WISCONSIN — One day after Vice President Kamala Harris officially accepted the Democratic party's presidential nomination on the final night of the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. endorsed former Presudent Donald Trump.
Kennedy said he's not ending his campaign, though he will now "throw my support to President Trump."
“Three great causes drove me to enter this race in the first place, primarily. And these are the principal causes that persuaded me to leave the Democratic party and run as an independent, and now to throw my support to President Trump,” he said.
He said he's staying in the race in certain states, but removing his name from the ballot in several battleground states.
It's not clear which states he will be removing himself from.
"We've seen all year long that Kennedy has had a little more appeal with Republicans than Democrats," said Charles Franklin, the head of the Marquette University Law School poll. "It's not a huge difference but it's a difference."
With roughly 10 weeks to go until the November election, Franklin said the race between Trump and Harris remains incredibly close, despite the potential for a traditional post-convention bounce in a very untraditional year.
"[Harris] got such a bounce by getting in the race that I wonder if she's used up all of that," Franklin said. "Maybe there will be a further bounce out of the convention."
Watch the full interview above.