Robert F. Kennedy tried unsuccessfully in Wisconsin and other states to pull his name from the 2024 presidential ballot.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. struggled Wednesday to answer questions about Medicare and Medicaid or to provide details about how he would work to drive down health care costs.
Republican lawmakers in battleground state Wisconsin want to change state law to allow candidates to remove their names from the ballot.
Candidates in Wisconsin would be able to strike their names from the ballot by request without dying, as current law requires, under a bill two Republicans proposed on Tuesday.
Wisconsin Lawmakers Propose a Way for Candidates Like RFK Jr. to Get off the Ballot in the Future MADISON ... an issue that arose after Robert F. Kennedy Jr. tried to get off the presidential ...
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Republican lawmakers in battleground state Wisconsin want to change ... addressing an issue that arose after Robert F. Kennedy Jr. tried to get off the presidential ballot ...
Republican lawmakers in battleground state Wisconsin want to change state law to allow candidates to remove their names from the ballot, addressing an issue that arose after Robert F. Kennedy Jr ...
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. responded to questions from the Senate Finance Committee. Democrats attacked his past statements questioning vaccines, while Republicans expressed optimism about working with Kennedy to improve healthcare.
Backed by dozens of ultra-right anti-vaccine zealots in the audience, Kennedy engaged in over three hours of lies, half-truths, and disinformation in his effort to become the top general in Trump’s war on public health.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. struggled to address key issues during his Senate confirmation hearing for Secretary of Health and Human Services.
Kennedy Jr. was pressed to clarify his views on vaccines, abortion and public health priorities in the first of two senate hearings as he tries to make the case to become President Donald Trump's health secretary.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. pleaded guilty in 1984 to possessing heroin on an airplane, a few months after authorities found a small amount of heroin in his luggage as he traveled from Minneapolis to Rapid City,