RFK Jr. expected to drop out of race by end of week, plans to endorse Trump: Sources
Sources tell ABC News that Kennedy plans to endorse the former president.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is planning to drop out of the presidential race by the end of this week, sources familiar with the decision tell ABC News.
Sources tell ABC News that Kennedy plans to endorse Donald Trump -- but when asked directly by ABC News if he will be endorsing the former president, Kennedy said, "I will not confirm or deny that."
"We are not talking about any of that," he said.
Sources cautioned the decision is not yet finalized and could still change, with one source adding that Kennedy's hope is, in part, to finalize things quickly in order to try to blunt momentum from the Democratic National Convention.
One possible scenario being discussed is for Kennedy to appear on stage with Trump at an event in Phoenix on Friday, though the sources cautioned that Kennedy's thinking could always change and sources close to Trump say no plan for Friday is finalized.
Kennedy's campaign manager, Amaryllis Fox, emailed senior staff on Wednesday morning thanking them for their hard work -- but indicated a decision on the way forward had not been made, a source familiar with the email told ABC News.
"There are a couple potential paths forward, not only two, and I can bear witness to the care, examination that Bobby has invested in the consideration of each," Fox wrote, according to the source.
A spokesperson for Kennedy posted on X that Kennedy will "address the nation" live on Friday to discuss his "path forward," but offered no specifics.
A spokesperson for the Trump campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Kennedy's running mate Nicole Shanahan -- who in a podcast interview published Tuesday said Kennedy was considering a move to "join forces" with Trump -- told ABC News Wednesday that the choice is "Bobby's decision" and that he has her "full support."
Of the campaign's discussions with Trump's team, she said, "All we can do is gauge sincerity, and we're gauging sincerity from Donald Trump."
Kennedy told ABC News regarding the Democratic convention and Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris, "I think it was a coronation, it's not democracy. Nobody voted. Who chose Kamala? It wasn't voters."
He also complained about the way his campaign has been treated.
"She went in four weeks from being the worst liability for the Democratic Party to the second coming of Christ without giving one interview, without showing up for a debate, without a single policy that anyone thinks isn't ridiculous," he said. "It's not democracy."
For weeks, Kennedy, buried under an avalanche of lawsuits brought by Democratic groups challenging his place on state ballots, has accused Democrats of acting undemocratically by trying to strip his supporters of the opportunity to vote for him.
Shanahan on Wednesday said, "We're getting prosecuted politically right now. This is not normal for democracy."