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  • David’s Quest to Become the Ultimate Status Protein Bar

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    Standing 17 feet tall in a glimmer of white marble at the Galleria dell’Accademia in Florence is the statue of David, his musculature carefully chiseled by the hand of Michelangelo, a portrait of the biblical hero who, despite all odds, defeated Goliath.

    The unlikely eponym follows more than 500 years later, gleaming from the shelves of most major supermarkets, gyms, and convenience stores across America today. It is, of course, the David Bar, easily identified by its shiny gold packaging and bold block letters. Its cofounder, Peter Rahal, started the company alongside Zach Ranen after selling his first, RxBar, to Kellogg’s for $600 million in 2017. Since David’s debut, it’s grown into a $725 million business. Its main investors include podcaster and neuroscientist Andrew Huberman and longevity guru Peter Attia (who now serves as the company’s chief science officer); their combined Instagram followings of 9.4 million helped catapult the status protein bar to mainstream popularity.

    In the fall, David moved into a new office to accommodate their rapid expansion. Rahal emerges from his desk, tall, with a shadowy scruff, tousled brown locks, and piercing blue eyes. He’s dressed in his daily work uniform: a gray monogrammed “David” hoodie, black track pants, and sneakers. Unlike most CEOs of multimillion-dollar companies, there’s no swanky corner office, just a standard desk amongst a row of colleagues. “I want my team to be able to see what I’m doing at all times,” he says. Beside his computer sits a crumpled David bar wrapper—he eats at least one every single day. Taped to his monitor is a photo of his wife, the 29-year-old French model Charlotte Coquelin, their son, and their two dogs, all frequent visitors of the office.

    Justin Campbell.

    Raised in a Chicago suburb by two Lebanese immigrants, Rahal was shaped by a doting mother and an entrepreneurial father, guided by “the classic immigrant mindset” of “if you’re not working, what are you doing?” That, in combination with his dyslexia-fueled struggles in school, meant he rarely felt he measured up to his peers. “At 10 years old, I looked in the mirror and realized I was fat,” he recalls, prompting a fixation with nutrition, which, by the time he was in his early 20s, became a daily devotion to CrossFit.

    After finishing college at Wittenberg University in Ohio and working and studying in Belgium and Beirut, he returned to the States with new entrepreneurial ambitions, hoping to eventually join his father’s juice company. “But first I wanted to sharpen my teeth,” he says, so he went to work at a transportation brokerage startup. “The company’s unstated mission was to make the founder as much money as possible,” regardless of anyone else, he says. Unhappy in his corporate life, Rahal worked on various unsuccessful entrepreneurial ventures after hours—including the concept for an upscale Dunkin’ Donuts called Cream and Sugar—until one day, he says, he came across an Inc article on how to start a nutrition bar business with just $10,000.

    Because of CrossFit, Rahal knew consumers wanted simple, whole ingredients in line with the Paleo diet, which he calls “the religion” of the time. He started to put together recipes in his parents’ basement, enlisting his mother to help with sticking on the labels (she was later “fired” for putting them on incorrectly).

    A few months later, Rahal began carrying cases of the bars to local CrossFit gyms in Chicago, convincing managers to stock a limited supply. Soon, they were flying off the shelves. In 2015, he invested that money in a rebrand that would become the iconic, brightly colored packaging the brand is known for today. In October 2017, he sold the company to Kellogg’s for $600 million.

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    Sophia Herring

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  • Michael J. Fox and Harrison Ford on ‘Shrinking,’ Parkinson’s, and Donald Trump

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    Last January, Michael J. Fox received a presidential medal of freedom in recognition of his Parkinson’s advocacy work from outgoing president Joe Biden. In USA Today, he wrote about how the incoming Trump administration could help find a cure for the disease he was diagnosed with in 1991 at age 29. They’d be wise to take the actor turned advocate seriously: His Michael J. Fox Foundation has funded more than $2.5 billion in Parkinson’s research over the last 25 years, raising more than $100 million in research annually. “Our foundation directs more money towards Parkinson’s research than the federal government,” Fox tells Vanity Fair. When asked for an update on working with President Donald Trump a year later, Fox retorts, “He’s busy with Greenland. More pressing concerns, I guess.”

    If all goes to plan, Fox says he’ll soon meet with US Department of Health and Human Services head Robert F. Kennedy Jr. “I’m going to Washington next month and hopefully talk to Kennedy and find out what the government’s game plan is on addressing brain research in general and taking a more serious approach to some of these things that are soluble,” he says. “It’s just a weird disease. We always say genetics loads a gun and environment pulls the trigger. We’re trying to figure out what’s biological and what’s chemical.”

    In season three of Shrinking (which premieres on January 28), coping with a Parkinson’s diagnosis fuels Fox’s storyline opposite Harrison Ford, who plays a therapist living with the degenerative brain disease. At this point in the conversation, a stoic, but engaged, Ford interjects: “Michael raises more money for and has done more Parkinson’s research than almost anybody in the world.

    Ford in season three of Shrinking.Kevin Estrada/Apple TV

    Image may contain Michael J. Fox Face Head Person Photography Portrait Adult Sitting Clothing Pants and Body Part

    Fox in season three of Shrinking.Courtesy of Apple

    “It’s a credit to our great people,” Fox replies. “It’s frustrating to know we’re putting everything we can into it, and it would be nice to have the government behind us, but it seems that they’re involved in other things that have less impact on peoples’ lives.”

    In 2004, Fox and Ford were photographed shaking hands at a charity event where Nancy Reagan advocated for stem cell research in finding a cure for illnesses like Alzheimer’s, which afflicted her husband, Ronald. “I’m sure I was very excited to see Harrison,” says Fox, glancing across the Zoom screen at a smiling Ford. “And Nancy Reagan—she was a force.” The former first lady was one of few conservatives at the time to publicly support embryonic stem cell research, which Republican lawmakers are still fighting to restrict at the federal level. Fox supports stem cell research in finding a cure for Parkinson’s disease. “For someone like Mrs. Reagan to step outside of political or ideological groupings and just speak to what she believes…is tremendously valuable,” he told reporters at the 2004 event.

    Image may contain Harrison Ford Accessories Formal Wear Tie Blazer Clothing Coat Jacket Suit and Person

    Fox poses alongside Ford and his wife Calista Flockhart at a 2004 charity event honoring former First Lady Nancy Reagan, who advocated for stem cell research in the study of diseases like Parkinson’s.Vince Bucci/Getty Images

    After playing the conservative son of former-hippie parents on Family Ties, then a know-it-all political strategist on Spin City, Fox returns to his TV roots in Shrinking, which last year earned Ford the first Emmy nomination of his career. Given Fox’s longtime friendship with series creator Bill Lawrence, whom he previously worked with on Spin City, the invite felt overdue. “It was a short and profane conversation,” Fox recalls. “I said, ‘You’re doing a fucking show about Parkinson’s with Harrison fucking Ford, and you don’t call me?’” Ford tilts his head back with a chuckle.

    “Well, I’m calling you now,” Lawrence said, to which Fox replied, “‘No, I’m calling you.” It was a fitting moment, as Lawrence has “a history of pulling me back out of retirement,” Fox says. “I did Scrubs [which Lawrence created] in the early ’00s after I’d retired from Spin City, and so I knew he’d make it happen. He always was a talented kid. Talented kid.” Fox shakes his head, “He’s what, 60 years old?” (Lawrence is 57; Fox is 64.)

    Although nearly two decades younger than a now 83-year-old Ford, both men, and their characters on Shrinking, grapple with their mortality. “We’re on the same shitty train to sucksville,” Fox’s character, Jerry, says to Ford’s character, Paul, as both men await Parkinson’s treatment. Later in the season, the curmudgeonly Paul finds renewed zest for his profession—and strategies for living with his diagnosis—when he provides therapy to other people with Parkinson’s disease, including Gerry. “The thing about therapy is it’s a talking cure, but there’s no talking cure for Parkinson’s, so those two worlds have always had an uneasy relationship,” Fox explains. “I couldn’t have gotten through Parkinson’s without therapy, but you find yourself educating the therapist as much as they’re educating you. You have to paint a picture of the ground you’re living on. And it’s very hard to explain to people.”

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    Savannah Walsh

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  • Trump signs law to allow whole milk in school lunches

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    Credit: Official White House photo by Joyce N. Boghosian

    President Donald Trump signed a law Wednesday that will restore whole milk in federally subsidized school lunches.

    The dairy staple — out of school meal programs for more than a decade amid a broader push to curb childhood obesity — will soon return to school cafeterias under the law. 

    Trump said during a signing ceremony in the Oval Office that the Whole Milk for Healthy Kids Act will “ensure that millions of school-aged children have access to high-quality milk as we make America healthy again.” 

    Seated with a jug of milk on the Resolute Desk, Trump said the changes will also be “major victories for the American dairy farmers who we love and who voted for me in great numbers.” 

