Advertisement
Advertisement
United States
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Robert F. Kennedy Jnr has announced his intention to run for president in the 2024 US election. Photo: Getty Images

Robert Kennedy Jnr to challenge Joe Biden in US presidential bid

  • He faces little chance of success, but his campaign could help advance his claims that childhood Covid-19 immunisations pose health risks
  • A member of the Kennedy political dynasty, he has been banned from YouTube and Instagram for spreading misinformation about vaccines and the pandemic

Anti-vaccine activist Robert F. Kennedy Jnr, a member of a storied US political dynasty, is due to announce on Wednesday a long shot bid to challenge incumbent President Joe Biden for the 2024 Democratic presidential nomination.

Kennedy, 69, faces little chance of success, but his campaign could help him to advance claims that childhood immunisations pose health risks – a theory that has been repeatedly discredited by multiple scientific reviews.

Kennedy has been banned from YouTube and Instagram for spreading misinformation about vaccines and the Covid-19 pandemic.

He is the nephew of former President John F. Kennedy, who was assassinated in 1963, and the son of former US Senator Robert F. Kennedy, who was assassinated in 1968 during his own presidential bid.

Biden says he’s decided to run for re-election, will announce ‘soon’

Kennedy is likely to highlight these links when he makes his announcement in Boston, the city where his uncles – also including the late US Senator Edward Kennedy – launched their political careers.

His anti-vaccine activism has earned him allies on the right. In 2017, Republican then-President Donald Trump tapped him to oversee a vaccine review panel, drawing criticism from scientists who said it could legitimise unfounded scepticism.

During the Covid-19 pandemic, Kennedy criticised social-distancing requirements and vaccine mandates. At a January 2022 rally in Washington he suggested that Americans had fewer freedoms during the pandemic than Jews living in Nazi Germany. He later apologised for his remarks.

A 1961 photo shows then US President John F. Kennedy, left, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, and Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy. Photo: AFP / Handout

Kennedy said on Twitter last month that he was considering a presidential run to “end the corrupt merger between state and corporate power”.

Self-help guru Marianne Williamson has also said she will challenge Biden for the Democratic nomination.

Biden, 80, said last Friday that he will run for re-election and will make a formal announcement “relatively soon”.

2