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		RFK Jr faces down midnight deadline to qualify for CNN presidential 
		debate
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		 [June 19, 2024]  
		By Stephanie Kelly 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - Independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr has less 
		than 24 hours to qualify for the first U.S. presidential debate of the 
		2024 election cycle, and a complaint filed with the hamstrung U.S. 
		agency that oversees election policy might be his only hope.
 
 CNN will host the debate on June 27, after incumbent President Joe Biden 
		and his Republican rival Donald Trump agreed in late May to the 
		face-off. The deadline for candidates to qualify for the debate is 12 
		a.m. ET (0400 GMT) on Thursday. Wednesday also marks the Juneteenth 
		holiday, which will stall most federal business.
 
 Kennedy filed a complaint with the Federal Election Commission in late 
		May alleging CNN's debate amounts to a large prohibited campaign 
		contribution to Biden and Trump because the media company "illegally" 
		demanded that Kennedy meet "different criteria" to participate in the 
		debate.
 
 The campaign asked that the FEC take action by Thursday and keep CNN, 
		Biden and Trump from holding the debate on June 27 until they have "come 
		into compliance with the Federal Election Campaign Act," according to 
		the complaint.
 
 The FEC declined to comment for this article. The agency, hobbled by 
		political division, recently struggled to rule on artificial 
		intelligence in the 2024 campaign, and has not ruled on related issues 
		in recent elections, experts say.
 
		
		 
		This election cycle presents a nearly unprecedented situation - not 
		since 1960 ushered in the era of televised presidential debates have 
		news organizations - first CNN next week, and ABC, which hosts a 
		September debate - been fully in control of the terms and parameters of 
		two debates between the top two candidates.
 Most recently, the bipartisan Commission on Presidential Debates has 
		sponsored them.
 
 CNN said candidates eligible to participate must appear on a sufficient 
		number of state ballots to reach the 270 electoral vote threshold needed 
		to win and receive at least 15% in four separate national polls.
 
 Soon after the debate was announced, Kennedy and his campaign cried 
		foul. Kennedy claimed that Biden and Trump "are trying to exclude me 
		from their debate because they are afraid I would win."
 
 On Saturday, CNN said it is "not impossible" Kennedy could qualify, but 
		that he has not yet met the criteria. He has received at least 15% in 
		three qualifying polls to date and has qualified for the ballot in six 
		states, making him eligible for 89 electoral college votes, CNN said.
 
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            Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. addresses 
			the Libertarian Party's national convention in Washington, U.S., May 
			24, 2024. REUTERS/Brian Snyder/File Photo 
            
			 
            The Kennedy campaign declined to comment further for this article. 
			It is in the middle of an aggressive operation to gain ballot access 
			across the U.S., with $15 million raised for the process. 
 In a news release on Tuesday, the campaign said Kennedy is on the 
			ballot in nine states - totaling 144 electoral votes - and has 
			collected enough signatures to be on the ballot in 14 other states - 
			for another 166 electoral votes.
 
 Biden and Trump, as the presumptive nominees of the Democratic and 
			Republican political parties, respectively, qualify because most 
			states automatically allow them ballot access without petitioning, a 
			CNN spokesperson said.
 
 "The mere application for ballot access does not guarantee that he 
			(Kennedy) will appear on the ballot in any state," a CNN 
			spokesperson told Reuters. "In addition, RFK, Jr. does not currently 
			meet our polling criteria, which, like the other objective criteria, 
			were set before issuing invitations to the debate."
 
 Derek Muller, a law professor at the University of Notre Dame Law 
			School, said CNN's criteria is "nonsensical" because it allows Biden 
			and Trump to qualify for the debate as presumptive nominees versus 
			candidates. Biden and Trump will officially be named candidates at 
			their parties' conventions later this summer, after the debate.
 
 Having an independent candidate like Kennedy on stage may make for a 
			more substantive debate, he said.
 
 "If you're saying that we're looking for those candidates that have 
			serious support to weigh major issues, and dealing with two of the 
			least popular major presidential candidates of all time, then the 
			debate could definitely benefit from having a third party on the 
			stage. It's all dependent on your point of view."
 
 Some 41% of registered voters in a recent Reuters/Ipsos poll said 
			they would vote for Trump if the election were held today, while 39% 
			picked Biden.
 
 Ten percent of respondents would pick Kennedy, if he were on the 
			ballot with Trump and Biden, the poll showed.
 
 (Reporting by Stephanie Kelly; Editing by Heather Timmons and 
			Alistair Bell)
 
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