    White House ceremony

    Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins celebrated the legislation becoming law and said her department would post Wednesday the “new rulemaking that is necessary to get whole milk back into school lunches.” 

    Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. also lauded Trump’s efforts and described the measure as a “long overdue correction of the school nutrition policy that puts children’s health first.” 

    Trump was also joined by Dr. Ben Carson, national advisor for nutrition, health, and housing at USDA, along with Democratic Sen. Peter Welch of Vermont, GOP Sens. John Boozman of Arkansas, Mike Crapo of Idaho and Roger Marshall of Kansas, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and advocates who supported the bill.

    Rep. Glenn “GT” Thompson of Pennsylvania, who chairs the House Agriculture Committee, and Rep. Tim Walberg of Michigan, chair of the House Committee on Education and Workforce, also attended the ceremony. 

    The U.S. House passed the bill in December, following unanimous passage in the Senate in November. 

    Welch and Marshall, along with Pennsylvania Sens. Dave McCormick, a Republican, and John Fetterman, a Democrat, introduced the measure in the Senate. 

    Thompson and Democratic Rep. Kim Schrier of Washington state brought corresponding legislation in the House.

    What the new law does 

    Under the law, schools that are part of the USDA’s National School Lunch Program can offer “flavored and unflavored organic or nonorganic whole, reduced-fat, low-fat, and fat-free fluid milk and lactose-free fluid milk.” 

    The program — which provides free or low-cost lunches in public and nonprofit private schools and residential child care institutions — saw nearly 29.4 million children participate on a typical day during the 2023-2024 school year, according to the Food Research & Action Center.

    The schools can also provide “nondairy beverages that are nutritionally equivalent to fluid milk and meet the nutritional standards established by” the Agriculture secretary.

    The law exempts milk fat from being considered saturated fat as it applies to schools’ “allowable average saturated fat content of a meal.” 

    Parents and guardians, as well as physicians, can also offer a written statement for their student to receive a nondairy milk substitute. 

    Michael Dykes, president and CEO of the International Dairy Foods Association, celebrated the bill becoming law in a Wednesday statement.

    Dykes dubbed the law a “win for our children, parents, and school nutrition leaders, giving schools the flexibility to offer the flavored and unflavored milk options, across all healthy fat levels, that meet students’ needs and preferences.” 

    The signing marked the second major nutrition policy change this month. The U.S. Department of Agriculture and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services released the 2025-2030 Dietary Guidelines for Americans, which encourages more full-fat dairy and protein.  

    Florida Phoenix is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Contact Michael Moline for questions: info@floridaphoenix.com. Follow Florida Phoenix on Facebook and Twitter.


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    It was out of school meal programs for more than a decade amid a broader push to curb childhood obesity

    That’s down from a Mason-Dixon survey taken last March, when he was at 53%, and the lowest ranking taken by Mason-Dixon since July 2020

    Florida bill would require portraits of Washington and Lincoln in all K-5 classrooms and all other classrooms used for social studies



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    Shauneen Miranda, Florida Phoenix
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  • So, why are people talking about RFK and butts? | The Mary Sue

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    A wild couple of weeks for Robert F. Kennedy Jr. keeps escalating and social media would like off the ride. RFK is trending in conjunction with the word “felching” today. Needless to say, a lot of people out there are trying to digest this information that they did not ask for. Writer/former journalist Ryan Lizza has been talking about Olivia Nuzzi’s continuing scandal with RFK. He decided to effectively slow the Internet to a halt with that felching story.

    Lizza’s newsletter drops some really graphic details of alleged poems RFK wrote Nuzzi.  For context, The 51 year old used to be engaged to her, and their engagement was quickly broken off when allegations of infidelity surfaced. All of this is messy, pun not intended, and social media at large is living for every sorted detail that hits the timeline. It’s important to emphasize that these allegations are not confirmed yet. But the discourse machine is up and running.

    In the newsletter, Lizza says that RFK wrote, “Yr open mouth awaiting my harvest. … I mean to squeeze your cheeks to force open your mouth. I’ll hold your nose as you look up at me to encourage you to swallow. ‘Dont spill a drop’. I am a river You are my canyon, I mean to flow through you. I mean to subdue and tame you. My Love.” 

    Now, the entire political social media landscape has a juicy new rumor to ruminate on and other users just trying to find recipes or Wordle solutions have to live with that information taking up space in their brains. It’s a no-win scenario for everyone involved.

    Why was RFK sending Olivia Nuzzi perverted poetry?

    olivia nuzzi and rfk together
    (Jason Mendez/Paul Morigi/Getty Images)

    RFK has demonstrated brazenness at every point of his political career. To be honest, he probably never thought these poems wouldn’t ever see the light of day. In that regard he’s the same as Nuzzi because her dirty laundry has been airing on social media for the better part of a year and a half now. Check out her MySpace single that is still somehow live on the Internet for more on just how long forever is on the web.

    In a better political climate, this would all be just tabloid fodder. But, multiple key stakeholders in this poetry situation have their hands in all kinds of government regulation. So, these little oddities become even more alluring for the average person to rubberneck at. 

    Over at The Handbasket, Marisa Kabas does amazing political writing on things that matter. She had to address all the Nuzzi/RFK nonsesnse in a recent newsletter. The writer is probably thrilled to have penned this before the word “Felching” came into the conversation. Her piece about Moral Rot in journalism is a must-read. 

    “There are some stories where there are no winners–only losers,” she says. “This is one of those stories.” That’s a feeling a lot of people have this year. Numerous stories manifest in ways that make you ask why a journalist withheld information for a book or deliberately covered for a colleague’s wrongdoing. But, our hunger for more juicy details ends up doing more damage than good.

    (Photo Credit: Getty Images)

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

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    Teresia Gray

    Teresia Gray (She/Her) is a writer here at the Mary Sue. She’s been writing professionally since 2016, but felt the allure of a TV screen for her entire upbringing. As a sponge for Cable Television debate shows and a survivor of “Peak Thinkpiece,” she has interests across the entire geek spectrum. Want to know why that politician you saw on TV said that thing, and why it matters? She’s got it for you. Yes, mainlining that much news probably isn’t healthy. Her work at the Mary Sue often includes political news, breaking stories, and general analysis of current events.

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    Teresia Gray

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  • RFK Jr.’s neighbor has Halloween display message for him – WTOP News

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    Along with pumpkins, witches, and vampires you will see a lot of Halloween decorations featuring political messages on the front steps of homes around D.C.

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    RFK Jr.’s neighbor has Halloween display message for him

    Move over spooky, this year’s Halloween theme in D.C. is politics.

    Along with pumpkins, witches and vampires, you will see a lot of Halloween decorations featuring political messages on the front steps of homes around the District.

    Skeletons throwing sandwiches were spotted in many parts of D.C., which represents Sean Dunn, the former paralegal for the Department of Justice who was arrested for throwing a sub at a Customs and Border Protection during a protest at 14th and U streets NW in August.

    One hot spot for politically themed Halloween decorations is in Georgetown, which may make one of President Donald Trump’s cabinet members feel less than festive.

    Christine Payne has lived, along with her husband Jimmy, in Georgetown for six years and her small but pointed decoration has more than a veiled message to her neighbor Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

    “My son has autism, and a neighbor is very active in anti-vaccines,” Payne said. “So it was also in reflection to that.”

    Along with pumpkins and a Halloween themed “Welcome” sign on the door, Payne has a skeleton displayed in her window.

    The skeleton in a child-sized chair, holding a sign that says, “Wish I had taken my vaccine.”

    “There is a small bottle of Tylenol also next to his feet because we’re very concerned about it affecting children,” Payne said.

    Another one of Payne’s neighbors joined her with the theme — by putting out a headstone that reads, “I did my own research.”

    “We have people taking photos of it constantly,” Payne said.

    While she had not heard from Kennedy about the Halloween display, she did say he and his wife Cheryl Hines have only been nice and friendly.

    “One of the nicer neighbors that we’ve dealt with through the years, very agreeable, but love thy neighbor, not agree with his politics,” Payne said.

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    Jimmy Alexander

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  • Cheryl Hines’s MAGA Makeover Has Her Hollywood Colleagues Scratching Their Heads: “I Don’t Know You Anymore!”

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    What a long, stranger-than-fiction trip it’s been for Cheryl Hines. Over the last year and a half, her transition from Hollywood liberal to MAGA wife has stunned Curb Your Enthusiasm fans, not to mention some of her friends and entertainment industry colleagues.

    “There’s just mutual headshaking,” says one former colleague sadly. Whenever the subject of Hines comes up within their social circles, “It’s like you lock eyes and you shake heads and you move on.” Another industry insider who has worked with her says, “It’s a sense of betrayal, like, who are you? Were you always like this? I don’t know you anymore!”

    Now that she’s on the press trail hawking Unscripted, her forthcoming memoir about her life and marriage to Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Hines is suddenly ubiquitous—and her media bombardment is triggering a new wave of sadness and disgust from some in Hollywood who once admired her. “I think people gave her the benefit of the doubt,” says the former colleague.

