RALEIGH, N.C. — Robert F. Kennedy Jr. scored a pair of legal victories Friday in the battleground states of North Carolina and Michigan, and a setback in Wisconsin, in his quest to get his name off of the ballots in some states after he suspended his campaign and endorsed former President Donald Trump.
North Carolina's intermediate-level Court of Appeals issued an order granting Kennedy's request to halt the mailing of ballots that included his name, upending plans in the state just as officials were about to begin sending out the nation's first absentee ballots for the Nov. 5 presidential election.
The court — a three-judge panel ruling unanimously — also told a trial judge to order the State Board of Elections to distribute ballots without Kennedy's name on them. No legal explanation was given.
In Michigan, its intermediate-level Court of Appeals ruled that Kennedy should be removed from the ballot, reversing a decision made earlier this week by a lower court judge.
And in Wisconsin, a Dane County circuit court judge denied Kennedy's request for a temporary restraining order to put on hold the state elections commission's decision to keep him on the ballot.
''A matter of such consequence deserves a full development of the record with appropriate briefing by all sides,'' Judge Stephen Ehlke wrote. He set a scheduling conference for Wednesday, a week before the deadline for the printing of ballots.
In separate statements, a Kennedy attorney praised the North Carolina and Michigan rulings, saying they uphold state elections laws and support ballot integrity by ensuring no one must vote for a candidate no longer running in their state.
A favorable outcome for Kennedy could assist Trump's efforts to win North Carolina, Michigan and Wisconsin.