Star-Telegram (Sunday)

Trump/RFK Jr. alliance is weird but could work

- BY CYNTHIA M. ALLEN

In an election cycle that can only be described as stranger than fiction, things have just gotten impossibly weirder.

Longtime Democrattu­rned-independen­t candidate for president Robert F. Kennedy Jr. dropped out of the race and endorsing none other than Donald Trump.

The move wasn’t totally unexpected; both campaigns had been hinting at it for days, and a certain sect of Trump supporters have been angling for an alliance for months.

Trump’s running mate, Sen. J.D. Vance, had said that communicat­ion between the campaigns has been ongoing, and on Friday, it culminated in one of the strangest political marriages we’ve seen in some time.

In a weird way, though, it’s a very American-looking union.

Aside from being a member of one of the most famous political dynasties in American history — a relationsh­ip upon which he has capitalize­d — Kennedy is far from a ne’er-do-well or grifter.

He made a name for himself as a prominent environmen­tal activist and attorney, working as a senior attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council, an organizati­on known for being a thorn in the side of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency during Republican administra­tions.

But his assertions that common childhood vaccines are dangerous, his skepticism of government in general and his outspoken opinions on the COVID vaccine in particular attracted support from government cynics on the right, growing a base of supporters as motley as one could imagine.

Indeed, his campaign platform is an amalgam of both left- and right-leaning policies: strength on the border, dovish foreign policy, populist economics, and support for the Second Amendment, abortion rights and legalizing marijuana.

It’s almost as if he threw conservati­ve and progressiv­e policy positions into the air and picked up the ones that landed at his feet.

While Kennedy and his running mate, Silicon Valley attorney and entreprene­ur Nicole Shanahan, have deep roots in the Democratic Party, it seems things have changed.

Kennedy’s platform is predicated on challengin­g what he deems a corrupted two-party system; he intended for his ticket to attract the growing number of voters who find themselves politicall­y homeless.

Early polling showed that his candidacy would siphon away enough support from Joe Biden to give Trump the edge in the election.

Now that Kamala Harris is the new “joyful” Democratic nominee, that edge may be less certain.

But it’s probably not non-existent.

Homeless voters will need to go somewhere, and if the two divergent campaigns pool their resources and work together they could build enough voter support over the next three months to secure a Trump-Kennedy conservati­ve-populist-progressiv­e victory, if you will.

At least on issues that send voters to the polls, the Venn diagram of Trump and Kennedy supporters is promising.

And while political parties like to talk about unity and compromise when it suits them, it’s rarely done in reality because politician­s once in office tend to primarily serve their bases.

In this way, we could be entering new territory in modern American politics.

Cynthia M. Allen: @CJMAllen12

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