Anti-vaccine activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. launches 2024 U.S presidential bid
Robert
F. Kennedy Jr., the anti-vaccine activist and environmental lawyer, described
himself as a truth-teller who will “end the division” as he launched his bid for the 2024 Democratic presidential nomination on
Wednesday in Boston.
Kennedy used
his campaign launch speech to lambast school and business closures during the
coronavirus pandemic and to insist that government and media “lie to us.”
“My mission
over the next 18 months of this campaign and throughout my presidency,” he
said, “will be to end the corrupt merger of state and corporate power that is
threatening now – threatening now – to impose a new kind of corporate feudalism
in our country; to commoditize our children, our purple mountain’s majesty; to
poison our children and our people with chemicals and pharmaceutical drugs; to
strip-mine our assets; to hollow out the middle class and keep us in a constant
state of war.”
The
69-year-old Kennedy is the nephew of former President John F. Kennedy and son
of former US attorney general and assassinated 1968 presidential candidate
Robert Kennedy.
He joins
self-help guru Marianne Williamson in a presidential primary that President Joe
Biden is soon expected to enter as the overwhelming favorite.
One hurdle likely facing Kennedy as he attempts to win over
Democratic voters: his own family. Some Kennedy family members have denounced
his views on vaccines. He has also clashed with his mother and siblings over
his support for the release of Sirhan Sirhan, the man who shot and killed his
father in a moment that changed US history.
He acknowledged in his speech the opposition within
his own family to his presidential bid.
“Other members of my family who are not here today
– I’m going to make a confession because I know most American families, they
never have any differences with each other,” he said. “So when that happens
with a family, it’s really huge news, like everywhere.”
Still, he said he bears “no ill will or any kind of
disappointment” toward family members who oppose his run.
He also pointed out a list of family members who he
said were on hand Wednesday, including children, grandchildren, siblings and
cousins.
“I told them to wear name tags,” he said of his
children.
Kennedy made the announcement Wednesday in a
ballroom of the Boston Park Plaza hotel, which was bathed in red, white and
blue lights, before a backdrop of American flags, patriotic bunting and signs
celebrating Kennedy 2024.
More
than 500 people filled chairs, with a few hundred more standing in an overflow
area, as signs were passed out to the crowd with a succinct campaign message:
“Heal the divide.”
A brass band
played as Kennedy family photographs played in a loop on large screens at the
front of the room. Volunteers distributed Kennedy 2024 signs and bumper
stickers.
Kennedy
lives in Los Angeles, but he chose Boston as a nod to his family’s deep
political roots in the city, even though his father, Robert F. Kennedy,
declared his presidential ambitions in the Senate Caucus Room on Capitol Hill
in 1968, the same place his uncle, John F. Kennedy, launched his presidential
campaign in 1960.
He’s hardly
the first Kennedy to take on a sitting Democratic president. Another uncle,
Sen. Edward Kennedy, challenged Jimmy Carter for the party’s nomination in 1980
and lost decisively in a bitter campaign that divided the party for years to
come.
For more
than six decades, the reverence to the Kennedy name remains unparalleled in
American politics, but the presidential announcement on Wednesday was met with
resistance from some admirers of the family.
“I’m a
lifelong Democrat, but I will not be voting for Robert Kennedy Jr. because I
cannot stomach the anti-vaccine thing,” said Tyson Humble of Portland, Oregon,
who was visiting the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum. “The
Kennedy name isn’t enough. If he’s going to go around saying crazy stuff like
that, it’s kind of a distraction more than anything.”
Others
acknowledged they didn’t know much about Kennedy’s environmental activism or
controversial stance on vaccines.
“I’m willing
to listen to what a person has to say, but I see no reason to displace Joe
Biden,” said Bob Howland, who was visiting the Kennedy library from Pittsburgh.
Tricia
Santi, who took the train from Maine to attend the announcement, said she’s a
longtime admirer of the Kennedy family and a strong supporter of his message
against government mandates for vaccinations. But she said his presidential
candidacy excited her for other reasons, including shining a brighter spotlight
on his environmental activism.
“I’ve been
following him for many years with his advocacy work,” Santi said. “I think he
would make an excellent candidate to bring the country together to tell the
truth about everything.”
She knows
his views on vaccinations are controversial, but she called him “a choice
candidate” who favors personal autonomy.
Judy
McIntyre stood in the ballroom, wearing a Kennedy button and a white T-shirt
saying “question everything.” She said she hoped his presidential campaign
would draw more attention to not only vaccination mandates, but also other
progressive positions.
“Don’t fall
for the one-subject anti-vax thing,” McIntyre said. “Keep an open mind, listen
to him, listen to his message. He’s been cleaning up the environment for
years.”
A Boston
native and long admirer of the Kennedy family, McIntyre said she was not
bothered by the criticism from his family.
“I put
nobody on a pedestal, but I really believe in his message,” McIntyre said. “I
come from a big Irish family, too. Everybody is entitled to how they feel.
Agree to disagree – that’s what you have to do.”
Longtime
vaccine skeptic and environmental activist
Kennedy is a
longtime vaccine skeptic. He has promoted discredited claims linking vaccines
and autism and founded the anti-vaccine organization Children’s Health Defense.
In 2019,
three members of his family – his sister Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, brother
Joseph P. Kennedy II and niece Maeve Kennedy McKean – forcefully denounced his
anti-vaccine views in a Politico Magazine op-ed, arguing that he was “part of a
misinformation campaign that’s having heartbreaking – and deadly –
consequences.”
Kennedy was
a strident critic of the government’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic and
its top infectious disease expert, Anthony Fauci. He also railed against the
coronavirus vaccine and vaccine mandates.
In 2022,
Kennedy invoked Nazi Germany in an anti-vaccine speech at the Lincoln Memorial
in Washington, DC. The previous year, Instagram took down his account “for
repeatedly sharing debunked claims about the coronavirus or vaccines.”
Kennedy is
the latest in a long line of family members to seek to enter politics.
His sister
Kathleen served as the lieutenant governor of Maryland from 1995 to 2003. His
brother Joseph was a congressman from Massachusetts from 1987 to 1999. And more
recently, his brother Chris Kennedy was an unsuccessful candidate for governor
of Illinois in 2018.
The last
Kennedy to hold elected office was his nephew former Massachusetts Rep. Joe
Kennedy III, who lost a Democratic Senate primary in 2020. (He is now the US
special envoy for Northern Ireland.) Caroline Kennedy, the daughter of former
President Kennedy, is currently the US ambassador to Australia.
The 2024
Democratic presidential primary is only beginning to take shape. Williamson
launched her second long-shot campaign for the Democratic presidential
nomination last month. CNN previously reported that Biden has told several
elected officials in private conversations that he is “definitely running” for
reelection but some Democratic officials have said a formal announcement is more
likely to come this summer.
On the
Republican side, former President Donald Trump jump-started the race for the
party nomination, announcing his third bid for the White House last year.
Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson and
tech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy are also in the race, while South Carolina
Sen. Tim Scott launched an exploratory committee earlier this month. Other
high-profile Republicans said to be weighing bids include Florida Gov. Ron
DeSantis and former Vice President Mike Pence.
Want to send us a story? SMS to 25170 or WhatsApp 0743570000 or Submit on Citizen Digital or email wananchi@royalmedia.co.ke
Comments
No comments yet.
Leave a Comment