RFK Jr. gets on NH ballot through Primary Day petition signatures

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on June 20, 2023. Photo/Andrew Sylvia

CONCORD, NH – The Kennedy campaign on Wednesday collected in just one day the full 3,000 signatures needed to get on the ballot in New Hampshire, making New Hampshire the second state in the nation where Kennedy has reached the signatures it needs to take on the likely candidates Presidents Biden and Trump in the general election.

โ€œI want to thank our dedicated supporters and volunteers who made this great accomplishment possible,โ€ Kennedy said. โ€œDemocracy is much more than voting. Iโ€™m inspired by how enthusiastic people are to collect signatures, create new political parties, and rally for real change. This kind of energy is what will get us onto the ballot in every state and fuel our voter registration and GOTV operation as we head toward election day.โ€

Led by the campaignโ€™s ballot access and field team, volunteers from across New Hampshire and every state in New England came together to gather voter signatures at nearly 100 precincts from 6 a.m. until 8 p.m.

โ€œWe had people ages 18 to 88 collecting signatures for RFK Jr.,โ€ said Northeast Regional Field Director Larisa Trexler. โ€œAll of New England was represented. We made this our primary.โ€

Kennedy is already on the ballot in Utah, the only state in which the signature submission deadline has now passed. The campaign launched a Ballot Access Headquarters page to keep media and supporters up-to-date on the campaignโ€™s operations to get Kennedy on the ballot in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.

Earlier this month, supporters filed political party paperwork in six states โ€” California, Delaware, Hawaii, Mississippi, North Carolina, and Texas. In the first five states listed, the โ€œWe the Peopleโ€ political party was formed and in Texas, the โ€œTexas Independent Partyโ€ was created.

Three months ago, Kennedy returned to Philadelphia, the birthplace of the United States, and declared his independence from the โ€œbankrupt two-party system.โ€ He did so with the National Constitution Center behind him and the words โ€œWe the Peopleโ€ etched into the building by his side.

โ€œWe the peopleโ€ are the first three words of the U.S. Constitution. These words symbolize that our government draws its power from the people that it was created to serve.

On Oct. 9, Kennedy said, โ€œLike the Founding Fathers declared their independence from the crown more than two centuries ago, today we declare our independence from the corrupting influence of Wall Street and corporate donors that have rigged our economy for the few at the expense of the many.โ€

Learn more at Kennedy24.com. Visit our press page here.


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