An incident involving former presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. 30 years ago has resurfaced and he recently acknowledged it, saying that he is now under investigation by the National Marine Fisheries Services for allegedly sawing the head of a dead whale off in Hyannisport around 1994 and bringing it home.
Kennedy suspended his campaign in August, but he still wants votes in non-competitive states, even while fighting to get off the ballot elsewhere.
The fallout from Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Olivia Nuzzi’s emotional affair is still ongoing as the players involved sort through the mess. RJF Jr. is married to actress Cheryl Hines and Nuzzi was engaged to Politico reporter Ryan Lizza — and that’s where things get interesting.
Zachary Levi endorsed Donald Trump for president on Saturday. The Shazam actor had previously declared support for RFK Jr.
Kennedy, 70, wore the band during an appearance at a rally for former President Donald Trump in Walker, Mich., where he urged his supporters to not vote for him in the key battleground state –
Former independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. mocked Vice President Kamala Harris during a Michigan rally this week, encouraging the audience to chant "I was born in the middle class!
Kennedy was seeking to force his name to appear on New York's ballot in November, despite suspending his campaign.
New York Magazine staffer Olivia Nuzzi’s ex-fiancé apparently did not take her “digital relationship” with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. lightly. Journalist Ryan Lizza, who popped the question to Nuzzi in 2022,
His request to be removed from the ballot was accepted in Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, and Pennsylvania. In North Carolina, a judge ruled, after ballots were already printed with his name on them, that Kennedy could be removed from the ballot, which has complicated their ballot rollout.
The U.S. Supreme Court rejected on Friday a bid by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to restore his name to the ballot in New York state even though he suspended his campaign as an independent for president in August and endorsed Donald Trump.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court ruled Friday that Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s name will remain on the state's presidential ballot, upholding a lower court's ruling that candidates can only be removed from the ballot if they die.