    “Unfortunately, we’re now sitting here and it has been 10 months of a war on science, a war on vaccines, and a war on general intelligence. And to have to listen to this craziness about Tylenol and circumcision and whatnot,” this person continued. “It’s true insanity.”

    In the wake of measles outbreaks, the normalization of junk science, and the whole Tylenol thing, the question of whether Hines’s career can survive this moment might seem frivolous. But at least one Hollywood heavyweight who knows Hines has their mind made up: “Whatever her reasons for staying with that weird, imbecilic husband and whether or not she subscribes to his inane positions is of no real consequence,” this person says disdainfully. “It isn’t as though we’re talking about Zendaya, whom one would desperately want to get into their movie.” Hines’s most recent project is a short film called Prowl that she starred in with her daughter, Catherine Rose Young.

    No one interviewed for this piece wanted their name attached to their criticisms of Hines, out of residual respect for her or fear of Trump reprisal, or both. And none of Hines’s Curb costars have publicly aired their feelings about her transformation either; Those whom I contacted declined to comment. Even Larry David—who’s never been quiet about his liberal leanings, and who Hines credits for introducing her to RFK Jr. at an environmental fundraiser many years ago—has kept surprisingly shtum on this particular subject, at least since making clear in 2023 that he did not support Kennedy’s presidential campaign. Maybe that will change when David premieres his forthcoming HBO sketch series about American history? It’s produced, in part, by a very different president: Barack Obama. Hines, for her part, told Billy Bush this week that they are not in close touch: “I haven’t talked to him in a while,” she said. “I love Larry, and I think Larry loves me. I think it’s just politics.”

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    Joy Press

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  • Meet Stefanie Spear, RFK Jr.’s “Attached at the Hip” HHS Deputy

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    Once a radical environmental activist, Spear has transformed herself into a powerful gatekeeper at the center of MAHA.

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    Katherine Eban

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  • CDC vaccine advisory panel changes guidance for COVID-19 shots

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    DENVER — The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices declined to recommend the COVID-19 vaccine to anyone, even those at high risk, leaving people to choose for themselves whether to get it.

    Until now, COVID-19 vaccinations had been recommended as a routine shot each fall, like a flu vaccine.

    The advisors also urged the CDC to adopt stronger language around claims of vaccine risks, despite pushback from outside medical groups that say the shots have a proven safety record from billions of doses administered worldwide.

    The Associated Press reports that among many unproven questions about risks that the panel raised Friday was one rare side effect that people already are warned about: a kind of heart inflammation called myocarditis, mostly in young men, that was discovered in the early days of vaccination in 2021. A scientist studying whether people with certain genes are uniquely susceptible to that risk told the panel the Trump administration had canceled his grant before the research could be finished.

    The divided panel narrowly avoided urging states to require a prescription for the COVID-19 shot.

    What is the CDC’s vaccine advisory panel and why is it so influential?

    On Thursday, the panel voted to change its age recommendations for the measles, mumps, rubella and varicella (MMRV) vaccine.

    In an 8-3 vote, the panel decided to change the recommended minimum age for receiving the MMRV vaccine, which combines the MMR vaccine and the chickenpox vaccine, to 4 years old, and that children in this age group instead get separate vaccines — one against MMR and another for varicella, or chickenpox.

    Since 2009, the CDC has said it prefers separate shots for initial doses of those vaccines, and 85% of toddlers already do.

    In a move that surprised some medical groups, the panel delayed recommending whether to end the longstanding CDC recommendation that all newborns be vaccinated at birth against the liver virus, hepatitis B.

    The Associated Press reports that the panel had been considering whether to recommend delaying that initial vaccination — something doctors and parents already can choose to do. However, amid criticism from independent pediatric and infectious disease specialists who say the vaccine is safe and has helped infant infections drop sharply, the advisers decided Friday to postpone that decision.

    Scripps News Group and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    Denver7 | Your Voice: Get in touch with Shannon Ogden

    Denver7 evening anchor Shannon Ogden reports on issues impacting all of Colorado’s communities, but specializes in covering local government and politics. If you’d like to get in touch with Shannon, fill out the form below to send him an email.

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  • RFK Jr. said all can get the COVID-19 vaccine. Is that true?

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    When U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. testified before the Senate Finance Committee on Sept. 4, several senators criticized him for restricting the COVID-19 vaccine after promising in November he wouldn’t “take away anybody’s vaccines.” 

    “Did you hold up a big sign saying that you were lying when you said that?” Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., asked Kennedy. 

    On Aug. 27, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration updated its COVID-19 vaccine guidance, limiting the groups of people approved to get the updated shot to anyone age 65 and older and any person 6 months and older who has at least one underlying health condition that increases their risk of severe COVID-19 infection.

    Kennedy pushed back, “Anybody can get the booster,” he said, later adding that “it’s not recommended for healthy people.”

    Warren said, “If you don’t recommend, then the consequence of that in many states is that you can’t walk into a pharmacy and get one. It means insurance companies don’t have to cover the $200 or so cost.” 

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    Warren and Kennedy continued to speak over each other debating the vaccine’s availability. 

    “It depends on the states,” Kennedy said. “But they can still get it. Everybody can get it. Everybody can get it, senator.”

    Asked for evidence, the Health and Human Services Department pointed us to an Aug. 27 X post from Kennedy that said, “These vaccines are available for all patients who choose them after consulting with their doctors.” 

    Kennedy’s blanket statement to senators is misleading and premature.

    Under current guidance, healthy people under 65 years old might need a doctor’s prescription to get the shot. If they successfully get a prescription, they may need to pay out of pocket. 

    Further, whether the vaccine is available at pharmacies and covered by insurance is largely dependent on a vaccine panel that has so far issued no recommendations.

    What was the status quo for years — that the majority of Americans, regardless of age, could easily make an appointment at their local pharmacy for the vaccine at little to no out-of-pocket cost — is no longer guaranteed in the 2025-26 season.  

    FDA limited COVID-19 vaccine approval, CDC has yet to issue guidance

    The FDA’s approval is not the only step in the process of making vaccines available to the public.

    The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, a panel of independent experts that guides vaccine policy, has not voted on or issued current guidance. Typically, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends vaccines based on the panel’s guidance.  

    And that guidance affects insurance coverage and vaccine access. Federal law requires that most health insurance plans fully cover vaccines recommended by the CDC. Some states also require these recommendations before they allow vaccines to be offered over-the-counter at pharmacies. 

    On June 9, Kennedy fired all 17 members of the CDC’s immunization advisory committee and replaced some with new members, many of whom have expressed antivaccine views. CDC Director Susan Monarez was fired Aug. 27 over what Monarez described as a dispute about vaccine policy. 

    According to the CDC’s website, the advisory panel is scheduled to meet Sept. 18 to 19. 

    Whether people in FDA-approved groups can get the vaccine over the counter depends on the state 

    People in the FDA-approved groups should be able to schedule vaccinations as soon as authorized health care providers receive it, likely in the next few weeks.

    Even if you are in these approved groups, where you can get the COVID-19 vaccine varies by state. By law, pharmacies in certain states won’t be able to offer the vaccine or will only administer it with a doctor’s prescription until the CDC’s vaccine advisory panel issues its recommendations.

    That means even though the FDA has issued its approval for some groups, in 18 states and Washington D.C., “pharmacists cannot administer it because it isn’t on the CDC immunization schedule yet,” Brigid Groves, American Pharmacists Association vice president of professional affairs, previously told PolitiFact.

    As of Sept. 4, the scheduling apps for Walgreens and CVS notified patients in some locations that they could not schedule a COVID-19 vaccine appointment because of state restrictions, inventory or the need for a prescription. 

    People not in FDA-approved categories may require off-label prescriptions

    People who are not in the FDA’s approved group are not banned from getting the COVID-19 vaccine, per se. But accessing the vaccine will likely require navigating some barriers. 

    Doctors can legally prescribe a COVID-19 vaccine for people who fall outside the FDA categories.

    That’s true for adults and children — and the practice of prescribing medications and vaccines for “off-label” use is fairly common in pediatrics, Dr. William Schaffner, Vanderbilt University Medical Center professor of infectious diseases, previously told PolitiFact.

    That requires making and paying for a doctor’s appointment, and finding a doctor willing to prescribe it off-label. 

    Depending on ACIP’s guidance, pharmacists might be able to vaccinate people not in an FDA-approved group through a process called “shared clinical decision making.” 

    That means, for example, “If you were 52 years old and otherwise healthy, but you nonetheless wanted to get the vaccine, you could discuss that with your doctor — shared clinical decision making — and you could receive the vaccine,” Schaffner said. 

    Pharmacists are considered clinicians who can conduct that shared decision making, Groves said. 

    But again, without CDC recommendations, “We don’t know if that provision is still there,” Schaffner said. 

    Vaccine insurance coverage is dependent on CDC guidance that is not yet available

    Insurance coverage for the vaccine is still up in the air, too, and will largely depend on what the CDC recommends. 

