Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., has won two legal appeals in Michigan and North Carolina to have his name removed from the states’ respective 2024 presidential election ballots. The state appellate courts reversed two lower court rulings issued just days ago, which held that the independent presidential candidate’s ballot line would remain in place.
In North Carolina, the appellate court remanded a ruling issued by Wake County Superior Court Judge Rebecca Holt yesterday—directing the lower court to rewrite its opinion in favor of Kennedy. On Thursday, Judge Holt held that Kennedy—who suspended his campaign late last month and endorsed former President Donald J. Trump—suffers only “minimal” harm by remaining on the state’s ballot compared to the harm having to reprint ballots would do to the state.
Following the appellate court ruling, the North Carolina State Board of Elections issued a memo informing local officials to halt the mailing of absentee ballots to voters—a process set to begin this afternoon. However, the memo also ordered officials not to destroy the current ballots, suggesting the State Board of Elections intends to appeal the court ruling.
Moments after the North Carolina ruling was handed down, a state appellate court in Michigan also issued an order to remove Kennedy’s name from the state ballots. The Michigan decision also reverses and remands a lower court ruling earlier this week preventing Kennedy from removing his name.
The National Pulse previously reported that polling data suggests Kennedy supporters break by a two-to-one ratio for former President Trump over the Democratic Party’s presidential nominee, Kamala Harris.