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  Kennedy, Robert F.
CANDIDATE DETAILS
AffiliationDemocratic  
 
NameRobert F. Kennedy
Address
New York, New York , United States
EmailNone
Website [Link]
Born November 20, 1925
DiedJune 06, 1968 (42 years)
ContributorJake
Last ModifedJuan Croniqueur
Nov 06, 2023 04:02pm
Tags Irish - Married - Navy - Assassinated - Catholic - Straight -
InfoRobert Francis "Bobby" Kennedy

"Robert F. Kennedy was a man of passionate conviction, carrying a message of change, and for the forlorn and dispossessed of America, a message of hope." - Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr.

Robert Francis Kennedy was born on November 20, 1925, in Brookline, Massachusetts, the seventh child in the closely knit and competitive family of Rose and Joseph P. Kennedy. "I was the seventh of nine children," he later recalled, "and when you come from that far down you have to struggle to survive."

He attended Milton Academy and, after wartime service in the Navy, received his degree in government from Harvard University in 1948. He earned his law degree from the University of Virginia Law School three years later. Perhaps more important for his education was the Kennedy family dinner table, where his parents involved their children in discussions of history and current affairs. "I can hardly remember a mealtime," Robert Kennedy said, "when the conversation was not dominated by what Franklin D. Roosevelt was doing or what was happening in the world."

In 1950, Robert Kennedy married Ethel Skakel of Greenwich, Connecticut, daughter of Ann Brannack Skakel and George Skakel, founder of Great Lakes Carbon Corporation. Robert and Ethel Kennedy later had eleven children. In 1952, he made his political debut as manager of his older brother John's successful campaign for the U.S. Senate from Massachusetts. The following year, he served briefly on the staff of the Senate Subcommittee on Investigations, chaired by Senator Joseph McCarthy. Kennedy's investigative work confirmed reports that countries allied with the United States against Communist China in the Korean War were also shipping goods to Communist China, but did not imply, as Senator McCarthy often did, that traitors were making American foreign policy.

Disturbed by McCarthy's controversial tactics, Kennedy resigned from the staff after six months. He later returned to the Senate Subcommittee on Investigations as chief counsel for the Democratic minority, in which capacity he wrote a report condemning McCarthy's investigation of alleged Communists in the Army. His later work as chief counsel for the Senate Rackets Committee investigating corruption in trade unions won him national recognition for his investigations of Teamsters Union leaders Jimmy Hoffa and David Beck.

In 1960 he was the tireless and effective manager of John F. Kennedy's presidential campaign. After the election, he was appointed Attorney General in President Kennedy's Cabinet. While Attorney General he won respect for his diligent, effective and nonpartisan administration of the Department of Justice.

Attorney General Kennedy launched a successful drive against organized crime - convictions against organized crime figures rose by 800% during his tenure - and became increasingly committed to the rights of African Americans to vote, attend school and use public accommodations. He demonstrated his commitment to civil rights during a 1961 speech at the University of Georgia Law School: "We will not stand by or be aloof. We will move. I happen to believe that the 1954 [Supreme Court school desegregation] decision was right. But my belief does not matter. It is the law. Some of you may believe the decision was wrong. That does not matter. It is the law."

In September 1962, Attorney General Kennedy sent U.S. Marshals and troops to Oxford, Mississippi to enforce a Federal court order admitting the first African American student - James Meredith - to the University of Mississippi. The riot that had followed Meredith's registration at "Ole Miss" had left two dead and hundreds injured. Robert Kennedy saw voting as the key to racial justice and collaborated with President Kennedy when he proposed the most far-reaching civil rights statute since Reconstruction, the Civil Rights Act of 1964, passed after President Kennedy was slain on November 22, 1963.

Robert Kennedy was not only President Kennedy's Attorney General, he was also his closest advisor and confidant. As a result of this unique relationship, the Attorney General played a key role in several critical foreign policy decisions. During the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, for instance, he helped develop the Kennedy Administration's strategy to blockade Cuba instead of taking military action that could have led to nuclear war and then negotiated with the Soviet Union on removal of the weapons.

