OAN Staff Brooke Mallory
5:28 PM – Friday, September 27, 2024
On Friday, the U.S. Supreme Court denied Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s request to appear on New York’s presidential ballot.
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Kennedy’s appeal was denied by the Supreme Court without a statement, and there were no notable dissents.
His name was removed from the ballot by state election officials due to “an incorrect address” he provided on his nomination form, according to the justices.
They argued that Kennedy’s position would “not only severely disrupt the state’s election processes and trigger substantial voter confusion, but also cause New York to miss federal deadlines for mailing overseas and military ballots.”
“State election officials countered that voters would be “severely harmed” by holding up the mailing of overseas ballots to accommodate Kennedy’s request. Kennedy’s position, they said, would ‘not only severely disrupt the state’s election processes and trigger substantial voter confusion, but also cause New York to miss federal deadlines for mailing overseas and military ballots,’” CNN reported.
Kennedy withdrew from the race in August and backed Donald Trump, promising to take his name off the ballot in a number of states.
In the weeks following his withdrawal from the race, Kennedy has withdrawn his name from certain states with a strong Republican majority and made more direct pleas to his followers to vote for Trump wherever they may live.
“My name is going to appear on Michigan’s ballot. I don’t want you to vote for me. I want you to vote for Donald J. Trump,” Kennedy stated. “That’s the only way I’m going to get to Washington, DC, and do all the things to help end the war, end the chronic disease epidemic, to end the censorship, to end the surveillance, and all the other things that I entered this race to do.”
Kennedy’s attempts to contest New York’s ruling had been turned down by lower courts, such as the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
The fact that this is the second challenge regarding presidential ballot access to reach the Supreme Court in as many weeks highlights the role independent and third-party candidates can play in close elections.
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