I’d be surprised if some readers are not already fumbling over themselves racing to the comment section to denounce me as brainwashed, an advocate against the interests of America–or if they choose a more polite term–misled.
The headline of this article is controversial, especially when one considers the fact that Republicans are bathing in the honeymoon phase of Robert Kennedy Jr’s recent endorsement of Donald Trump’s candidacy. Though I understand Republican excitement, I can’t help but feel that RFK Jr. made a catastrophic mistake.
It is no secret that I support independent presidential candidates. I extended that support to the campaign of RFK Jr., for I believed he had a greater chance of winning than, say, Dr. Cornel West, and, therefore, that he represented the most obvious choice for those who can only stomach the idea of voting for an independent. And while it’s true I disagree with him on important issues, most notably his view on the war in Gaza, I believe many of his policy proposals were constructed in good faith and would render positive results for a nation that desperately needs them. I also appreciated his willingness to detach himself from the Democratic Party and how he challenged people to confront their own allegiances. It was a very unifying message.
For example, in an op-ed he wrote for The Hill, RFK Jr. states:
“For decades Republicans have railed against Big Government, and Democrats have complained about Big Business. Behind the scenes though, they have capitulated to both. The result is that we now face something much more dangerous: a combination of Big Government and Big Business.”
This is why his endorsement of Trump is so puzzling. He is against corporate capture yet is also willing to join the conglomerate of Big Government and Big Business? RFK Jr. claims that his support of Trump is necessary to counter the malignancy that is the modern Democratic Party. In addition to releasing intense obloquy against the Democrats, he cited “free speech, the war in Ukraine and ‘a war on our children’ as among the reasons he would try to remove his name from the ballot in battleground states.”
The goal of this article is not to delve into each one of these issues–it would simply take too much time. For what it’s worth, I believe RFK Jr’s ambitions (assuming he’s serious about them) are extremely noble, especially with regard to public health. Anyone can see that Americans have become progressively less healthy and that our youth are especially far less healthy than they were in the past. Serious action needs to be taken in this area, and it cannot wait any longer.
But since RFK Jr. did not reveal explicitly how he expects to achieve advancement on these issues, we are left wondering about the role he would assume should Trump reclaim the White House in November. It is speculated that he could serve as Trump’s secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services.
Some may wonder why he did not team up with the Democrats and why he shows so much disdain for the party his family was so crucial in building. In short, the Democratic Party isolated RFK Jr. and shut down any attempt at collaboration. It was reported, for example, that RFK Jr. attempted to meet with the Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris “to discuss the possibility of serving in her administration, perhaps as a Cabinet secretary, if he throws his support behind her campaign and she wins.”
The article goes on to say that “Harris and her advisers” did not respond “with an offer to meet,” nor did they show any interest in his proposals. Strategically, I think it was a terrible idea for Harris to side-step RFK Jr. Many expect his endorsement of Trump to have only a modest effect in the November election, but I think that is facile. It won’t determine it, but to suggest his endorsement won’t have any sway in the electorate, particularly among swing voters, is, in my view, naive. Recent polls show a tight race, so why wouldn’t the Democrats want to bring RFK Jr. into their camp?
The simple answer is that RFK Jr. goes against many of the interests of the Democratic Party. Party interests lie elsewhere, and the pursuit of those interests has been reflected in the corporatization of the United States. However, what I cannot wrap my head around is how RFK Jr. believes the Republican Party is not beholden to the same forces. In fact, he doesn’t believe that.
RFK Jr. frames his role in Trump’s campaign as being similar to Abraham Lincoln’s team of rivals, where opposing politicians can form a “unity party” and work together while disagreeing “privately and furiously.”
Though I think it is good messaging, the Republican Party is simply using RFK Jr. for votes. Republicans saw what the Democrats didn’t: that RFK Jr.’s voters are valuable.
In addition, RFK Jr. has been scathing in his criticism of Trump and I do not understand how he can seriously uphold these criticisms while also supporting him. For example, he called Trump a “bully” and a “terrible president.” I recommend looking at what he says directly because it is quite potent.
His endorsement of Trump, however, underscores his movement as an independent, which in his words, is the only thing that “can free America from corporate capture.” True political change, the kind America is clamoring for, will not derive from the two-party system. RFK Jr. knows this, and so does the rest of America.
It can be argued that RFK Jr. had no realistic chance of winning the presidential election, and while I agree, I think the purpose of his campaign could have been greater than a political victory. It is the same line of reasoning behind my support of Dr. Cornel West. Our country needs a candidate who is unifying, regardless of whether you agree or disagree with them on every issue, and one who can stir up a grassroots political revolution against the two-party system that is bringing American politics to its nadir.
More than that, many people believed in RFK Jr.’s messaging and appreciated that he discussed issues both Republicans and Democrats were eager to avoid due to their complicity in creating them–but now, any hope seems to be extinguished.
Of course, I can only speak for myself and others who are strict dissidents to the current status quo. As I stated earlier, many people in the Trump camp are gushing over the endorsement and believe it could be a deciding factor in November.
Did RFK Jr. succumb to corruption? Is he simply a puppet? There have been many questions raised about what made him abandon his mission. In his speech, RFK Jr. claims that Trump campaign cares about pressing issues such as public health and that if Trump follows through on his commitments, the country will be much healthier in four years. Moreover, since RFK Jr. is 70 years old, he insisted that he can’t wait another 4-8 years to run again for office and that he needs to act now to be most “effective.” In short, he sees a direct path into presidential politics, an opportunity time will not allow him to see again. Spite also played a role in the decision–it simply had to. As a lifelong Democrat, to be dumped like he was most definitely stung.
