RFK Jr. Clears First State Signature Requirement To Be On 2024 Presidential Ballot | Eastern NC Now

Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has submitted the requisite number of signatures needed to qualify for the ballot in Utah, according to the Salt Lake County clerk’s office.

ENCNow
    Publisher's Note: This post appears here courtesy of the The Daily Wire. The author of this post is Leif Le Mahieu.

    Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has submitted the requisite number of signatures needed to qualify for the ballot in Utah, according to the Salt Lake County clerk's office.

    Kennedy will be on the 2024 presidential ballot in Utah as soon as he officially files because he turned in at least 1,000 signatures. A super PAC backing Kennedy's campaign is spending millions of dollars to get him on the ballot in Arizona, California, Colorado, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Nevada, New York, and Texas.

    "We will be announcing Jan. 3 our ballot access status in Utah at a press event in Salt Lake City," Kennedy's campaign press secretary Stefanie Spear told CBS News. The official paperwork to run as an independent needs to be submitted between January 2 and March 5.

    Kennedy initially began running as a Democrat challenger to President Joe Biden but announced he was mounting an independent campaign in October. The independent candidate splits with most Democrats on the issues of vaccines and Ukraine, but still takes traditional Democratic stances on issues like abortion and affirmative action.

    At his announcement, Kennedy suggested that the political divisions in the U.S. were "deliberately orchestrated" and declared himself as the solution for people who are "fed up with being fooled and [are] ready to take back power."

    Kennedy previously filed a lawsuit challenging Utah's requirement to have the signatures submitted by January 8, saying that the requirements were not fair for independent candidates.

    "The current deadline is the earliest deadline ever sought to be imposed on independent presidential candidates in the modern era. No federal court has ever upheld a January deadline [for independent presidential candidates]," Kennedy's lawsuit said.

HbAD0

    Kennedy has also been pushing for the federal government to provide him with Secret Service protection, but was just rejected for a third time. He reportedly received a letter from U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas turning down his request.

    "I have consulted with an advisory committee composed of the Speaker of the House, the House Minority Leader, the Senate Majority Leader, the Senate Minority Leader, and the Senate Sergeant at Arms. Based on the facts and the recommendation of the advisory committee, I have determined that Secret Service protection for Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is not warranted at this time," Mayorkas wrote in the letter obtained by Deseret.
Go Back

HbAD1

Latest State and Federal

Cheryl Hines. Dennis Quaid. Nicki Minaj. All became associated with the Trump administration. What happened next?
Two years ago, new media brought President Trump back to the White House. What happened?
Victims’ advocates, prosecutors, law enforcement officials, and families impacted by violent crime gathered Tuesday at the North Carolina State Archives building in Raleigh to recognize National Crime Victims’ Rights Week and honor those affected by crime across North Carolina.
The POLITICO poll found that almost half of respondents think Hollywood players should "be less vocal with their political beliefs."
"They help cultivate a radical hate America agenda, and we can't afford that same toxic ideology in America's War Department.”
Tax Day is a week away, and the reports are in: North Carolinians are winning big with record-setting tax returns thanks to President Trump and Republicans' Working Families Tax Cuts.

HbAD2

“It is a trust fund, a piece of the American economy for every child that they will be able to take out when they are 18.”
For most of her life, Zofia Cheeseman built her life and schedule around being a gymnast until a health scare forced her to look at her life off the mat.
"We could very well end up having a friendly takeover of Cuba."
You can't make this up. If you turned this script into Hollywood, they'd say it's too on the nose.
"Alaska native" firms, most often in Virginia, were paid $45 billion in Pentagon contracts thanks to DEI law.
Small cities rarely make headlines. Their struggles - fiscal mismanagement, leadership vacuums, the slow erosion of public trust - play out in school gymnasiums and wood-paneled council chambers, witnessed by a handful of residents and largely ignored by the world outside.
"Go that way and get down ... there has been a shooting ... there are people dead over here."

HbAD3

 
 
Back to Top