Former President Donald Trump 's campaign made a "strategic error" in courting former independent presidential hopeful Robert F. Kennedy Jr, according to a former aide for Vice President Mike Pence.
This presidential campaign cycle has been weird for many ominous, dark and deeply concerning reasons, not least of which is the fact that democracy as we know it is on the line. But also because of the prominence of gimmicky stuff,
Donald Trump, the Republican nominee for President, may let Robert F. Kennedy Jr., choose the next leaders of the NIH, CDC, and FDA and "go wild" on health and food.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s recent comments on fluoride are prompting questions about its safety in drinking water. Here's what to know.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.’s claims about fluoride in the drinking water are linked to Cold War conspiracy theories about the substance.
Seth takes a closer look at an exhausted and despondent Donald Trump closing out his campaign with rambling speeches to dwindling crowds, threats of violence, baseless allegations of cheating, vaccine ban possibilities and complaints about Saturday Night Live.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. waded into another scientific debate on Saturday by saying Donald Trump’s administration would advise that fluoride be removed from the country’s water supplies if the former president wins Tuesday’s presidential election.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said former President Trump will push to remove fluoride from drinking water if elected president, against decades of guidance.
The former presidential hopeful said that a vote for Donald Trump was the only way to get him and his ideas into the White House.
Former President Donald Trump on Sunday expressed tentative support for Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s plan to order the removal of fluoride from water supplies during a potential second Trump term, saying that it “sounds OK to me.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. made a final election-eve pitch to voters, explicitly telling his supporters “do not vote for me.” Kennedy, an independent who unsuccessfully ran a third-party presidential bid,