    Insurance coverage is more probable for people in an FDA-approved category. But, if the CDC recommendations include giving vaccines to healthy people through the shared clinical decision making process, insurance companies will generally honor that, Schaffner said.

    COVID-19 vaccines cost about $142, according to the CDC’s price lists. It’s unclear whether that would be the out-of-pocket cost for patients receiving a COVID-19 vaccine not covered by insurance. 

    Our ruling

    Kennedy said “everybody can get” the COVID-19 vaccine. 

    The FDA limited the groups of people who are eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine, which has already diminished the shot’s drugstore availability in some states. People who are not in those groups aren’t banned from getting the shot, but are likely to face additional barriers. For example, people may need a doctor to prescribe the vaccine “off-label,” making the process more challenging and potentially more costly. 

    Kennedy’s blanket statement also is premature.

    A CDC vaccine panel has not issued recommendations for the vaccine. The group’s guidance might affect insurance coverage and over-the-counter access.

    The statement contains an element of truth — the vaccine has not been banned and some people are approved to get it. But it ignores critical facts about the barriers others could face accessing and paying for it. We rate it Mostly False.

    PolitiFact Staff Writer Madison Czopek contributed to this report.

    RELATED: Can I get an updated COVID-19 vaccine this year? Is it available yet? Will insurance cover it?

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  • Ethel Kennedy dies from complications after recent stroke, family announces

    Ethel Kennedy dies from complications after recent stroke, family announces

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    Ethel Kennedy dies from complications after recent stroke, family announces

    BACK AT HER LIFE AND HER LEGACY. ETHEL SKAKEL KENNEDY MARRIED INTO AMERICAN ROYALTY, AND FROM THAT POINT ON HAD A FRONT ROW SEAT TO HISTORY. SHE MET BOBBY KENNEDY WHEN SHE WAS JUST 17. A CLOSE FRIEND AND ROOMMATE OF BOBBY’S SISTER, JEANNE. IN 1950, SHE MARRIED ROBERT KENNEDY AND WENT ON TO HAVE 11 CHILDREN. A ROWDY BUNCH THAT TURNED THEIR MASSIVE 13 BEDROOM VIRGINIA MANSION CALLED HICKORY HILL INTO THE KENNEDYS VERSION OF GRAND CENTRAL STATION. ETHEL WAS THE RINGMASTER. HER LIFE CHANGED FOREVER WITH AN ASSASSIN’S BULLET IN APRIL OF 1968. SHE VOWED THEN THAT SHE WOULD NEVER MARRY AGAIN, AND SHE DID NOT. HE WAS AN INSPIRING FIGURE, CERTAINLY FOR ME, HE WAS MY HERO. THIS WAS THE MOMENT WHEN BOBBY’S YOUNGEST BROTHER STEPPED FORWARD EVERY SINGLE ONE OF MY BROTHERS AND SISTERS NEEDED A FATHER, AND WE GAINED ONE THROUGH UNCLE TEDDY. SADLY, RFK’S MURDER WASN’T THE LAST TRAGEDY IN ETHEL KENNEDY’S LIFE. TWO OF HER 11 CHILDREN PASSED BEFORE HER. IN 1984, SON DAVID DIED OF A DRUG OVERDOSE, AND 13 YEARS LATER, MICHAEL DIED IN A SKIING ACCIDENT ON NEW YEAR’S EVE. BUT MANY OF HER CHILDREN FOUND GREAT SUCCESS. KATHLEEN KENNEDY TOWNSEND SERVED AS LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR OF MARYLAND. JOE KENNEDY, THE SECOND, WAS ELECTED TO CONGRESS AND FOUNDED A NONPROFIT TO HELP WITH HEATING OIL ASSISTANCE IN RECENT YEARS, MRS. KENNEDY RARELY ATTRACTED THE SPOTLIGHT. IN AUGUST OF 2009, SHE MOURNED THE DEATH OF HER BROTHER IN LAW, TED KENNEDY, ALONGSIDE HIS WIFE VICKI AND HER LIFELONG FRIEND JEANNE BAGNI SAUGUS. ON THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF JFK’S ASSASSINATION, SHE VISITED THE ETERNAL FLAME AT ARLINGTON CEMETERY WITH PRESIDENT OBAMA. A SITE WHERE HER HUSBAND, ROBERT IS ALSO BURIED IN 2014, SHE WAS AWARDED THE PRESIDENTIAL MEDAL OF FREEDOM, HONORED FOR CARRYING ON HER FAMILY’S LEGACY OF SERVICE, SOMETHING ETHEL SKAKEL KENNEDY EMBODIED FOR ALL THE YEARS OF HER LONG LIFE. ETHEL KENNEDY’S GRANDSON, JOE KENNEDY THE THIRD, MADE THE ANNOUNCEMENT ON X MOMENTS AGO, WRITING IN PART, QUOTE, IT IS WITH OUR HEARTS FULL OF LOVE THAT WE ANNOUNCE THE PASSING OF OUR AMAZING GRANDMOTHER, ETHEL KENNEDY. SHE DIED THIS MORNING FROM COMPLICATIONS RELATED TO A STROKE SUFFERED LAST WEEK, ALONG WITH A LIFETIME’S WORK IN SOCIAL JUSTICE AND HUMAN RIGHTS. OUR MOTHER LEAVES BEHIND NINE CHILDREN, 34 GRANDCHILDREN AND 24 GREAT GRANDCHILDREN, ALONG WITH NUMEROUS NIECES AND NEPHEWS, ALL OF WHOM LOVE HER DEARLY. WE WILL CONTINUE TO FOLLOW THIS STORY THROUGHOUT THE DAY. ON AIR AND ONLINE. FOR NO

    Ethel Kennedy dies from complications after recent stroke, family announces

    Ethel Skakel Kennedy, the human rights advocate and widow of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, died Thursday morning, her grandson said.She was 96 years old. Former Rep. Joe Kennedy III announced on social media that his grandmother died of complications following a stroke suffered one week ago.”Along with a lifetime’s work in social justice and human rights, our mother leaves behind nine children, 34 grandchildren, and 24 great-grandchildren, along with numerous nieces and nephews, all of whom love her dearly,” he wrote.Ethel Kennedy met Bobby Kennedy when she was just 17, as a close friend and roommate of Bobby’s sister, Jean. The couple married in 1950 and went on to have 11 children.Her life changed forever with an assassin’s bullet in June 1968. She vowed then she would never marry again and she never did.”She was a devout Catholic and a daily communicant, and we are comforted in knowing she is reunited with the love of her life, our father, Robert F. Kennedy; her children David and Michael; her daughter-in-law Mary; her grandchildren Maeve and Saoirse; and her great-grandchildren Gideon and Josie,” her grandson wrote. “Please keep her in your hearts and prayers.” Related video below: Remembering those we’ve lost in 2024RFK was buried with his brother, President John F. Kennedy, at Arlington Cemetery. Ethel Kennedy visited the eternal flame there in 2013 with then-President Barack Obama, 50 years after JFK was assassinated.Funeral arrangements for Ethel Kennedy were not immediately announced.

    Ethel Skakel Kennedy, the human rights advocate and widow of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, died Thursday morning, her grandson said.

    She was 96 years old.

    Related video above: Remembering those we’ve lost in 2024

    Former Rep. Joe Kennedy III announced on social media that his grandmother died of complications following a stroke suffered one week ago.

    “Along with a lifetime’s work in social justice and human rights, our mother leaves behind nine children, 34 grandchildren, and 24 great-grandchildren, along with numerous nieces and nephews, all of whom love her dearly,” he wrote.

    Ethel Kennedy met Bobby Kennedy when she was just 17, as a close friend and roommate of Bobby’s sister, Jean. The couple married in 1950 and went on to have 11 children.

    Her life changed forever with an assassin’s bullet in June 1968. She vowed then she would never marry again and she never did.

    PARK CITY, UT - JANUARY 20:  Ethel Kennedy attends the 'Ethel' premiere held at the MARC Theatre during the 2012 Sundance Film Festival on January 20, 2012 in Park City, Utah.  (Photo by Jonathan Leibson/Getty Images)

    Jonathan Leibson

    Ethel Kennedy in 2012

    “She was a devout Catholic and a daily communicant, and we are comforted in knowing she is reunited with the love of her life, our father, Robert F. Kennedy; her children David and Michael; her daughter-in-law Mary; her grandchildren Maeve and Saoirse; and her great-grandchildren Gideon and Josie,” her grandson wrote. “Please keep her in your hearts and prayers.”

    RFK was buried with his brother, President John F. Kennedy, at Arlington Cemetery. Ethel Kennedy visited the eternal flame there in 2013 with then-President Barack Obama, 50 years after JFK was assassinated.

    Funeral arrangements for Ethel Kennedy were not immediately announced.

