RFK Jr. appeals ruling that knocked him off New York’s presidential election ballot

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. speaks to reporters at the Nassau County Supreme Court in Mineola, N.Y. on Aug. 21, 2024. AP Photo/Stefan Jeremiah, Pool

A lawyer for Robert F. Kennedy Jr. asked a state appeals court Wednesday to restore him to New York’s presidential election ballot, even though he has suspended his campaign.

A state judge knocked Kennedy off the state’s ballot earlier this month, ruling that he had falsely claimed to live in New York on his nominating petitions, despite actually living in California. Kennedy suspended his campaign less than two weeks later and endorsed Republican Donald Trump.

Kennedy began withdrawing his name from the ballot in states where the presidential race is expected to be close, including Maine, where election officials said Wednesday that he met a deadline to withdraw from the ballot.

He has asked supporters to continue to back him elsewhere, however.

In Oregon, Kennedy submitted his candidate filing as the nominee of the We the People party on Monday, three days after dropping out of the race. For now, this means Kennedy’s name will appear on the state’s ballot, election officials said.

Candidates in Oregon have until Friday to withdraw by submitting a form to the secretary of state’s office, spokesperson Laura Kerns said, and if they don’t, they will appear on the ballot.

Kennedy’s communications team did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment. But Oregon Public Broadcasting reported that Mike Cully, who ran Kennedy’s Oregon operations, said the move was “meant to suck votes away from the Democratic Party, which obviously he has disenfranchised himself from.”

Meanwhile, Kennedy’s legal team has pressed ahead with arguments that Kennedy is right to keep calling himself a New Yorker, and wasn’t trying to trick anyone when he listed a friend’s house in a New York City suburb as his home address.

“Robert F. Kennedy Jr. could have put his residence as the moon and no one would…

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