Joe Rogan Would Like to Clarify: He Did Not Endorse Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

A day after praising Mr. Kennedy, the podcast host was backpedaling. “This isn’t an endorsement” Mr. Rogan posted, and he advised that he is “not the guy to get political information from.”

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Joe Rogan Would Like to Clarify: He Did Not Endorse Robert F. Kennedy Jr. | INFBusiness.com

Joe Rogan in April. His remarks about the independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. set off a frenzied response, with supporters of former President Donald J. Trump and Mr. Trump himself lashing out.

The world’s most popular podcaster has, sort of, but not really, thrown his support to one the 2024 presidential race’s least popular candidates.

On Thursday, Joe Rogan said he preferred Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who is running as an independent, for president. “He’s the only one that makes sense to me,” Mr. Rogan said, as a guest on a podcast hosted by Lex Fridman, and called Mr. Kennedy a “legitimate guy.”

Mr. Rogan’s devoted following, one that leans young, male and numbers in the tens of millions, is highly coveted. His remarks about Mr. Kennedy, uttered on a show with a far smaller reach than his own, nonetheless set off a frenzied response.

Supporters of former President Donald J. Trump, worried that Mr. Rogan’s stance could carve off voters and hurt his electoral chances come November, quickly turned on the podcaster, standup comic and former U.F.C. announcer. They questioned his intelligence and even mocked his height, a spectacle that was greeted with something akin to joy — or, at least, schadenfreude — among Democrats who have long written off Mr. Rogan as helpful to their cause.

By Friday morning, Mr. Rogan was backpedaling. “This isn’t an endorsement,” he posted on the social media platform X, and advised that he is “not the guy to get political information from.”

Mr. Trump himself weighed in on Friday afternoon, pondering “how loudly Joe Rogan gets BOOED the next time he enters the UFC ring” in a post on his social network that seemingly reflected his concerns that the influential podcaster could tip the scales against him.

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Source: nytimes.com

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