[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 the
possibilities of a Robert Kennedy presidency, and what was lost with his
assassination.
First, I want to give this James
Baldwin quote, highlighted in the wonderful documentary I Am Not Your Negro
(2017), the space it deserves: “I remember when
the ex-Attorney General, Mr. Robert Kennedy, said it was conceivable that in 40
years in America we might have a Negro President. That sounded like a very
emancipated statement to white people. They were not in Harlem when this
statement was first heard. They did not hear the laughter and bitterness and scorn
with which this statement was greeted. From the point of view of the man in the
Harlem barber shop, Bobby Kennedy only got here yesterday and now he is already
on his way to the Presidency. We were here for 400 years and now he tells us
that maybe in 40 years, if you are good, we may let you become President.” As
usual, Baldwin has an excellent point—the presidency (and more exactly even the
consideration or eligibility for the presidency) was itself a particularly
glaring form of white privilege for more or less the entirety of American
political history; even when Barack Obama finally broke through that barrier in
2008, the Birther
movement (which spawned among other things our current horror show of a
president) reflected a continued national inability to see an African American
as a legitimate president.
So like
nearly all of the white men who have run for president, and certainly like
those from already prominent and presidential families, Bobby Kennedy did
indeed begin from a position of significant privilege. But that doesn’t mean
that all those candidates were the same, nor that their prospective
presidencies would have been similar. And I would argue that Bobby Kennedy’s 1968
presidential campaign featured a candidate who (compared to just about any
prior mainstream presidential candidate) was uniquely and passionately interested
in African
American Civil Rights. It’s true, and important, that in 1963, as Attorney
General under his brother John F. Kennedy’s administration, Robert had to
some degree signed off on J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI’s initial surveillance of
Martin Luther King Jr. (although “to some degree” is an important phrase, as
Hoover generally did what he wanted regardless of presidents or
administrations). But it’s also true that Robert, who in response to a May 1962
interviewer’s question about “the big problem ahead for you,” answered “Civil Rights,”
was a
dedicated supporter of the Civil Rights Movement, from the biggest scales
(using troops to enforce
desegregation and protect Freedom Riders) to the more intimate ones (responding
to Mildred Loving’s letter and helping the family pursue their
ground-breaking court case). “Dr. King may be gone,” John
Lewis recalls saying after King’s assassination, “but we still have Robert
Kennedy.”
King’s
April 4th assassination took place during the 1968 presidential
primaries, in which Robert Kennedy was the frontrunner for the Democratic nomination
(incumbent Lyndon Johnson had decided not to run again). As Lewis’s quote thus reflects,
Kennedy had brought that emphasis on Civil Rights to his campaign, along with
broader but interconnected proposals for racial and economic justice, an
advocacy for America’s youth, and social change. His June
4th, 1968 victory in the California primary solidified his position
as the likely nominee; while addressing supporters the night of that victory in
the ballroom of Los Angeles’s Ambassador Hotel, Kennedy
was shot and fatally wounded by Sirhan
Sirhan, a 24 year old Palestinian apparently angry at Kennedy’s support for
Israel. The assassination was a horrific tragedy on its own terms, as any and
all such killings are. But when we consider what a Bobby Kennedy presidency
might have been—not least because eventual nominee Eugene McCarthy was soundly beaten
by Richard Nixon, in a campaign in which Nixon relied overtly on the racist
Southern Strategy—the tragedy is greatly compounded. We can never know for
sure what Kennedy’s presidency would have looked like, but we can still mourn
the loss of the chance to find out.
Special post
this weekend,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other Kennedy connections you’d highlight?
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