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RFK Jr. Withdraws From Presidential Contest in Arizona

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., an independent candidate, is set to give an address on Friday about the future of his campaign.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has filed paperwork to withdraw from the presidential race in Arizona, a spokesman for the Arizona secretary of state’s office said on Thursday night.

The move comes a day before Mr. Kennedy, an independent candidate, is set to give an address in Arizona about the future of his struggling campaign.

He is expected to end his candidacy and possibly to endorse former President Donald. J. Trump following weeks of discussion between their camps, although people close to Mr. Kennedy say an endorsement is not yet certain. On Thursday Mr. Trump’s campaign announced that the former president would have a “special guest” at his rally in Glendale, Ariz., on Friday.

A spokeswoman for the campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Just last Friday, Mr. Kennedy had submitted 118,000 signatures to qualify for the Arizona ballot, more than the required amount, said Aaron Thacker, the spokesman for the secretary of state’s office. Mr. Kennedy was verified by the secretary of state’s office to appear on the ballot this week.

“In fact, when he filed Friday, our staff spent the entire weekend working to verify his signatures,” Mr. Thacker said. “He only needed about 42,000, and he got over 118,000.”

Those signatures, however, could be problematic. As The New York Times reported this week, two people familiar with the campaign’s operations said the signatures had been collected by a super PAC backing Mr. Kennedy, rather than the campaign itself. Federal law limits coordination between campaigns and outside organizations, and the move would most likely have opened the campaign up to legal complaints.

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Source: Elections - nytimes.com


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