Former Democrat Robert F. Kennedy Jr. will campaign with Donald Trump in the battleground states, as they unite to "drain the swamp" and keep Vice President Kamala Harris away from the White House.
Trump and Kennedy have found a common enemy in the modern Democratic party, which embraces censorship, endless wars, and election interference in the name of "democracy."
“We haven’t worked out the entire schedule, but certainly I’ll probably do rallies with him and with other surrogates where President Trump. We’re hoping, we’re co-planning these rallies that make America healthy again, rallies and … drain the swamp,” Kennedy told The Hill.
To help Trump, Kennedy has sought to have his name removed from the ballot in swing states like Michigan and North Carolina.
If Kennedy can't get his name off the ballot, he's going to join Trump in the swing states to get their anti-establishment message out.
“We’re planning a Make America Healthy Again tour where we’re going to visit almost all of those states,” he said.
“So I will be doing rallies in each of those states over the next 61 days,” he continued. “We want to, if we’re going to accomplish the mission that I set out to accomplish when I got into this campaign — end the censorship, end surveillance, get out of Ukraine war and unravel the war machine and the chronic disease epidemic.”
“The only way to do that is to get President Trump in the White House and me into Washington. So we’re going to pull out all the stops to make sure that happens.”
Kennedy's efforts to get off the ballot in swing states have faced opposition from Democrats, who previously fought to keep Kennedy from running.
He had cited the Democratic party's ruthless "legal warfare" when he dropped out and endorsed Trump, sparking condemnation from his family of famous Democrats.
Kennedy said he found common ground with Trump on free speech, foreign policy, and the rise in chronic diseases among Americans.
Trump has embraced Kennedy's messaging around public health, pledging to get to the bottom of declining children's health outcomes if elected.
A North Carolina judge rejected Kennedy's request Thursday to take his name off the ballot after the state's Democrat-run elections board argued it was too late for him to withdraw.