PHOENIX (AP) — Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has long argued that the biggest hurdle of his presidential campaign is the perception that independent candidates can’t win. He has looked to the debates as a singular opportunity to stand alongside Joe Biden and Donald Trump in front of a massive audience.
But to make the first debate stage, he’ll have to secure a place on the ballot in at least a dozen more states and improve his showing in national polls in one month.
With a famous name and a loyal base, Kennedy has the potential to do better than any third-party presidential candidate since Ross Perot in the 1990s. Both the Biden and Trump campaigns, who fear he could play spoiler, bypassed the nonpartisan debate commission and agreed to a schedule that leaves Kennedy very little time to qualify for the first debate.
Publicly, Kennedy is expressing confidence that he will make the stage.
Related articles:
Related suggestion:
China's top legislature concludes annual sessionChina files over 1,000 new undergraduate education programs in 2023China strengthens crackdown on illegal fishingNEV makers encouraged to speed up overseas developmentXi Receives Honorary Doctorate from King Saud UniversityFull Text of Xi's Written Speech at APEC CEO SummitRoundup: Foreign Leaders, Scholars Mourn Former Chinese Leader JiangVice Premier Stresses Optimizing COVIDNational Winter Games put incing on Olympic legacyXi Meets with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas
2.7276s , 6499.5234375 kb
Copyright © 2024 Powered by How Robert F. Kennedy Jr. could make the first debate stage ,Cultural Current news portal