Despite His Claims, RFK Jr. Hasn't Qualified For CNN Debate: Report
HuffPost
A Washington Post survey found the anti-vaccine conspiracy theorist falls far short of the debate's state ballot requirement.
Despite claims from independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. that he has qualified for enough state ballots to participate in next week’s presidential debate on CNN, a Washington Post survey of state election officials found Tuesday that that’s not the case.
So far, only Delaware, Michigan, Oklahoma and Utah election officials have said Kennedy will appear on their ballots, and he is likely to appear on the California and Hawaii ballots, the survey found. Those states total 100 electoral votes, falling far short of CNN’s required 270 ― the number a candidate needs to win the election.
Kennedy’s campaign has spent months gathering the minimum number of signatures that states require to get an independent candidate on the ballot, but many election officials told the Post that they would still need several more weeks to certify those petitions.
He also hasn’t met CNN’s requirement of earning 15% support in four national polls, though it’s theoretically possible that could change before Thursday’s deadline to meet the debate requirements.
Last month, Kennedy filed an election complaint alleging that CNN is colluding with President Joe Biden and presumptive GOP nominee Donald Trump to exclude him from the debate. A CNN spokesperson pushed back, saying, “The mere application for ballot access does not guarantee that he will appear on the ballot in any state.”