Trump-Kennedy 2024? Trump, at Least, Is Intrigued by the Idea.

Published Sun, Apr 7, 2024 · 09:00 AM

Would a merger between Mar-a-Lago and Camelot prove irresistible for American voters?

That is a question former President Donald Trump has weighed as he considers possible options for his running mate, repeatedly asking advisers and associates in recent weeks about the idea of selecting Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as his number two, according to two people familiar with the conversations.

Those close to Trump do not consider Kennedy a true contender for the position. Kennedy, a scion of Democratic royalty, is also already running against Trump and President Joe Biden as an independent candidate, and he told The New York Times that he would not entertain joining the former president’s ticket.

“I’m flattered by the thought, but it’s not a course I would consider,” Kennedy said in a text message.

Instead, Trump’s queries about Kennedy suggest that the former president remains in the initial stages of his vice-presidential selection process.

Trump has asked associates about several potential running mates in recent weeks, and although no one knows whom Trump will choose, he has left some with the impression that he has not yet settled on his first-tier options.

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The Trump campaign has begun the early stages of vetting potential contenders, but Trump does not need to settle on a choice until the Republican National Convention, scheduled to start Jul 15 in Milwaukee.

Some people close to Trump have suggested that choosing a candidate sooner than later might help with fundraising and campaigning on days he is defending himself in court against the dozens of criminal charges he faces. In 2016, Trump announced just before the start of his nominating convention in Cleveland that Mike Pence, then the governor of Indiana, would be his running mate.

Trump’s interest in Kennedy has centered almost exclusively on the potential power of the branding. He has collected opinions from those around him about whether combining the two famous last names on a single presidential ticket could result in some kind of political magic, according to the people familiar with the conversations.

Trump has long been intrigued by the Kennedy political dynasty. As president, he often told visitors that he sat at the same Oval Office desk as John F. Kennedy, and he regularly invoked the former president during White House events, including announcements of new tax policies and the ceremonial pardoning of a Thanksgiving turkey.

“I like Trump-Kennedy,” the former president recently told one person. “I like the way that sounds.”

Trump’s curiosity about Kennedy as a running mate appeared to undermine the public attacks he and his allies have leveled at the independent candidate.

Last week, Trump criticized Kennedy’s views on climate change and the environment, and cast him as more “radical Left” than Biden. As he did so, he suggested that Kennedy would siphon more votes from Biden. “I love that he is running!,” Trump said.

Kennedy has been running for president as an independent since last year. Last week, he announced Nicole Shanahan, a Silicon Valley lawyer, as his own running mate.

In a Wall Street Journal poll this week across seven battleground states, Trump had support from 39 per cent of voters, compared with 36 per cent for Biden and 11 per cent for Kennedy.

Democrats have signaled more worry about Kennedy’s potential to play a spoiler role, however, mobilizing a legal and political messaging effort to block him from state ballots and discourage left-leaning voters from supporting him.

Although Kennedy initially tried to challenge Biden for the Democratic presidential nomination, he has also taken positions more likely to be supported by conservatives, including opposing military assistance for Ukraine in its war against Russia. NYT

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