing a spot on the ballot in Michigan, a swing state vitally important to Biden’s victory plans. Trump narrowly won the state in 2016 and Biden nabbed it back in 2020. If Kennedy draws more votes from one or the other, he could flip the state’s 16 Electoral College votes and maybe the election.

Both sides are racing to define Kennedy. For Democrats, he’s a fringe conspiracy theorist not even backed by his siblings in the famed political dynasty, a vaccine skeptic who has waffled over prosecutio­ns of Jan. 6,

2021, riot participan­ts. Trump most recently called him an environmen­tal extremist and openborder advocate unworthy of a protest vote against Biden, though he has also touted Kennedy’s Democratic roots to try to hurt the president.

Kennedy’s rise, from unsuccessf­ul primary challenger to mystery-box third-party contender, illustrate­s the volatile nature of the 2024 campaign, with polls showing voters wish they had a choice other than the Biden-Trump rematch.

Kennedy, 70, is viewed favorably by 29 percent of swing-state voters who opted for Biden in 2020 but viewed favorably by 50 percent of voters who selected Trump that year, according to the latest Bloomberg News/ Morning Consult poll, with similar numbers in Michigan.

“He is a challenge for both sides,” said Jim Messina, who managed Barack Obama’s 2012 reelection bid. “But on the Democratic side, I feel comfortabl­e that, once we get education, we can drive his numbers through the floor.”

Kennedy’s biggest donors come from the world of Trump backers.

Timothy Mellon gave $20 million to American Values

2024, Kennedy’s allied super political action committee, and has also given $15 million to a group backing Trump. Leila Centner, an anti-vaccine activist, gave $1 million.

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