Independent Party of Delaware Nominates Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., for President

On May 7, the Independent Party of Delaware, which is ballot-qualified, announced that it has nominated Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., for president. The party has been on the ballot since 2000, but it usually abstains from running anyone for president. The only time it ever previously ran anyone for president was in 2004 and 2008, when it ran Ralph Nader.

The Kennedy campaign had been working on getting the We the People Party qualified in Delaware, but that work is no longer necessary. The We the People Party has 175 registrants as of last week, and would have needed 769 in order to qualify.


Comments

Independent Party of Delaware Nominates Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., for President — 22 Comments

  1. COMMIE DONKEYS IN DE – HOME STATE OF TYRANT BIDEN — UNABLE TO RIG 3RD PARTIES OFF BALLOTS IN DE ???

  2. Richard any idea on how many other small ballot qualified parties are out there that could conceivably nominate Kennedy?

  3. Doesn’t have Delaware yet, or it’s too small to see without zooming in, but I think it’s otherwise up to date. This is good news, because Kennedy is even more pro Israel than Trump, and way more pro Israel than Biden.

    https://www.kennedy24.com/ballot-access

  4. Interesting , I didn’t know the Liberal party was working on ballot access anywhere. Are they the breakaway libertarians, or something else?

  5. They are fake libertarians who left after the parry turned libertarian.

  6. Are you sure? I haven’t heard of them actually trying to get on the ballot in any other states. Could be some other group, for example Democrats who are mad at Biden?

  7. Yeah Baby Kennedy 🎵 Kennedy 🎵 Kennedy 🎵

    Minor Parties are uniting like never before.

    Let’s do it

  8. …No contact with reality.

    One of them will be President. Almost certainly Trump or Biden. Hopefully, Trump.

  9. “Kennedy sure is getting a lot of endorsements.”

    He may have to be de-wormed, first.

  10. It’s actually pretty easy to get on the Delaware ballot actually. Which is surprising. Massachusetts is hilariously easy to get on the ballot despite it being a dark blue state. Massachusetts tends to have 20 candidates for president.

  11. “Massachusetts is hilariously easy to get on the ballot despite it being a dark blue state. Massachusetts tends to have 20 candidates for president.”

    Only in the Presidential primary. Getting on the general election ballot is much harder. There usually aren’t more than 5 candidates on the general election ballot for President.

  12. @Walter, correct. I misremembered. Colorado and Vermont had 21 people each on the ballot. Massachusetts allows basically unlimited write-ins if I recall correctly. For those curious, for 2020 the states by amount of candidates in the general were 21 candidates: CO, VT; 13: AR, LA; 9: IA, MN, MS, TN, UT; 8: NJ; 7: AK, FL, ID; 6: CA, DC, HI, IL, MI, NM, OK, RI, WA; 5: KY, ME, MD, MO, NY, NC, OR, SC, WI; 4: CT, DE, MA, NV, OH, TX, WV, WY; 3: AL, AZ, GA, IN, KS, MT, NE, NH, ND, PA, SD, VA.

    Also, for third parties that could endorse RFK, there is a bunch of them. I have a running list on those two.

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