The family of Latino civil rights legend Cesar Chavez is doing all it can to stop conspiracy theorist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. from co-opting the activist’s legacy for his presidential campaign.
Kennedy, whose campaign has largely been propped up and promoted by a right-wing megadonor and conservative media outlets, appears intent on winning over liberal voters — particularly Black and Latino voters — seen as key to President Joe Biden’s electoral chances this fall. On the campaign trail, he’s attempted this by shamelessly glomming on to the political legacies some of his family members have established, including his uncle, President John F. Kennedy; and his father, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy.
Most of the Kennedy family have backed President Biden’s reelection. And RFK, Jr. has repeatedly been denounced by his relatives for using the family name to fuel his campaign. That was the case when he promoted a Super Bowl ad supporting his candidacy that was modeled on a JFK ad from 1960. Now, Kennedy’s name-dropping is being bashed by the Chavez family, too. The activist’s son Fernando and other members of the family denounced a “Viva Kennedy24” event planned around Cesar Chavez Day that touted Chavez as “a good friend of RFK and RFK, Jr.” and suggested the three were aligned politically.
As the Los Angeles Times reported:
Several [family members] spoke out this week, as Kennedy plans to hold an event Saturday in Los Angeles commemorating Cesar Chavez Day. In promoting the event, Kennedy’s campaign has featured his own image almost blending into a photo of his father sitting beside Chavez in 1968. “When we saw Bobby Kennedy begin to use images of my father, and then when we heard about this event in L.A., it really prompted us to stand up and to make sure that people understood that the Chavez family does not support his campaign,” Paul Chavez, Fernando’s brother, told The Times. “We’ve never seen anybody go as far as using that image for political gain,” Andres Chavez, Paul’s son, said of Kennedy’s campaign event invitation.
The sons are endorsing Biden and claim their dad would’ve done the same. And this is just the latest example of dubious clout-chasing and name-dropping from a Kennedy campaign that’s been disturbingly reliant on both.
Whether invoking his dad’s name, co-opting Cesar Chavez’s activism or palling around with Black rappers, Kennedy has tried to amass political clout on the strength of his associations, rather than his actual policy platform. To me, this is a cheap gimmick meant to mask the fact that he’s on the record espousing political stances that would harm many Black and brown people, if they haven’t already.
That’s a point U.S. Virgin Islands Del. Stacey Plaskett made last year in an MSNBC op-ed criticizing Kennedy’s anti-vaccine conspiracism.
She wrote:








