RFK Jr says he will not back eventual Dem nominee: 'Of course I’m not going to do that'

Democrat presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced that he would not be backing the eventual Democrat nominee for president and that he was all-in on his campaign.

Democrat presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr., said he would not be backing the eventual Democrat presidential nominee.

In a Wednesday interview, Kennedy said that he will not be backing whoever gets the Democratic nomination and that he is going full send on his campaign.

"Of course I’m not going to do that," Kennedy said in the interview.

YOUTUBE CENSORS ANOTHER RFK JR INTERVIEW; KENNEDY SAYS PLATFORM PROTECTING POLITICAL ESTABLISHMENT

"You’re not going to do that?" NewsNation’s Elizabeth Vargas asked.

"No, of course," Kennedy responded, telling the reporter he doesn’t know what he’ll do if Biden gets the blue party nomination again.

"Let’s see what happens in this campaign," Kennedy said. "Let’s see, you know, if people are living up to Democratic values and having debates and having discussions."

"My plan is to win this election, and I don’t have a Plan B," Kennedy said when asked if he would back a Republican nominee or run as an independent candidate if he doesn’t get the Democrat nomination.

In the same interview, Kennedy said he’s running for president because he believes the Democratic Party "has lost its way" and that he wants his "party back."

"I’m not going to attack other people personally," he said. "What I’m trying to do in this race is bring people together."

"You won’t hear me saying bad things about President Biden," Kennedy said. "I’m not going to attack him as a man."

Kennedy Jr. announced online this week that another of his interviews has been removed from social media giant YouTube.

Kennedy said that his interview with former New York Post reporter Al Guart had been taken off the prominent video-sharing platform.

The Democrat challenger to President Biden in the 2024 primaries has already seen one of his interviews removed from YouTube due to an apparent violation of the website's vaccine misinformation policy.

"[YouTube] just pulled another of my videos, with former NY Post political reporter [Guart]," Kennedy wrote in a Tuesday Twitter thread. "People made a big deal about Russia supposedly manipulating internet information to influence a Presidential election. Shouldn’t we be worried when giant tech corporations do the same?"

"When industry and government are so closely linked, there is little difference between ‘private’ and ‘government’ censorship," he continued. "Suppression of free speech is not suddenly OK when it is contracted out to the private corporations that control the public square."

Kennedy wrote that the "Twitter Files proved that numerous government agencies, acting through the FBI, told Twitter whom to censor" and that "Twitter complied."

"Doubtless, Facebook, YouTube, and the rest received similar requests," Kennedy wrote.

"In the case of my interview with [Guart], [YouTube] probably acted on its own initiative," he continued. "It has internalized the political wishes of the establishment to the point where it knows what to censor without being told."

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