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  • Olivia Nuzzi and RFK Scandal, Divorce Watch, and Chappell Roan

    Olivia Nuzzi and RFK Scandal, Divorce Watch, and Chappell Roan

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    Juliet and Amanda return this week with a couple of celebrity bits to discuss, starting with Olivia Nuzzi and Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s “digital relationship”, alleging a secret relationship was happening (1:04). Next, the ladies discuss a “divorce watch” as Prince Harry seems to be going on a solo tour without Meghan (15:24), then touch on Chappell Roan’s continuous soundbite and clickbait headlines as she navigates being in the spotlight as a new artist (20:35). Lastly, Juliet says a heartfelt see you later to Amanda as she leaves for maternity leave for a few months (25:13). Safe delivery Amanda!

    Hosts: Juliet Litman and Amanda Dobbins
    Producer: Jade Whaley

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher

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    Juliet Litman

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  • Key Tips For Consuming Marijuana At The Local Fair

    Key Tips For Consuming Marijuana At The Local Fair

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    Fall is the time county fairs, carnivals, and more come to time…while engaging in the fun, there are few tip to know if you are going to consuming marijuana

    September is a highlight for country fairs followed by October for the Halloween carnivals. Elephant ears, Ferris wheels and midways all appeal to our childlike delight for fun, excitement, different foods and more. But what if you want to chill out while attending? Well here are key tips for consuming marijuana at the local fair?

    RELATED: The Best Refreshing Cocktails

    With over 50% of the country having access to legal marijuana, some are taking it for granted like it a beer and is accepted everywhere. But it is wise to think ahead, especially since you are with large groups of people – including families and kids. The Minnesota State Fair is the largest daily attended fair and the Texas State Fair, which is the largest in the country by total attendance, drew a peak daily attendance in 2023 of 141,410 but a total attendance of 2,341,449. Some parts of the fair are geared for kids, others for a mixed crowd, like the pirate ship and roller coasters.

    Fairs are a sensation extravaganza. The lights, noises, movements, smells and food appeal to all the senses. The midway is the main path or street fairgoers walk along to find sideshows, concession stands, and other amusements.

    The first thing is be discreet, fairs are family events. Consider a vape or gummies over smoking. They provide less smell, so are less noticeable. With a vape you can also manage your high.

    If you are new to consuming marijuana, consider a low level high so you aren’t overwhelmed by the mass amount of sensations. It will also let you experience both things without freaking out. Part of a gummy might put you in the right spot to absorb everything going on and appreciate it at the next level.

    RELATED: How To Keep The Munchies From Ruining Your Diet

    The fair is about food, so know if you are prone to the munchies, this will be a fiesta of flavors. Consider eating beforehand or know this will be a cheat day. From fried butter to hot dogs, it is all going to look good.

    Start slow on the rides. Let the high settle into your mind and body before boarding the scrambler. This gives your body time to adjust so there isn’t any unpleasant surprises.

    RELATED: Player Says 9 Out Of 10 NFL Athletes Use Marijuana

    Some fun fact, cotton candy was originally called “fairy floss” and was invented in 1897 by candy makers William Morris and John C. Wharton of Nashville, Tennessee. It was introduced in 1904 at the St. Louis World’s Fair.

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    Anthony Washington

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  • Presidential Elections Are All Over The Board For Marijuana

    Presidential Elections Are All Over The Board For Marijuana

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    It is an odd, odd one – this year election is all over the board, especially for marijuana

    This presidential election is turning out to be one for the history books. With Biden dropping out, a Kennedy becoming a major player, AI, and a nation on edge, it is becoming a year which is flustering the public. Few expect a clear outcome the night of the election and worries abound for the results. One key group worried is the cannabis industry, the presidential elections are all over the board for marijuana.

    RELATED: California or New York, Which Has The Biggest Marijuana Mess

    While state legalization is increasing and consumer use is significantly growing, federal restrictions along with chaos in New York and California caused the industry to crash in 2022 and it has struggled ever since. The Biden administration’s last minute push to follow through on the 2020 campaign to help the industry has become a dud. The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) has delayed any action until December, guaranteeing zero industry support for 2024.  While all this is bad news, the candidates positions involve and change.

    Photo by KellyJHall/Getty Images

    In the GOP camp, the presidential nominee has been indifferent toward marijuana. While he doesn’t drink, he seems to flow with popular opinion. He just posted support of recreational legalization in Florida (against his foe DeSantis) and seems to be positive toward the industry. But his team has made it clear cannabis is bad. The GOP Vice President candidate has not be a fan, voted against in the Senate and has been quiet on his stance.  House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) is taking the place of Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY) in trying to be a cannabis killer.

    The GOP has an “extra man” in Robert Kennedy,Jr who has been positioned as a top tier leader. Kennedy is pro marijuana and recently attacked the Democratic Presidential candidate for her history against marijuana.

    In the Democratic team, Biden was very slow in supporting the industry. Aside from pardons, which helped some individuals, it took 3 years for him to make a move.  Thousands of small mom and pop businesses in the industry placed hope in him, but have had struggled to pay bills. A seasoned policy lawmaker, it seems Biden’s team played a reschedule date game to see if they can convince younger voters. When it wasn’t needed, the DEA left the cannabis industry to twist in the wind. Harris has changed from being anti-marijuana during her time in California to being seemingly open to increased legalization. She has brought it up in her campaign, but it isn’t a major policy plank.

    RELATED: Player Says 9 Out Of 10 NFL Athletes Use Marijuana

    The only clear record is the Democratic Vice Presidential Tim Walz. As Governor of Minnesota, he has been a clear champion of legal cannabis. He seems to understand the medical benefits, the economic value to states, how it supports mom and pop businesses, can help veterans and reduces crime. He seems to be the only real champion.

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    Terry Hacienda

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  • The Inside Story of Donald Trump and RFK Jr.’s Alliance

    The Inside Story of Donald Trump and RFK Jr.’s Alliance

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    Ironically, one of Donald Trump’s biggest political liabilities is also arguably his greatest achievement as president: the rapid development of the COVID-19 vaccine. A swath of the Republican base remains openly hostile to vaccines, which has left Trump exposed to rare criticism from his MAGA supporters. According to sources, Trump allies such as Tucker Carlson and Roger Stone were worried enough about the former president’s vulnerability on the vaccine issue that they wanted him to publicly disavow Operation Warp Speed, the public-private program that released a COVID vaccine in less than nine months. But Trump refused because, well, has Trump ever passed up a chance to claim credit for a success? (Carlson and Stone declined to comment.)

    As a result, sources say Carlson, Trump’s son Donald Trump Jr., and others helped engineer an alternative: Robert Kennedy Jr.’s decision to drop out and endorse Trump. Stone told people that Kennedy, whose third-party campaign served as a vehicle for his anti-vaccine views, was peeling off enough voters to tip the election to Kamala Harris. “You have maybe 3% of voters where opposition to vaccines is their one issue,” says a Republican who participated in the courtship of Kennedy.

    But getting Kennedy and Trump to forge an alliance almost didn’t happen. The two New York scions have famously big egos and a history of viciously attacking each other. Trump previously called Kennedy a “phony, radical-left fool,” a “Democratic ‘plant,’” and a “liberal lunatic.” Kennedy, meanwhile, wrote a 2018 Newsweek op-ed that said Trump’s “presidency has not just discredited our nation, but the entire American experiment in self government.”

    A breakthrough came following the July 13 assassination attempt on Trump’s life at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. A few hours after the shooting, Carlson put Trump and Kennedy on a text thread together, according to a person briefed on the communications. Kennedy texted Trump that he was ready to drop out and endorse him but wasn’t sure of the timing, the source says. On a phone call the following day, Trump courted Kennedy by endorsing Kennedy’s unproven view that vaccines hurt children. “When you feed a baby, Bobby, a vaccination that is like 38 different vaccines and it looks like it’s meant for a horse, not a, you know, 10-pound or 20-pound baby,” Trump said, “and then you see the baby all of a sudden starting to change radically. I’ve seen it too many times.” But the relationship hit a setback when Kennedy’s son, Robert Kennedy III, posted a video of the call with Trump to social media.

    The damage control fell to Florida financier Omeed Malik, a Trump donor and close friend of Don Jr. and Robert Kennedy III. (Malik’s anti-woke private equity firm, 1789 Capital, invested in Tucker Carlson’s digital video venture.) Malik arranged an in-person meeting between Trump and Kennedy on the opening day of the Republican convention to discuss an endorsement. According to people briefed on the meeting, Kennedy came in with unrealistic expectations that he could be FDA chairman or Health and Human Services Secretary in a Trump administration. “There were asks,” a source briefed on the talks tells me. (Kennedy denied this.) “The meeting concluded without a deal,” the source says. The Trump campaign declined to comment.

    Talks between Kennedy and Trump went dark. Over the next several weeks, Malik worked behind the scenes to bring Trump and Kennedy back together. According to the source, Kennedy and Trump agreed on four broad policy areas: treating chronic disease, opposing censorship, adopting an isolationist foreign policy, and exposing the deep state. The source said the deal-breaker was that Kennedy needed to be on Trump’s transition team. “That was nonnegotiable,” the source says.

