Tube4vids logo

Your daily adult tube feed all in one place!

RFK reveals he will be on the ballot in key swing state of Nevada: Warning sign for Trump AND Biden with third party candidate threatening to take thousands of votes in battleground that could decide the election

PUBLISHED
UPDATED
VIEWS

Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced on Tuesday that his campaign has collected enough signatures to get on the ballot in the battleground state of Nevada.

His inclusion on the ballot there could have a major impact on who wins the key swing state come November. President Biden won Nevada by less than 35,000 votes in 2020 over Donald Trump.

Kennedy's campaign said it has collected more than 15,000 signatures in Nevada.

He issued a statement on Super Tuesday saying it marked the end of the primary and beginning of the general election.  

'Nearly 70 percent of Americans don’t want a Trump/Biden rematch from 2020,' Kennedy said.

Kennedy's campaign announced he has collected enough signatures to get on the ballot in Nevada. The pro-Kennedy super PAC has said he has qualified to get on the ballots in Arizona and Georgia

Kennedy's campaign announced he has collected enough signatures to get on the ballot in Nevada. The pro-Kennedy super PAC has said he has qualified to get on the ballots in Arizona and Georgia

The pro-Kennedy super PAC American Values 2024 (AV24) has previously said his name will be on the ballots in Georgia and Arizona, meaning Kennedy could impact the results of the election in three critical swing states in 2024.

The Kennedy campaign said it has launched an access plan to get him on the ballot in all 50 states and the District of Columbia and has exceeded all of its benchmarks to date.

Kennedy qualified to get on the Utah ballot in early January.  He has also collected enough signatures to get on the ballots in New Hampshire and Hawaii, according to his campaign. 

The DNC filed complaint with the FEC accusing the pro-Kennedy Jr. super PAC of not properly disclosing $10 million loan or whether it had other 'off the books' loan agreements. Democrats have also accused Kennedy's campaign and super PAC of illegally coordinating to get Kennedy on the general election ballot

The DNC filed complaint with the FEC accusing the pro-Kennedy Jr. super PAC of not properly disclosing $10 million loan or whether it had other 'off the books' loan agreements. Democrats have also accused Kennedy's campaign and super PAC of illegally coordinating to get Kennedy on the general election ballot

Kennedy previously launched his White House bid as a Democrat but then switched to running as an Independent presidential candidate

Kennedy previously launched his White House bid as a Democrat but then switched to running as an Independent presidential candidate

Earlier this month, the DNC filed an other complaint with the Federal Election Commission accusing the Independent presidential candidate's campaign of illegally coordinating with the pro-Kennedy super PAC to help get him on the general election ballot.

The DNC alleged that AV24 worked to collect signatures to ensure Kennedy is on the November ballot in key states but will have to 'integrate their expenses' with the campaign in ways that violate federal election rules in order to do so. 

On Monday, the DNC filed another complaint with the FEC accusing the pro- Kennedy super PAC of failing to properly disclose $10 million in loans.

The DNC alleged AV24 violated federal law by not properly disclosing $10 million in loans from billionaire donor Gavin de Becker, $9.65 million of which has since been repaid. It also accused the super PAC of not disclosing whether it has other 'off the books' loan agreements with donors.

 Democrats claimed the loan agreement allowed the super PAC to inflate fundraising numbers and conceal the extent to which the super PAC is being funded by major Trump donor Tim Mellon. 

Democrats have argued Kennedy's campaign is being propped up by Trump supporters to help him siphon off voters from Biden and help the Republican ex-president in November. 

In an average of polls include Trump, Biden, Kennedy, Cornel West and Jill Stein on the general election ballot, Kennedy was polling on average at just under 13 percent and Trump was leading by just under three points.

Comments