I understand his decision to a point, though, and I think he made his choice out of genuine concern for our nation. It also put apparent strain on his personal relationships with people such as his own wife and members of the Kennedy family. Where he went wrong is to trust the word of the Republican Party. Does he genuinely believe Trump will follow through on his commitments? Even if Trump does care (which I don’t believe for a second he does), is the Republican Party interested in pursuing solutions to these pressing issues? I’m inclined to say no, and for the same reasons RFK Jr. outlined at the outset of his campaign. This endorsement sucked the life out of his movement – a genuine independent candidacy–and brought him into the mix of partisan politics, where the most committed of his supporters now feel abandoned.
In sum, RFK Jr.’s abandonment of independent principle was a massive mistake for the simple fact that it contradicts everything his campaign represented–a genuine attempt at an independent political revolution. You can’t tell people to be suspicious of the corporate-captured political parties, then ally yourself with said parties.
At any rate, for the sake of the country, I hope RFK Jr. has success in achieving the goals he identified; all of us know how crucial it is to be healthier, to end our wars, and to have freedom of speech. Unfortunately, however, I have little faith in the word of Donald Trump or the Republican Party.
Whether it was worth it for RFK Jr. to suspend his movement will be answered in time.
He can only be judged by his results.
John D. Alder | Aug 31, 2024 at 1:54 am
Col. Douglas McGregor said on the Judge Napolitano show Judging Freedom ( on youtube) the voters don’t win elections, donors do. Four years after the 2024 election I think most voters will be no better off than they were before election day. We need more than cheap bumprr sticker slogans.
David Jackson | Aug 30, 2024 at 9:51 pm
RFK Jr. isn’t the only high-level Democrat to now endorse Trump, so has Tulsi Gabbard. They put patriotism above partisanship because they both know what’s on the line, that with all of his flaws Trump is not the wannabe authoritarian the left-wing intelligentsia fear monger him out to be to the electorate’s easily emotionally manipulated. They both know Trump is far from perfect, but also know he’s not out to morph the United States into a neo-socialist authoritarian technocracy, whereas the far-leftist partisans who were running the show behind the dementia afflicted Biden and now behind the incompetence afflicted Harris, are. RFK Jr. and Gabbard are well aware the “threat to our democracy” slogans are entirely projection.
Trump is no messiah, and he’s no great moral character. Only a fraction of his support comes from people who believe such, regardless of what MSNBC, CNN, NPR, and their sycophantic audiences tell you about “Trumpers” and “MAGA Extremists.” Most Republicans and Independents don’t agree with everything Trump has said or done, however Biden/Harris, and their shadow cabinet of far-left Obama era holdovers running things while a dementia patent and a woman with a double-digit IQ pretend to be in charge are demonstrably destructive to federalism, constitutional rule of law, and a money burning firestorm for the country as a whole.
The reason we got Trump in the first place is a Democrat party that has gone completely authoritarian-socialist, opposed only by a mostly lame Republican party that largely just screamed conservative values while caving in on gun control, social upheaval, economy killing spending and currency devaluation. Until Trump came in and energized Republicans again. Both parties have proven to be trash. But, given the choice of having Trump’s policies or Biden now Harris/Waltz’s, it’s a no brainer.
We need a presidential administration that’s not actively making things worse while hiding behind feel good slogans. With Trump we had Putin in check, China on notice to not invade Taiwan, a southern boarder that wasn’t open to human traffickers and drug cartels, inflation that was relatively under control, the US a net oil exporter, and the Abraham Accords signed in the middle east. Under Biden/Harris, we have Putin invading Ukraine after shady deals between that country and Biden, China expanding into international waters and threatening to invade Taiwan, record numbers of undocumented migrants with known infiltration of known terrorists and cartel members, dependence on foreign oil and to the point of depleting our strategic reserves driving fuel costs and the costs of everything transported up, runaway inflation, and Iranian proxies pushing a war with Israel through Gaza and attacking ships in the Persian Gulf. Yeah…sorry for reality not matching the emotional media rhetoric, but this is not the adults back in charge kids.
The powers that be haven’t been the same since Trump’s election in 2016. They were completely shocked that he won and went stark raving mad that a Hillary Clinton presidency didn’t follow 8 years of Obama, where they could have secured the Supreme Court with an activist judge majority for a half century and finished their “fundamental transformation” of America. They executed an unprecedented media and lawfare campaign against Trump that has never stopped, censored social media, pushed the now debunked Russian collusion narrative, weaponized the DOJ against their political opposition, orchestrated large scale riots via community activist organizations in our urban centers, and “fortified” the 2020 election exploiting the COVID pandemic with mass mail in ballot and ballot harvesting operations, causing for the first time in US history a sitting president to not get re-elected despite having more votes for his re-election than he had for his initial election. As if that wasn’t enough, they’ve also attempted to undermine the Supreme Court, deriding justices and threatening to pack it in their favor to push their agenda. These are not the good guys now matter how many times they repeat the mantra “on the right side of history” and hypocritically call their opposition “fascist.”
Trump isn’t half the danger to our country that Harris/Waltz is. Tulsi Gabbard and RFK Jr. know this and know they were ostracized from their party for not going along with its radicalization. RFK Jr. didn’t make a mistake, he made the only sane choice a truly independently thinking and informed American can make, however begrudgingly.