    “There was no quid pro quo of any kind,” Kennedy tells Vanity Fair.

    On Tuesday, the Trump campaign announced Kennedy would serve as an honorary co-chair of the transition alongside former Democratic congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard. “This is going to give Bobby the ability to decide who gets into government,” the source says.

    Former Trump adviser Sam Nunberg says Kennedy’s presence on the transition is a signal to anti-vax voters that Trump will be an ally in office. “This is Trump’s way of winking to Kennedy’s supporters,” Nunberg says.

    One open question is what role Kennedy’s vice presidential pick, Nicole Shanahan, might play in Trumpworld. On Tuesday, Shanahan declined to say if she would campaign for Trump. And she disputed that Kennedy dropped out of the race. “We are technically still running and on the ballot! Just suspended,” she texted.

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    Gabriel Sherman

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  • Donald Trump Campaign’s Use of Foo Fighters Song Could Boost Kamala Harris

    Donald Trump Campaign’s Use of Foo Fighters Song Could Boost Kamala Harris

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    Add the Foo Fighters to the growing list of musicians ticked off by the presidential campaign for GOP nominee Donald Trump. As widely expected, on Friday the former president was joined onstage by erstwhile independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr., part of their now-shared campaign’s plan to stymie Democratic nominee Kamala Harris’s White House aspirations. Less predicted was the Trump campaign’s decision to introduce the alleged sexual assailant (oh, sorry, I should specify—I’m talking about RFK, Jr.) with the song “My Hero,” the Foo Fighters’s song celebrating the most ordinary among us.

    At the Friday event in Arizona, Kennedy confirmed that he would endorse Trump as he suspended—but not did not end—his campaign and suggested, the Associated Press reports, that “Trump offered him a job if he returns to the White House.” The scion hasn’t lost hope that he could still win the presidency, telling the Washington Post that if “neither of the candidates wins 270 electoral votes, which is quite possible—in fact, today our polling shows them tying at 269-269—I could conceivably still end up in the White House in a contingent election.” Thus far, any news of a reciprocal job offer from a prospective President Kennedy to Trump has not been reported.

    As Kennedy took the stage Friday to officially seal the deal with rally-holder Trump, the loudspeakers played the Foo Fighters’s 1998 song. Was the intention to communicate that RFK was Trump’s hero, or vice versa? No one knows, but we do know that the Foo Fighters were not happy about it.

    Via X (formerly Twitter), the Foo Fighters posted a screenshot of an exchange between its account and that of another user, in which the Dave Grohl-fronted band confirmed that the Trump campaign did not have permission to use their song for campaign purposes.

    In a statement reported on by Entertainment Weekly and others, the band confirmed via a spokesperson that they “were not asked permission, and if they were, they would not have granted it.” Any royalties generated by Trump’s use of the song will be donated to the Harris-Tim Walz campaign, the spokesperson said.

    The Foo Fighters aren’t the first artists to distance themselves from the Trump campaign, nor is this the first time they’ve drubbed a campaign for their use of this particular song. Two weeks ago, Celine Dion called the former president out for his use of the Titanic theme song “My Heart Will Go On,” saying then that she “does not endorse this or any similar use.”

    And earlier this week, Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung used Beyonce’s song “Freedom”—an anthem widely understood to be permitted for use by the Harris campaign—as a soundtrack to footage of the former president. After Beyonce’s camp reportedly threatened legal action, the video was deleted. According to USA TODAY, other artists who say Trump has co-opted their work include the Village People (Trump frequently uses their 1978 hit “YMCA”) and the estate of Isaac Hayes, which has demanded $3 million in royalties for the unauthorized use of Hayes-penned Sam & Dave classic, “Hold On, I’m Comin.”

    Meanwhile, in 2008, the Foo Fighters managed a similar issue with song use—this time, during then-Republican senator John McCain’s failed bid for US president. After McCain’s campaign made “My Hero” its theme song, the band responded, “It’s frustrating and infuriating that someone who claims to speak for the American people would repeatedly show such little respect for creativity and intellectual property.”

    “The saddest thing about this is that ‘My Hero’ was written as a celebration of the common man and his extraordinary potential,” the Foo Fighters continued at the time. “To have it appropriated without our knowledge and used in a manner that perverts the original sentiment of the lyric just tarnishes the song.”

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  • The Democratic War Room Against RFK Jr.

    The Democratic War Room Against RFK Jr.

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    Nobody likes a spoiler. For that reason, Lis Smith, a well-known Democratic operative, is on a mission to make sure nobody likes Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

    Smith is leading the party’s efforts to reduce Kennedy’s support and thus his potential spoiler power in this year’s presidential election. She shared insights from the Democratic “war room” on this week’s episode of Inside the Hive. “One thing that we’ve seen is that while [RFK] attracts 10 to 15% in the polls right now, a lot of voters who say they are supporting him or open to voting for him don’t know much about him beyond his last name,” Smith says. Furthermore, “the more people hear or see RFK Jr.,” she says, “the more they learn about him, the less they like him.”

    That’s what Democrats (and some Republicans) are banking on. “It’s incumbent upon us to fill in the blanks for voters,” Smith says. “To let them know that he’s a spoiler for Donald Trump. To let them know that a vote for RFK is a wasted vote. And to really lay out the stakes of this election.” Smith came prepared for the podcast with anti-RFK talking points that doubled as anti-Trump points: “He was recruited by Trump allies, he’s being funded by Trump’s biggest donor, and his staff has identified stopping Biden as their top goal.”

    Smith says she is not opposed to third-party candidates in theory—“I don’t think more choice is a bad thing”—but “ultimately, there are only two people in this election with a realistic path to victory, and those two people are Joe Biden and Donald Trump.” That’s why the Democratic Party has established a formal effort to warn voters about third-party contenders. “This is the first time in history that a war room like this has existed,” Smith says. “And it came into existence because Democrats finally learned the lessons of the 2000 election and the 2016 election: when third-party candidates played the role of spoiler and threw the election to Republicans with disastrous results.”

    Democrats certainly haven’t forgotten how candidates like Green Party nominee Jill Stein drew votes away from Hillary Clinton in 2016. “We’re making sure that third-party candidates receive a similar amount of scrutiny that the major party traditional candidates receive,” Smith says. In practice, this means “we basically live and breathe everything RFK Jr. right now,” she says. “We listen to or watch all of his interviews, all of his events, and we just go out and make sure that voters are fully informed about him.”

    This opposition-research effort is being emulated, to some degree, by Republicans. “They, like us, understand that RFK Jr. could be a wild card in this election,” Smith says. But pro-Trump forces are “of two minds” about Kennedy’s candidacy, Smith says. One day Fox’s Sean Hannity is bashing him on the air; the next day Hannity’s prime-time colleague Jesse Watters is interviewing him. “Biden, Trump Go on Offense Against RFK,” a banner on Watters’s show proclaimed during the interview.

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    Brian Stelter

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  • Olivia Rodrigo and the Myth of “Kennedy Class,” Or: The Kennedy Fallacy

    Olivia Rodrigo and the Myth of “Kennedy Class,” Or: The Kennedy Fallacy

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    In keeping with the tradition of elevating the Kennedys to the height of glamor in American politics (which should be telling of how “glamorous” American politics is), Olivia Rodrigo’s opening track for Guts, “all-american bitch,” wields a more than somewhat false simile. Specifically, “I got class and integrity/Just like a goddamn Kennedy, I swear.” But, unless this line is meant to be facetious (as many of the others in the song are), Rodrigo seems as misinformed as she was about which short story collection of Joan Didion’s she actually took inspiration from in coming up with the title for this song. For it’s no secret now (as it scarcely was then) that the Kennedy name/presidency was mired in crookedness (though only Marilyn can truly say if that applied to JFK’s dick as well as his code of ethics).

    From the rumors of John’s patriarch, Joseph Kennedy Sr., pulling the necessary strings to nudge then-mayor of Chicago Richard Daley to, let’s say, influence certain Cook County ballot boxes to using the Secret Service to ferry his various mistresses in and out of bedrooms, the Kennedy name—particularly in its primary association with “Jack”—hardly equates with class or integrity. And definitely not discretion. Indeed, JFK was about as discreet as Miss Monroe’s Jean Louis gown at his forty-fifth birthday celebration/Democratic Party fundraising gala in 1962. A spectacle that occurred mere months before JFK probably killed her (with some help from RFK, perhaps—and Teddy, per a slightly offensive 1985 SNL sketch in which Madonna plays Marilyn…this being only fair considering she would end up sleeping with John Jr.). A “conspiracy theory” that certainly wouldn’t be classy if it turned out to be true. But even if it’s not (which remains debatable to many), there are still plenty of other ways in which JFK hardly radiated class. The same went for the rest of his “clan” (as the Irish like to call families—particularly families of a storied and extensive lineage). Whether it was RFK’s own affair with Marilyn (and Jackie, for that matter) or Ted Kennedy leaving the scene of the crime he committed by driving himself and RFK campaign staffer Mary Jo Kopechne off the road while drunk.

