2024 candidate Kennedy questions Gaza ceasefire, Biden energy subsidies
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[March 21, 2024]
By Stephanie Kelly
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Independent U.S. presidential candidate Robert
F. Kennedy Jr offered staunch support for Israel in a Reuters interview,
calling it a "moral nation" that was justly responding to Hamas
provocations with its attacks on Gaza and questioning the need for a
six-week ceasefire backed by President Joe Biden.
Biden has also been a vocal defender of Israel since the Oct. 7 attack
by Hamas, but he has recently pressured it to stem the humanitarian
crisis in Gaza and accelerate a six-week ceasefire for hostage releases
and aid delivery.
Asked if he supported a temporary ceasefire in Gaza, Kennedy told
Reuters: "I don't even know what that means right now."
Kennedy said that each previous ceasefire "has been used by Hamas to
rearm, to rebuild and then launch another surprise attack. So what would
be different this time?" he said.
Kennedy, 70, spoke to Reuters in a wide-ranging interview on Monday from
his office at his Spanish-style home in Los Angeles, hidden by tropical
plants and hedges.
Support for Israel has become a political wedge issue inside the
Democratic Party, as the death toll in Gaza tops 30,000 and Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vows to push an assault into Rafah.
Kennedy's policy proposals, including a pledge to make homeownership
easier and crack down on corporate subsidies, have gained some traction
among U.S. voters unenthusiastic about Biden, a Democrat, or his
Republican rival Donald Trump in the presidential election.
Kennedy is backed by 15% of registered voters, versus 39% for Biden and
38% for Trump, according to a recent Reuters/Ipsos poll.
That level of support means Kennedy could have a significant impact on
the election in November, with strategists claiming he could help Trump
by pulling more votes from Biden. He will announce a running mate on
March 26; names floated include football player Aaron Rodgers, who
refused the COVID vaccine, lawyer Nicole Shanahan and U.S. Senator Rand
Paul.
His opposition to a ceasefire and his full-throated support for Israel
could be at odds with many young voters, whom he counts as one of his
strongest constituencies.
Speaking from an office crammed with bookshelves, taxidermied animals
and insect specimens, Kennedy told Reuters he sees wars as either moral
crusades that should be pursued or wars of choice that should be
avoided.
"World War I was an immoral war. It was a war of choice. We should have
never gone," he said.
Israel did not choose this war, he said, comparing it to U.S.
involvement in World War II after the attack on Pearl Harbor.
Kennedy said Hamas was to blame for Gaza's destruction for failing to
embrace a two-state solution and for firing thousands of missiles into
Israeli cities like Tel Aviv.
"Any other nation that was adjacent to a neighboring nation that was
bombing it with rockets, sending commandos over to murder its citizens,
pledging itself to murder every person in that nation and annihilate it,
would go and level it with aerial bombardment," Kennedy said.
"But Israel is a moral nation. So it didn't do that. Instead, it built
an iron dome to protect itself so it would not have to go into Gaza."
He said Hamas gave Israeli leaders no choice after fighters stormed into
Israel on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 people and capturing 253 hostages,
according to Israeli tallies.
Kennedy added that he thinks a U.S. president should be contacting
leaders from Russia, Turkey and Egypt to put an end to Hamas.
Since the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks, nearly 32,000 people have been confirmed
killed in Israel's retaliatory onslaught, according to Palestinian
health officials, with thousands more feared lost under the rubble.
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Independent U.S. presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. hikes
in the Santa Monica Mountains, in Los Angeles, California, U.S.,
March 18, 2024. REUTERS/Mike Blake
A U.N.-backed report on Monday said famine in Gaza is likely by May
without an end to fighting in the more than five-month war between
Israel and Hamas militants in the Palestinian enclave of 2.3 million
people.
'POLITICAL COSTS ARE IRRELEVANT'
Kennedy, an environmental lawyer who spent years pushing
anti-vaccine messages, told Reuters as president he would not
restrict abortion, would repeal many provisions of Biden's signature
Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), and would look to close down the
southern border to immigrants entering the U.S. illegally, while
people with asylum claims will await adjudication in Mexico.
He distanced himself from Trump, but said he supported a recent
Supreme Court decision that allowed the former president to remain
on the ballot in 2024.
"I intend to beat him in this election. I want to beat him on a
level playing field. I don't want to beat him because of a court
case," he said.
Kennedy said he considered many subsidies in the IRA "absolutely
catastrophic for the environment."
"You know, virtually all the carbon capture subsidies are really
giant subsidies to the oil industry and to the carbon industry. We
should not be doing that. We shouldn't add to big agriculture ... I
would get rid of those altogether," he said.
He spoke in front of a taxidermied tiger that was a gift to his late
father from Indonesia's late President Sukarno. On his bookshelves
were skulls of various animals, dead spiders in vials and a stream
of wooden ducks, some antique and some passed down from his father,
the senator and presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy who was
assassinated in 1968.
The bookshelves featured photograph archives of his uncle, former
President John F. Kennedy, as well as books about the U.S. Central
Intelligence Agency, and classics like Lewis Carroll's "Alice's
Adventures in Wonderland".
Kennedy was banned from Instagram in 2021 for spreading
misinformation about vaccines and the COVID-19 pandemic but was
later reinstated. He lost a legal bid to force YouTube owner Google
to reinstate videos of him questioning the safety of COVID vaccines.
He disputes the anti-vaccine tag, but chaired the Children's Health
Defense, a nonprofit organization that focuses on anti-vaccine
messaging. He said as president, he would not prevent people from
getting vaccines, but he did not answer a question about how he
would prevent an uptick in measles cases.
"I'm not concerned about whether people disagree with me," Kennedy
said in response to a question on how his position on Gaza might
affect his standing among young voters.
"If somebody shows me that I'm wrong about an issue, I'm going to
change my opinion."
Reuters/Ipsos polls show Kennedy backed by 16% of respondents aged
18 through 39, versus 28% for Biden and 26% for Trump.
Fifteen percent of respondents aged 40 or older said they supported
Kennedy Jr., versus 33% for Biden and 36% for Trump.
(Reporting by Stephanie Kelly; Jarrett Renshaw contributed
reporting; Editing by Heather Timmons and Stephen Coates)
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