The growing disgrace and danger of Robert F. Kennedy Junior
Robert F. Kennedy
Junior has apologized to relatives after his Super Bowl ad last Sunday, which
mirrored an ad broadcast by his uncle John F. Kennedy’s campaign in 1960. Jack Ohman/Tribune Content Agency
The Super Bowl ad
included images of RFK Jr. spliced into the original 1960 ad and a jaunty
jingle that repeated the Kennedy surname 15 times in 30 seconds.
RFK Junior said
the ad was the work of his SuperPAC and he had nothing to do with it.
Rubbish. Junior
placed the ad at the top of his X feed, and it remained there Monday.
The ad cost $7
million. Timothy Mellon — grandson of Andrew Mellon and an heir to the Mellon
banking fortune — gave RFK Junior’s SuperPAC $15 million.
Hmmm. Mellon is
also a major donor to PACs supporting Trump. RFK Junior’s candidacy is backed
by a PAC that also funds Marjorie Taylor Greene.
No one should doubt that Trump and Trump
donors are behind RFK Junior’s campaign, with the goal of siphoning off enough
votes from Biden to ensure a Trump victory.
How does RFK Junior intend to get on enough state ballots to hurt Biden? As he told CNN last week, he and officials from the Libertarian Party, which has ballot access, "are talking."
In a poll conducted late last year, RFK Junior was
supported by 22 percent of respondents and a greater number of independent
voters than either President Biden or Trump. In January, Gallup reported that 52 percent of Americans
view RFK Junior favorably — a higher percentage than either Biden (41 percent)
or Trump (42 percent) received.
These results
reflect the popularity of the Kennedy name and dissatisfaction with the likely
nominees of the major parties. In addition, RFK Junior has not received the
public scrutiny that presidential candidates inevitably get.
It’s time to lift
the curtain on a campaign based on false, irresponsible and self-contradictory
claims.
At a time when the
truth is a precious common good, RFK Junior has been spreading dangerous lies.
He claims that COVID-19 was “targeted to attack Caucasians
and Black people” and that “the people who are most immune are Ashkenazi Jews
and Chinese.”
And that “the
Chinese are spending hundreds of millions of dollars developing ethnic
bioweapons and we are developing ethnic bioweapons. They’re collecting Russian
DNA. They’re collecting Chinese DNA so we can target people by race.”
RFK Junior has
also promoted the baseless claim linking vaccines to autism. He’s been a
leading proponent of COVID-19 vaccine misinformation, erroneously
suggesting the vaccine has killed more people than it has saved.
In his 2021
book, The Real Anthony Fauci: Bill Gates, Big Pharma, and the
Global War on Democracy and Public Health, he alleged,
without plausible evidence, that Dr. Fauci performed “genocidal experiments,
sabotaged treatments for AIDS, and conspired with Bill Gates to suppress
information about COVID-19.” This is libelous nonsense.
RFK Junior’s
misinformation about vaccines continues to endanger public health.
Friends, I knew Robert F. Kennedy, and
Robert F. Kennedy Junior is no Robert F. Kennedy.
I worked in Robert
F. Kennedy’s Senate office in 1967. It wasn’t a glamorous job. I ran the
signature machine. But I did have a chance to get to see Bobby Kennedy close
up.
I watched Robert
F. Kennedy stand up for economic and social justice. I witnessed him bringing
together people of every race and ethnicity — to demand equal rights and an end
to the Vietnam War.
Robert F. Kennedy would never have
suggested that a deadly virus was targeted at certain races. He wouldn’t have
repeated the trope, dating at least to the Middle Ages, that Jews unleashed a
plague on non-Jews.
Another contrast
with his father and his uncle: In 1962, President John F. Kennedy signed the
Vaccination Assistance Act in order to, in the words of a CDC report, “achieve as quickly
as possible the protection of the population, especially of all preschool
children ... through intensive immunization activity.”
If not for his
lustrous name, RFK Junior would be just another crackpot in the growing pool of
bottom-feeding right-wing fringe politicians seeking to help Trump.
But the Kennedy
brand is political gold, and it could pull away just enough unwitting
Democratic voters to tip the race to Trump.
Democracy won by a
whisker in 2020. Just 44,000 votes in Arizona, Georgia, and Wisconsin decided
the outcome. If RFK Junior or any third-party candidate peels off just a
fraction of the vote from Biden, while Trump’s base stays with him, they will
deliver a victory to Trump.
That the good name
of the Robert F. Kennedy I worked for 57 years ago is being used to increase
the risk of a Trump victory is beyond shameful.
If Junior had any
respect for the principles his father fought and ultimately died for, he would
withdraw his candidacy immediately.
Please help spread
the word.