Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to address the country from Phoenix amid dropout speculation
PHOENIX - Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is expected to make an address in Phoenix on Friday.
Per a brief statement on Kennedy's campaign website, officials said Kennedy will address the nation live about "the present historical moment and his path forward." The address, as currently scheduled, will happen on the same day former President Donald Trump is scheduled to hold a rally at the Desert Diamond Arena in Glendale.
The announcement is fueling growing speculation that Kennedy could drop out and support Trump. Kennedy's running mate, Nicole Shanahan, openly discussed the possibility on a podcast this week, saying the campaign was considering a move to "join forces" with Trump to limit the election chance of Kamala Harris, whose Democratic convention winds up Thursday night in Chicago.
The move would have once seemed unthinkable for Kennedy, a Democrat for most of his life and - as the nephew of President John F. Kennedy and the son of Robert F. Kennedy - a member of a beloved Democratic dynasty.
A spokesperson for Kennedy, Stefanie Spear, declined to say whether he planned to drop out or why he chose Arizona for his speech.
After leaving the Democratic primary to run as an independent, Kennedy, 70, built an unusually strong base of support for someone running without the backing of a major party. It was unclear exactly where his support was coming from, which worried Republicans and Democrats alike.
However, since President Joe Biden ended his re-election campaign and Democrats coalesced around Vice President Harris as their nominee, Kennedy's rise has been stunted. It looks increasingly unlikely that he will be able to make the debate stage when Trump and Harris face off next month, a moment Kennedy counted on for momentum and legitimacy. His campaign finances have also been strained.
Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr., in a photo taken in May 2024. (Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
News of the address came a little over a week since a New York judge ruled that Kennedy should not appear on the ballot in the state because he listed a ‘sham’ address on nominating petitions. Kennedy has appealed, but has faced several similar challenges around the country.
On Wednesday, he was in a courtroom in a suburb of New York City, testifying in a trial for another ballot suit in the state, this one backed by the Democratic National Committee, that challenges the signatures collected by his campaign. Kennedy is also facing a likely legal challenge in Arizona, where last week he submitted signatures that may have been collected by a super PAC that supports him, which Kennedy's critics say is illegal coordination between a candidate and an independent political group.