    Yes, the infamous Chappaquiddick “incident” was one of the most peak examples of true “Kennedy class.” Kopechne, incidentally, was moved to enter the political realm in the first place after seeing the JFK inauguration speech during which he pontificated, “…my fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for you—ask what you can do for your country.” Soon after, Kennedy would bilk the country and its highest office of all the privilege he could get out of it. And what Kopechne ended up doing “for Teddy” rather than her country, unfortunately, was dying. Though, of course, JFK could say the same.

    Luckily for Joe Sr., he still had plenty of children to bet on in the race called Building an American Dynasty. And at the top of the list after Joe Jr.’s death was Jack. A man whose penchant for instinctively sweeping any wrongdoing beneath the rug was not much better than what Teddy exhibited with Chappaquiddick (hence, taking hours to report the accident, and Mary Jo’s death along with it). But what was to be expected of the Kennedy sons when it came to shirking transparency at all costs? They learned from the best burier of secrets and shame, after all: Joe Sr. Better known as the brainchild behind pushing for his daughter, Rosemary, to get a lobotomy because she was prone to having seizures and erratic/violent mood swings. Being that this was 1941, slapping her with the then-current panacea of a lobotomy was, sadly, par for the course. She was just twenty-three when the procedure ended up incapacitating her and preventing her from speaking in a way that could be understood as anything other than gibberish. So what else would Joe Sr. do but clean up the “mess” he made by burying Rosemary’s existence (hiding her whereabouts for decades) in a Wisconsin institution for the disabled? Never mind that Joe Sr. was the one who did the disabling by trying to “fix” a person who wasn’t broken. Again, real fuckin’ “classy.”

    When it comes to the generation of children Joseph Sr. begat, it was apparent that they (particularly the men) were taking a page out of the lawless, devil-may-care playbook he had nonverbally written for them. Most notably when it came to his propensity for stepping outside of his marriage with a celebrity. Even at a time when the very concept of “celebrity” was still germinal in its movie star iteration. Nonetheless, during the silent movie era, there were few bigger precursors to major stardom than Gloria Swanson. And after being among the few to actually increase his bank balance in the wake of the 1929 stock market crash, Joe Sr. found himself orbiting the Hollywood scene, buying up stakes in studios and theaters to build on his “portfolio” of wealth.

    It was during this time that he encountered Swanson (in the days before she became Norma Desmond in Sunset Boulevard)…and proceeded to ruin her life. Not just by ousting her husband at the time, Henri de la Falaise, but also by defrauding her out of millions of dollars after becoming her business manager, in addition to her paramour. It was when Joe decided to gift her with a Cadillac and expense it on her production company’s account that she finally had to call him out. A move that reportedly sent him out the door without ever speaking to her again. With this in mind, John’s behavior toward Marilyn almost looks positively princely (Rodrigo influencer Lana Del Rey also seemed to think the same of his behavior toward Jackie, if the 2012 video for “National Anthem” is anything to go by).

    As the third generation of Kennedys (this being counted from the start of Joe Sr.) rose to prominence, it became quickly apparent that boorish behavior was something that ran in the blood. For JFK’s lone son, John Jr., had his own predilection for extramarital affairs. Only rather than being the married one in the scenario, he preferred to be the paramour. Specifically, to Madonna, who was “legally bound” to Sean Penn at the time of their tryst in 1988. Though Madonna might remind that Penn was a bit of a stick in the mud when it came to having any fun or lapping up the spotlight that went with the territory of being a major celebrity. Made more major by being “attached” to one of the biggest stars in the world. And rather than repelling JFK Jr., as it did Sean, the former seemed to be all the more titillated because of her Marilyn Monroe-level fame…not to mention aesthetic. And yes, Madonna was already well-known for paying homage to one of the twentieth century’s greatest icons early on in her career.

    Perhaps most famously when she re-created the famed “Diamonds Are A Girl’s Best Friend” sequence from Gentlemen Prefer Blondes for her “Material Girl” video in 1985. Funnily enough, it was Sean who met and fell in love with Madonna on that set—not John Jr. But that didn’t mean Marilyn’s specter wouldn’t still haunt their eventual relationship. After all, Jackie insisted John call off his romance not because Madonna was a married woman, but because she was way too much of a Marilyn fangirl. With “class” like this, Jackie really had become a full-blown Kennedy.

    Even those roundaboutly connected to the Kennedys couldn’t seem to avoid the taint of uncouthness and/or sexual impropriety. One such prime example being Andrew Cuomo. Married to Kerry Kennedy for fifteen years (from 1990 to 2005), his descent into shame may have taken decades to occur, but when it happened, oh how it happened big. In a scandal that broke at the end of 2020 (just when Cuomo was riding high on praise [most of it self-given] for his handling of the pandemic). In the end, Attorney General Letitia James released the findings of an independent investigative report that stated Cuomo sexually harassed eleven women during his tenure as New York governor (and who knows how many others before that?). Needless to say, some standard-issue male Kennedy bullshit rubbed off on him. That, and probably working within the Clinton administration. Bill himself being a “renowned” acolyte of JFK—managing to get his picture taken with the OG presidential philanderer in 1963.

    While marriage to a Kennedy might turn you corrupt (or at least cause you to compromise some of your erstwhile ironclad “principles) if you weren’t already, being a Kennedy male appeared to all but assure that you could be born into a “high class” and still have no class at all. Most markedly when it came to the treatment of women. Another case in point: William Kennedy Smith, the son of Jean Kennedy/nephew of JFK. Smith was acquitted of a rape charge in 1991 despite potential reams of evidence against him. Evidence that also would have included the testimonies of three women stating on record that Smith had sexually assaulted them in the past. Their testimonies were deemed by Judge Mary Lupo to be inadmissible. After all, American “justice” stipulates that you should only be on trial for the crime you’ve committed, not the many others you’ve committed in the past and gotten away with.

    Then there was Michael LeMoyne Kennedy, son to Bobby. He, too, was another predatory Kennedy. A fact that came to light in 1997, two years before John Jr. died in a plane crash. But Michael had his own crash to deal with after being accused of having an affair with his children’s babysitter. Which wouldn’t be quite so bad if the affair hadn’t started when she was the Lolita age of fourteen. In typical “Kennedy clout” fashion, Michael evaded being charged with statutory rape in part because the three polygraph tests he took were conducted by companies that the Kennedys directly employed. Perhaps the only form of “justice,” then, could come in the skiing accident that resulted in his death at the end of 1997.

    And so, when Olivia Rodrigo perpetuates this bizarre and totally inaccurate trope about the Kennedys having class and integrity, well, it doesn’t bode well for Gen Z unlearning the undeserved association the Kennedys seem to have with “sophistication” and “glamor” in American politics. Something Gloria Swanson, who suffered the fallout of being collateral damage when it came to Kennedy ambition and entitlement, was unafraid to speak on. But that was after decades of silence and being almost on the verge of death. For she would only confess to her affair with Joe Sr. just three years before she passed away, releasing her autobiography (ghostwritten, of course) in 1980.

    “He was not very sophisticated insofar as knowing the right thing to do,” Swanson would “diplomatically” tell Barbara Walters in a 1981 interview promoting the book, called Swanson on Swanson. She then ominously added, “This man accomplished anything he wanted, including putting his son in the White House.” It was an inherited trait, this bulldozing version of “class.” Except that, in America, having class doesn’t really mean you have to be magnanimous. In fact, quite the opposite—it just means you have to be willing to do whatever it takes to secure your fortune.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Dionne Warwick, Martin Sheen—Even Mike Tyson—Will be No-Shows at RFK, Jr.'s Birthday Bash

    Dionne Warwick, Martin Sheen—Even Mike Tyson—Will be No-Shows at RFK, Jr.'s Birthday Bash

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    You know that childhood fear that all the cool kids from your class won’t come to your birthday party? Now, imagine the people throwing your party told everyone the cool kids were coming, but they weren’t—any they publicly laughed in your face. Now you know how conspiracy theorist and presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. feels.

    Kennedy, who just added vocal vaccination denier Del Bigtree to his campaign, turns 70 on January 17. American Values 2024, a Kennedy-backing super PAC with a name easily confused with the Facebook password used by your great replacement-pushing Aunt Karen, decided to leverage this landmark event with a fundraising event featuring—per a tweet from the super PAC—a performance from famed tenor Andrea Bocelli, and “well-wisher guests” including Martin Sheen, Mike Tyson, and Dionne Warwick.

    It’s a guest list fit for a joke that begins, “The West Wing president, a convicted rapist and alleged domestic abuser, and the only good person left on X (formerly Twitter) walk into a bar…” And a joke might be the best way to characterize it, as all four of these folks say they have no plan to attend the (per the Daily Mail) “multi-million dollar fundraiser” on January 22 at the California desert town of Indian Wells.