Soon after President Kennedy's death, Robert Kennedy resigned as Attorney General and, in 1964, ran successfully for the United States Senate from New York. His opponent, incumbent Republican Senator Kenneth Keating, labeled Kennedy a "carpetbagger" during the closely contested campaign. Kennedy responded to the attacks with humor. "I have [had] really two choices over the period of the last ten months," he said at Columbia University. "I could have stayed in - I could have retired. [Laughter.] And I - my father has done very well and I could have lived off him. [Laughter and applause.] ... I tell you frankly I don't need this title because I [could] be called General, I understand, for the rest of my life. [Laughter and applause.] And I don't need the money and I don't need the office space ... [Laughter.] ... Frank as it is - and maybe it's difficult to believe in the state of New York - I'd like to just be a good United States Senator. I'd like to serve." Kennedy waged an effective statewide campaign and, aided by President Lyndon Johnson's landslide, won the November election by 719,000 votes.

As New York's Senator, he initiated a number of projects in the state, including assistance to underprivileged children and students with disabilities and the establishment of the Bedford-Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation to improve living conditions and employment opportunities in depressed areas of Brooklyn. Now in its 32nd year, the program remains a model for communities all across the nation.

These programs were part of a larger effort to address the needs of the dispossessed and powerless in America - the poor, the young, racial minorities and Native Americans. He sought to bring the facts about poverty to the conscience of the American people, journeying into urban ghettos, Appalachia, the Mississippi Delta and migrant workers' camps. "There are children in the Mississippi Delta," he said, "whose bellies are swollen with hunger ... Many of them cannot go to school because they have no clothes or shoes. These conditions are not confined to rural Mississippi. They exist in dark tenements in Washington, D.C., within sight of the Capitol, in Harlem, in South Side Chicago, in Watts. There are children in each of these areas who have never been to school, never seen a doctor or a dentist. There are children who have never heard conversation in their homes, never read or even seen a book."

He sought to remedy the problems of poverty through legislation to encourage private industry to locate in poverty-stricken areas, thus creating jobs for the unemployed, and stressed the importance of work over welfare.

Robert Kennedy was also committed to the advancement of human rights abroad. He traveled to Eastern Europe, Latin America and South Africa to share his belief that all people have a basic human right to participate in the political decisions that affect their lives and to criticize their government without fear of reprisal. He also believed that those who strike out against injustice show the highest form of courage. "Each time a man stands up for an ideal," he said in a 1966 speech to South African students, "or acts to improve the lot of others, or strikes out against injustice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each other from a million different centers of energy and daring, those ripples build a current that can sweep down the mightiest walls of oppression and resistance."

Kennedy was also absorbed during his Senate years by a quest to end the war in Vietnam. As a new Senator, Kennedy had originally supported the Johnson Administration's policies in Vietnam, but called for a greater commitment to a negotiated settlement and a renewed emphasis on economic and political advancement within South Vietnam. As the war continued to widen and America's involvement deepened, Senator Kennedy came to have serious misgivings about President Johnson's conduct of the war. Kennedy publicly broke with the Johnson Administration for the first time in February 1966, proposing participation by all sides (including the Vietcong's political arm, the National Liberation Front) in the political life of South Vietnam. The following year, he took responsibility for his role in the Kennedy Administration's policy in the Southeast Asia, and urged President Johnson to cease the bombing of North Vietnam and reduce, rather than enlarge, the war effort. In his final Senate speech on Vietnam, Kennedy said, "Are we like the God of the Old Testament that we can decide, in Washington, D.C., what cities, what towns, what hamlets in Vietnam are going to be destroyed? ... Do we have to accept that? ... I do not think we have to. I think we can do something about it."

On March 18, 1968, Robert Kennedy announced his candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination. It was, in the words of Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., "an uproarious campaign, filled with enthusiasm and fun ... It was also a campaign moving in its sweep and passion." Indeed, he challenged the complacent in American society and sought to bridge the great divides in American life - between the races, between the poor and the more affluent, between young and old, between order and dissent. His 1968 campaign brought hope and challenge to an American people troubled by discontent and violence at home and war in Vietnam. He won critical primaries in Indiana and Nebraska and spoke to enthusiastic crowds across the nation.

Robert Francis Kennedy was slain on June 5, 1968 at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, California shortly after claiming victory in that state's crucial Democratic primary. He was 42 years old.

