Marjorie Taylor Greene would have never used these two words to describe Robert F. Kennedy Jr. just two weeks ago

Gage Skidmore from Surprise, AZ, United States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Marjorie Taylor Greene and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. couldn’t possibly be further apart on the vast majority of political issues. 

However they do agree on some incredibly important issues facing Americans today.

And now Marjorie Taylor Greene would have never used these two words to describe Robert F. Kennedy Jr. two weeks ago.

A return to Camelot

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. attempted to challenge incumbent President Joe Biden in the Democrat Presidential Primary.

But the Democrat Party had no interest in allowing an actual primary process to play out. 

Democrats refused to run any primary debates, and even restructured the dates in which state’s would vote throughout the process in order to stack Biden strongholds early in the process to weed out the field.

With the deck stacked against him, Kennedy fled the Democrat Party, and instead ran for the White House as an independent. 

While President Biden was the Democrat Party’s nominee, Kennedy’s impact on the Presidential race was murky. 

Polling showed RFK Jr. was taking from both Biden and former President Donald Trump – but it seemed he was drawing more support away from Democrats. 

However, the Democrat Party ran a coup, replacing the ineffective incumbent with his vice President, Kamala Harris, as a do-over candidate. 

And with that swap, Kennedy’s impact on the race suddenly changed as polling indicated that many traditional Democrat voters who had become anti-Biden suddenly wanted to throw their support behind Kamala – although, the accuracy of such polling is now in dispute, even amongst many Democrat political strategists and pollsters.

Nevertheless, the polling began to indicate that Kennedy was taking more votes from Trump than Kamala, and that his presence on the ballot in the top swing states could potentially hand Democrats the White House once again.

RFK Jr. vs. Kamala Harris 

RFK didn’t want to be responsible for tipping the election to the Harris-Walz ticket. 

So late last week, he dropped out of the race. 

And later that same day, Kennedy showed up at a Trump rally in Arizona to endorse the former President.

“These are the principal causes that persuaded me to leave the Democratic Party and run as an independent,” RFK Jr. said. “And now to throw my support to President Trump.”

“We are both in this to do what’s right for the country,” Trump said. 

Needless to say, Trump supporters are now celebrating what Trump and Kennedy are calling the “unity party.” 

MTG welcomes RFK Jr. to the team 

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) was quick to praise Kennedy for putting the country first.

Despite still having fundamental disagreements on many issues, Greene recognizes what Kennedy brings to the table. 

She clipped a four-minute portion of Kennedy’s withdrawal speech, calling it “must watch.” 

“He outlines, in detail, how they didn’t hold a legitimate primary, launched a tyrannical legal campaign to throw President Trump in jail, and waged lawfare and censorship against his campaign,” Greene wrote on X. “Every Democrat, especially Kamala Harris, is guilty of subverting the American people and their rights to choose the leaders of their government. It’s despicable and I’m glad RFK Jr. has the courage to expose their hatred of America and everything we stand for as a nation.”

Kennedy was polling around 5%-6% in most of the top-7 swing states before dropping out.

While that number may seem insignificant, it’s not. 

If Trump takes those RFK voters by a 2-1 margin – as some polls indicate is possible – that would likely make up the margin Biden defeated Trump by in 2020.

And that could be all the difference in what will be a nailbiter of an election either way.

US Political Daily will keep you updated on any developments to this ongoing story.