    Warwick first responded to the announcement with confusion and dismay, tweeting, “I don’t know anything about this event.”

    “I did not agree to it and I certainly won’t be there,” the “Walk on By” singer wrote.

    Speaking with Page Six, Warwick also noted, “No, I’m not backing him. No, no, and no!”

    A Bocelli representative also expressed confusion, telling Rolling Stone that the claims were false, and that “he will not even be in the U.S. this month.” 

    As for Sheen, an actor and activist who’s been arrested at least 66 times for his participation in civil actions and protests, made his denial in a since-expired Instagram story that’s been shared across social media. “I do not endorse RFK Jr., nor will I be attending his party,” he wrote.

    Get Out villain Bradley Whitford, who on The West Wing played Sheen’s deputy chief of staff, tweeted in support of his former colleague. “There’s a story going around saying g that Martin Sheen is supporting @RobertKennedyJr for president. The story is incorrect,” Whitford wrote.

    “Martin asked us to post this on his behalf. ‘I wholeheartedly support President Joe Biden and the democratic ticket in 2024. Sincerely, Martin Sheen.’”

    Then there’s Tyson, who was convicted of rape in 1992 (but has steadfastly declared his innocence), was accused of raping another woman last year, and joked about the domestic violence allegations against him with Oprah Winfrey in 2009. He also appears to consider the RFK Jr. event beneath him, which is perhaps the knockout punch. 

    A representative for the former boxer told Page Six that “Mr. Tyson was invited to RFK’s bday celebration, which he cannot attend, not a fundraiser,” and that he won’t be going to the party.

    American Values 2024 has yet to respond to a request for comment from Vanity Fair, but the Kennedy campaign said in a statement that all these shenanigans are not its fault. 

    “The campaign doesn’t have anything to do with the organization of this event,” it wrote. “The campaign has no knowledge of who is attending and can’t confirm or deny anyone’s participation, either as entertainment or as a guest.” 

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    Eve Batey

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  • Is Trumpworld Starting to Turn on RFK Jr.?

    Is Trumpworld Starting to Turn on RFK Jr.?

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    Robert F. Kennedy Jr. may be falling out with the MAGAverse. On Thursday, Donald Trump Jr. made the case that the Democratic scion is caught up in a conspiracy designed to undermine his father. “It legitimately always felt like it was a Democrat plant to hurt the Trump thing,” he said of Kennedy at the Trump campaign’s Iowa headquarters. “He wouldn’t be there if the Democrats didn’t want him,” the Trump son added, according to NBC News. 

    Members of Trumpworld previously cheered on Kennedy’s campaign with gusto: They hoped that the presidential hopeful, an anti-vaxxer who has embraced a number of conservative policy planks, would badger Joe Biden and ultimately weaken his political standing in the general election. But that calculus appears to have changed a little over two weeks ago, when Kennedy dropped out of the Democratic primary in favor of a third-party bid.

    While Kennedy could still hurt Biden in a general election, some polling suggests that Trump is at higher risk of losing votes. A Quinnipiac University survey taken in September found that Kennedy has much higher favorability marks among Republicans (48%) than Democrats (14%).

    Trump Jr., for what it’s worth, has argued that the opposite is true. “He should be much more of a threat to Joe Biden than to us,” he said of Kennedy. Still, he urged conservatives against viewing the independent hopeful as an ally. “Once you actually look at his voting record, you’re like, no, he’s just a liberal that is anti-vax,” Trump Jr. continued. “Being anti-vax, I don’t think that’s enough.” (The Kennedy campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.)

    That Trump Jr. would be so concerned about vaccines is noteworthy, given that vaccine skepticism is perhaps the one issue in which Kennedy could outflank Trump from the right. Kennedy has spent years as a face of the anti-vax movement. The former president, meanwhile, has been somewhat ambivalent toward anti-vaxxers, and—likely much to their displeasure—even sought to take credit for the development of the COVID-19 vaccines. His vulnerability on the issue has already provided ammunition for Ron DeSantis, the Florida governor and Trump’s main rival in the GOP primary: “You have another wrinkle now with RFK Jr. as a third party,” DeSantis said earlier this month. “RFK Jr. will be a vessel for anti-lockdown and anti-Fauci voters if Trump is the nominee. He would hurt Trump.”

    Trump Jr.’s comments represent a significant departure from his father’s view on Kennedy a few months ago. “He’s a very smart guy,” Trump said in July, before musing about how the then Democratic candidate might hamper Biden’s reelection campaign. “He’s hit a little bit of a nerve. And a lot of Democrats I know want to vote for him.” 

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    Caleb Ecarma

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  • How Third-Party Hopefuls Could Put Donald Trump Back in the White House

    How Third-Party Hopefuls Could Put Donald Trump Back in the White House

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    President Joe Biden is a bit occupied with life-and-death issues at the moment. He flew into a war zone for eight hours to comfort Israelis and to negotiate relief for Palestinians and to try to avert even larger tragedies, then returned to Washington to deliver a rare, powerful Oval Office speech explaining the stakes to Americans–an address also aimed at growing domestic divisions about the U.S. role in the Middle East.

    That war, plus the one between Ukraine and Russia, will occupy a great deal of the president’s attention for the near future. But those conflicts are also likely to take up an increasing amount of space next year, as Biden runs for reelection–when he may well have more rivals criticizing him about foreign policy than just Donald Trump.

    Third-party candidates are the first worry a Biden adviser mentions when asked to list general election uncertainties: “This is set up for a higher percentage than the 6% in 2016, in the Hillary-Trump election.” In 2020, seven states were decided by less than 3% of the vote, and the margins in battleground states this time around are likely to be nearly as thin. The number of ballots cast for a third-party candidate doesn’t need to be large to do outsize damage. In Pennsylvania in 2016, for instance, Trump edged Hillary Clinton by 44,292 votes—while Green Party candidate Jill Stein attracted 49,941 votes. “It certainly concerns me because I worked for Hillary Clinton in Pennsylvania in 2016 and saw what Jill Stein was responsible for firsthand,” says Brendan McPhillips, who went on to run the state for Biden’s 2020 campaign and then managed John Fetterman’s winning 2022 Senate bid. “I hope anyone who is continuing with some quixotic vanity project of a third-party presidential run will pull their head out of their ass in the next few months.”

    What’s been missing in the chatter is that the most prominent, most likely candidates would pose significantly different threats. Cornel West, the professor and activist, is coming at the president from the left, with a platform that includes universal basic income, nationalizing the fossil fuel industry, and reparations for Black Americans. The conventional wisdom has been that West would appeal to two constituencies where Biden is vulnerable: progressives and voters of color.

    The dynamics are unlikely to be that simple. Democratic strategist Rebecca Pearcey thinks third parties ultimately won’t have much impact—particularly if the Biden campaign hammers home the election’s stakes. “I think voters realize if they are going to go vote for a third-party candidate, it’s essentially throwing their vote away,” says Pearcey, who was the political director for Elizabeth Warren’s 2020 run for the Democratic presidential nomination. “None of these independents are going to get to 270. I think what Biden will need to do, in particular with the challenges from the left, is ensure that people understand the gravity of their one vote: ‘We may not check all your boxes, but it is certainly better than having Donald Trump back in the White House.’”

    West is a charismatic presence, and he’s sold a lot of books over the years, though is new to facing the kind of press scrutiny that comes with a presidential campaign. This week, he had to answer to taking money from Harlan Crow, the GOP megadonor linked to right-wing Supreme Court justice Clarence Thomas. West defended the donation, saying he is “unbought and unbossed.” Then he said he was giving Crow his money back. Meanwhile, West’s recent decision to ditch the Green Party, which has a strong record of getting its presidential candidates on ballots, could present a major challenge to winning votes. It’s the second time in four months West has left a political party and it contributes to the perception that he isn’t really a serious candidate. “The Biden White House was probably very glad to see that happen,” a Democratic strategist says.

    Indeed, Biden’s camp, and most everyone else, is less sure what to make of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s prospects. Earlier this month, Kennedy dropped his Democratic bid to run as an independent, breaking from his famous family’s deep ties with the party. The environmental lawyer turned conspiracy theorist has demonstrated skill at raising (and spending) money, as has the super PAC supporting Kennedy, though running a national campaign as a true outsider will become exponentially more expensive. The larger question is about his appeal. “Kennedy is more puzzling,” says Mark Longabaugh, a Democratic strategist who played a key role in the surprisingly strong presidential run by Bernie Sanders. “He’s moved beyond any kind of ideological association with his family’s political history. In some ways he’s more threatening as an independent than he would have been in a Democratic primary. His market would seem to be disgruntled voters, voters who are fed up with the system.” In the most optimistic Bidenworld view, this means Kennedy helps them by pulling fringe voters away from Trump. (Minnesota congressman Dean Phillips is still flirting with running in the Democratic primary, but has yet to officially challenge Biden.)

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    Chris Smith

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