Trump’s supporters appreciate the tough stance that Robert Kennedy Jr. had against the covid vaccine and the measures taken at that time, while Trump was found to have a much less precise position.

Kennedy told NewsMax on July 6 that he would not consider being part of either Trump’s or [Joe] Biden’s electoral ticket, but the prospect of a Kennedy/Trump ticket remains a hot topic on social media and even among high-profile politicians and could reveal how America will vote next November.
Former Trump adviser Steve Bannon suggested a Trump/Kennedy pairing back in April. In early July, former Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake, who considered herself a vice presidential candidate for Trump, was asked at the Christian Broadcasting Network (CBN) what she thought of the idea.
While not directly answering the question, Ms. Lake called Kennedy a good man who did extraordinary things and criticized people who referred to Kennedy as a “MAGA Democrat.”
“They don’t want outsiders in the political machine, they don’t want outsiders coming into the swamp to drain it,” Ms. Lake said, “they just want pre-approved, controllable, easily blackmailed and corruptible people like Biden and the whole swamp system.”
Bannon said Ms. Lake is his preferred choice for Trump’s vice presidency, but he said on his War Room program that if she was not available “Kennedy would be an excellent choice.”
Others, such as Connecticut resident Libby DePiero, who has attended 41 Trump rallies since he first ran for president in 2016, told The Epoch Times that it would be a “dream come true” if Kennedy and Trump ran together.
“Between Kennedy’s fight for medical freedom against COVID [sic] tyrants, and Trump’s proven track record of making Americans first in their country, it would be an even better presidency than Trump’s first time,” he said.
Several supporters of the idea launched polls on social media posing the question.
Participants such as New York Times bestselling author and ACT for America founder Brigitte Gabriel said that “a Trump-Kennedy 2024 ticket would end Biden’s re-election chances!”
The two candidates are very different, but they are both perceived as anti-system candidates, thus, while coming from opposite political families, as similar. Of course, this is a very strange idea: first of all, neither of them would agree to discuss the issue now, at a time when they are still fighting for primaries. Then the backgrounds are almost opposite.
However, the Trump-Kennedy ticket would be a certain novelty for the US political world. Every now and then it takes a little bit of craziness.

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