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Bobby Kennedy: The Making of a Liberal Icon

Bobby Kennedy: The Making of a Liberal Icon

Bobby Kennedy Crop

When Robert F. Kennedy ran for a U.S. Senate seat from New York in 1964, many cried foul. John F. Kennedy’s younger brother had served as attorney general in the late president’s administration — an appointment that had itself generated controversy — and his candidacy in a state in which he neither resided nor voted (he lived in Virginia, voted in Massachusetts) was seen as a shameless attempt to use New York as a steppingstone for a future White House bid. The New York Times, which would eventually endorse his Republican opponent, called the campaign a “cynical” move and alleged that New York was nothing more to Kennedy than a “convenient launching-pad” for his “political ambitions.”

As Larry Tye recounts in his clear-eyed and absorbing new biography, Bobby Kennedy: The Making of a Liberal Icon, others saw the same naked political calculations but responded with what amounted to a shrug. Kennedy, like many of his fellow citizens, was clearly still mourning the assassination of his revered brother the year before. “If the Attorney General has a wound so great that, not to heal him but just for a little while to relieve him, he must be made a Senator, then we owe him nothing smaller,” declared the veteran political journalist Murray Kempton in The New Republic.

The two reactions demonstrate how polarizing Kennedy was. To some, he was less like his brother Jack than like his ruthless, vindictive father, Joe. (“Jack made friends, Bobby enemies,” Tye quips.) But traveling in America and abroad, he attracted adoring crowds inspired by his youth and his promise, even before JFK’s death made him, as Tye writes, “a prince in exile.” Kennedy, of course, did win the Senate seat, and he used it to launch his presidential campaign in 1968, as political observers had predicted he would. The idealistic Bobby who ran against the Vietnam War and as a champion for African Americans and the poor — and who, like his brother, was cut down in his prime by an assassin’s bullet — is the Bobby we remember today.

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