Democrats have long worried that Robert F. Kennedy Jr. would leave the Democratic primaries and run independently—but it's not only President Joe Biden that Kennedy could pull support from.
As an independent run becomes increasingly likely, Republicans are now expressing concerns that Kennedy could jeopardize the 2024 election for the GOP frontrunner, former President Donald Trump.
Turning Point USA Founder Charlie Kirk suggested on his show last week that the reports about panic from Democrats over an independent Kennedy run are a "strategy" to conceal the threat that Kennedy would pose to the Republican Party.
"Far more of the 'I don't trust the government' brigade would vote for RFK Jr. if he were run as a Libertarian," Kirk said, adding that "Libertarians being on the ballot almost always hurt Republicans."
Kennedy, a candidate running for the Democratic nomination thus far, is expected to drop his challenge to Biden on October 9 and launch an independent bid instead. Despite being the closest Democratic threat to Biden and garnering double-digit support, Kennedy trails Biden by 50 points, multiple polls show.
Democrats have feared that should Kennedy run as an independent, the shakeup could deal a blow to the president in a Biden-Trump rematch, where Kennedy could take more centrist votes from Biden and further weaken a Biden advantage over Trump.
But a super political action committee (PAC) supporting Kennedy countered projections that anticipate an independent run would be a victory for Trump's campaign, saying in a Monday press release that, "The opposite is true. Kennedy is taking more votes from Trump than from Biden."
A poll conducted by the American Values 2024 PAC found that in a general election between Trump, Biden and a generic "independent candidate," Trump would come out on top with 40 percent, Biden lagging behind at 38 percent and the independent candidate down at 17 percent. But, if the race were to be Trump, Biden and Kennedy, Kennedy would see 19 percent support and leave Trump and Biden tied at 38 percent.
"RFK cant win but he can deny Trump the White House and hand it to Dems," far-right activist Jack Posobiec wrote on X, formerly Twitter.
Fox News anchor Martha MacCallum also argued to her colleagues that Kennedy "has a lot of support among [Joe] Rogan listeners, Jordan Peterson listeners, and what he's talking about in this video is that there has to be a different path."
"He has a lot of people, young people, very interested in what he's saying," she said.