The minor but storied Reform Party, which is backing Robert F. Kennedy Jr., had its ballot access restored, a significant boon for the independent candidate.
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Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will be on the ballot in Florida.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the independent presidential candidate, will be on the ballot in Florida this fall, his campaign said on Friday, after the minor party that nominated Mr. Kennedy as its presidential candidate had its ballot access reinstated this week.
It is a significant victory for Mr. Kennedy’s sprawling effort to get on the ballot in all 50 states. Florida has the third-largest number of electoral votes in the country, behind California (where Mr. Kennedy is already on the ballot) and Texas (where Mr. Kennedy has submitted a ballot access petition).
Florida is an increasingly Republican state — Donald J. Trump won by a margin of about three percentage points in 2020 — and it is unclear what effect Mr. Kennedy’s campaign could have on the race there. Mr. Kennedy is drawing support from both Mr. Biden and Mr. Trump, and both campaigns are concerned about the potential for him to swing the election in key states.
Mr. Kennedy is now on the ballot in seven states — California, Florida, Utah, Hawaii, Oklahoma, Michigan and Delaware — and is currently eligible for a total of 119 votes in the Electoral College. That metric is important even five months ahead of the election because Mr. Kennedy must be on the ballot in enough states to be eligible for 270 electoral votes in order to qualify for CNN’s presidential debate on June 27. With fewer than two weeks before the June 20 deadline to qualify, Mr. Kennedy has less than half of the total he needs.
Mr. Kennedy won ballot access in Florida through his nomination by the Reform Party, which has particular historical significance because it was founded by Ross Perot — a Texas billionaire who ran as an independent presidential candidate in 1992 and then formed the party ahead of his 1996 run for president. While Mr. Perot lost both races, they were the most significant campaigns by a third-party or independent candidate in modern American history — a feat that Mr. Kennedy hopes to emulate.
The Reform Party’s nomination of Mr. Kennedy allowed the campaign to sidestep the need to submit its own ballot access petition in Florida — an expensive and arduous venture that would require collecting more than 130,000 signatures from registered voters in the state.
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Source: nytimes.com