[On July
18th, 1969, Senator Ted Kennedy was involved in a car accident
that left his female companion Mary
Jo Kopechne dead. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy that Chappaquiddick
incident and four other Kennedy family
histories, leading up to a weekend post on cultural representations of the
family!]
On taking the
long view, recognizing its limits, and trying for a balance.
Edward
“Ted” Kennedy did a great deal of meaningful and good work in his nearly
fifty years (1962-2009) as a U.S.
Senator from Massachusetts. He and his staff wrote more than 300 bills that
became law, and he was a vital co-sponsor or supporter of many of the late 20th
century’s most significant laws, from the 1965 Immigration
and Nationality Act to the 1990 Americans
with Disabilities Act, the Civil
Rights Act of 1991 to the 2001 No
Child Left Behind Act (not his finest moment or most discerning judgment,
to be sure, but education reform was a widely shared bipartisan objective at
the time). To my mind that legislative career and legacy stand alone in the 20th
century, and rival those of towering 19th century greats like
Henry Clay, Daniel Webster, Charles
Sumner, and Thaddeus
Stevens. Whether or not Kennedy deserved to go to jail for his role in Mary
Jo Kopechne’s death (and more on that in a moment), it’s difficult to argue
that the Senate and America overall would not have suffered significantly if
Kennedy were not part of them for the forty years between that incident and his
2009 death.
And yet. In this
long-ago Talking
Points Memo piece, I argued that Mark Wahlberg’s escape from virtually all
punishment (either at the time or in his long and successful subsequent career)
for his youthful hate crimes represented a clear form of white privilege in
action. And I’m not sure there’s any other way to see Kennedy’s similar
avoidance of virtually all criminal punishment for his self-confessed abandonment
of the car in which Kopechne was drowning (“leaving the scene of a crash
causing personal injury,” in legal terms) and subsequent lack of notification
of the police for many crucial hours; Kennedy pled guilty and received only a two-month
suspended jail sentence. Whether the incident permanently tarnished his
reputation and political future is a separate question (and perhaps it did keep
him from the presidency, although there’s no way to know that for sure and
again in any case he served in the Senate for four more decades). But it’s not
a question that can or should distract us from the fact that a young woman died
as a result of Kennedy’s actions and negligence (to put it in the kindest
terms), and he remained legally and largely unaffected for his remaining forty
years of life.
So while no one
moment can necessarily define a life, moments of criminal behavior that result
in a person’s death almost always impact the perpetrator far more than did
Kennedy’s. That individual moment doesn’t entirely negate the long view of
Kennedy’s career and impact, but neither does the long view in any way negate
the awfulness of that individual moment. There’s no reason why we have to come
to a synthesis of those two sides, of course—they’re both just part of a long,
messy life and story, and any simplifying synthesis would risk eliding the
messiness. But I do believe there’s reason to try to aim for balance in how we
remember and tell that story. In many ways, Chappaquiddick and Kopechne were
frustratingly minimized in the latter decades of Kennedy’s life, and so better remembering
them is certainly an important part of that striving for balance (the new film, on which
more this weekend, certainly will add to that side). But at the same time,
Kennedy’s subsequent four decades of public service (far different from, for
example, Walhberg’s career as a rapper, actor, and restauranteur) contributed
meaningfully to the lives of numerous Americans and to the society as a whole,
and those contributions are part of the story too. The additive version of
collective memory isn’t always as inspiring as what I tend to focus on in this
space, but I’d say it remains a consistent goal.
Next
KennedyStudying tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other Kennedy connections you’d highlight?
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