Robert F. Kennedy Jr. hopes to make environmental issues bipartisan again.
The former independent presidential candidate on Thursday said he wants the environment to once again become an issue both parties can tackle together.
This comes after his recent show of support for the Republican presidential nominee, former President Donald Trump.
Kennedy, who referred to himself as “an old-school environmentalist” and “a lover and protector of nature,” recently suspended his presidential campaign and threw his support behind Trump.
Kennedy in his post on Thursday said he was also surprised to discover they also share common perspectives on the environment.
“I have found to my surprise that many people on the Trump team, including President Trump himself, care about the same environmental issues I do,” Kennedy said.
He also wrote that the issues can help unify the nation because “almost everyone values thriving ecosystems and wildlife” and wants clean air, soil, water, and food.
Kennedy, a member of one of the most high-profile and influential Democrat families, has distanced himself from the party after initially running for the Democratic Party nomination but in October 2023 announcing he would be running as an independent.
Kennedy wrote on Thursday on X that Democrats “obsess about counting CO2” but that many carbon-motivated environmental policies actually harm the environment. These include offshore wind—which he said can be harmful to marine animals such as whales and birds—and mining for lithium, coltan, silver, and copper in order to make batteries, which can impact entire ecosystems.
The more urgent issues are chemicals in food, water, and soil, according to Kennedy.
His statement online drew a lot of attention and X users applauded his stance and efforts to unify the country.
Kennedy’s statement, however, also drew some criticism.
Democrat presidential nominee Kamala Harris in her speech at the Democratic National Convention briefly touched on the topic of the environment, saying that fundamental freedoms are at stake in the 2024 election, including “the freedom to breathe clean air, drink clean water, and live free from the pollution that fuels the climate crisis.”