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JOB APPROVAL POLLS

BOOKS
Title Purchase Contributor
Who Killed Bobby?: The Unsolved Murder of Robert F. Kennedy  Purchase Craverguy 
To Seek a Newer World  Purchase Craverguy 
Thirteen Days: A Memoir of the Cuban Missile Crisis  Purchase Craverguy 
The Senator Must Die: The Murder of Robert F. Kennedy  Purchase Craverguy 
The Robert F. Kennedy Assassination: New Revelations on the Conspiracy and Cover-Up, 1968-1991  Purchase Craverguy 
The Last Campaign: Robert F. Kennedy and 82 Days That Inspired America  Purchase Craverguy 
The Gospel According to RFK: Why It Matters Now  Purchase Craverguy 
Shadow Play: The Untold Story of the Robert F. Kennedy Assassination  Purchase Craverguy 
Robert Kennedy: His Life  Purchase Craverguy 
Robert Kennedy and His Times  Purchase Craverguy 
RFK: A Memoir  Purchase Craverguy 
Make Gentle the Life of This World: The Vision of Robert F. Kennedy  Purchase Jake 
In His Own Right: The Political Odyssey of Robert F. Kennedy  Purchase Craverguy 

EVENTS
Start Date End Date Type Title Contributor

NEWS
Date Category Headline Article Contributor
Jul 06, 2009 12:45pm News Jackie O, RFK had steamy affair, book claims  Article Craverguy 
Jun 05, 2008 06:00am General Bobby Kennedy, 40 years later  Article DFWDem 
May 07, 2008 11:00am News The Last Good Campaign  Article The Sunset Provision 
Mar 17, 2007 12:00am News FBI file links Kennedy to Monroe's death  Article The Sunset Provision 
Dec 03, 2004 12:00am Idiocy Robert Kennedy's Killer Wants Hotel Left Standing  Article Thomas Walker 

DISCUSSION
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Importance? 9.50000 Average

FAMILY
Wife Ethel Skakel Kennedy Jun 17, 1950-Jun 06, 1968
Daughter Kathleen Kennedy Townsend 1951-
Son Joseph P. Kennedy II 1952-
Grandson Joseph P. Kennedy, III 1980-
Son Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. 1954-
Daughter Kerry Kennedy 1959-
Son Chris Kennedy 1963-
Son Max Kennedy 1965-
Father Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr. 1888-1969
Brother John F. Kennedy 1917-1963
Niece Caroline Kennedy 1957-
Nephew John Fitzgerald Kennedy, Jr. 1960-1999
Sister Kathleen Cavendish 1920-1948
Sister Eunice Mary Kennedy Shriver 1921-2009
Nephew Bobby Shriver 1954-
Niece Maria Shriver 1955-
Nephew Mark K. Shriver 1964-
Nephew Anthony Kennedy Shriver 1965-
Sister Patricia Kennedy Lawford 1924-2006
Sister Jean Kennedy Smith 1928-2020
Brother Edward M. "Ted" Kennedy 1932-2009
Nephew Edward M. "Ted" Kennedy, Jr. 1961-
Nephew Patrick J. Kennedy 1967-
Mother Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy 1890-1995
Grandfather John Francis "Honey Fitz" Fitzgerald 1863-1950
Father In-Law George Skakel 1892-1955

INFORMATION LINKS
Congressional Gold Medal Recipient Robert F. Kennedy  Discuss
Remarks on the Assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. - Robert F. Kennedy  Discuss
RACES
  06/11/1968 US President - D Primaries Lost 30.63% (-8.10%)
  06/11/1968 US President - R Primaries Lost 0.32% (-37.60%)
  05/14/1968 NE US President - Amer Primary Lost 0.40% (-97.42%)
  03/12/1968 NH US Vice President - D Primary Lost 20.91% (-35.34%)
  11/03/1964 NY US Senate Won 53.47% (+10.06%)
  09/01/1964 NY US Senate - D Convention Won 86.35% (+72.70%)
  08/27/1964 US Vice President - D Convention Lost 0.00% (-100.00%)
  07/01/1964 US President - D Primaries Lost 0.58% (-26.67%)
  03/10/1964 NH US Vice President - D Primary Won 95.58% (+93.64%)
  01/20/1961 US Attorney General Won 100.00% (+100.00%)
ENDORSEMENTS
Supreme Court - Associate Justice - Aug 30, 1967 D Thurgood Marshall
VA US President - Nov 06, 1956 R Dwight D. Eisenhower