JOHN KERRY AND BOBBY KENNEDY'S UNFINISHED MISSION
Arianna Huffington
[Received May 19, 2004]
There is no shortage of comparisons
between our current military
misadventures and Vietnam.
But after watching "RFK," David Grubin's
powerful new documentary
on the life of Robert F. Kennedy set to air on
PBS in October, I feel there
is a more useful comparison -- not of the two
wars but of two eras
and two leaders.
John Kerry has said that
he would one day like to write a book entitled
simply "1968." In
fact, it was impossible to watch "RFK" and not be
struck by the many historical
parallels between 1968 and today, by how
much the legacy of Bobby
Kennedy animates John Kerry's run for the White
House -- and how Kerry is
in a unique position to complete Kennedy's
unfinished mission of ending
a misguided war, returning real compassion to
our domestic agenda, and
bringing us together as a nation.
"As a survivor of RFK's 1968
campaign," historian Arthur Schlesinger told
me, "I see John Kerry in
the JFK/RFK tradition -- a brave, intelligent,
and thoughtful man.
I find many similarities between that campaign and
this one, especially our
entanglement in a hopeless war at the expense of
urgent domestic woes."
In the film, former Senator
and RFK confidant Harris Wofford says that
Kennedy told him that he
was running for president "to save the soul of
the country."
Kerry has already fueled
his campaign with similar aspirations. "America
is more than a piece of
geography," he said in a speech earlier this
month, "more than the name
of a country. It is the most powerful idea in
human history: freedom
and equal opportunity for all… I am running for
president to renew that
idea and spirit again."
And not a minute too soon.
You know the idea and spirit of America are in
desperate need of renewal
when the most stirring rallying cry we can
muster these days is, "At
least we don't behead people!"
It should go without saying
that we're better than that. Better than an
imperial, unilateral foreign
policy. Better than domestic policies driven
by selfishness and greed.
Better than Abu Ghraib. Better than 43 million
uninsured. Better
than 12 million children living in poverty. Better
than millions of school
kids left behind.
The 2004 election is our
chance to prove to ourselves and to the world
what America really stands
for. This election is a referendum on our
future: are we a nation
based on hope and promise, or a nation based on
fear?
"People are selfish," Kennedy
told speechwriter Richard Goodwin as he
agonized over whether to
seek the presidency, "but they can also be
compassionate and generous,
and they care about the country. But not when
they feel threatened.
That's why this is such a crucial time. We can go
in either direction.
But if we don't make a choice soon, it will be too
late to turn things around.
I think people are willing to make the right
choice. But they need
leadership. They're hungry for leadership."
In 2004, we're downright
starving for it. Real leadership. From leaders
who don't tell people what
their pollsters tell them the people want to
hear. Leaders who
capture our imagination and challenge us. Leaders who
can transform our country
through hope instead of demeaning it through
fear and division.
John Kerry can be that kind
of leader -- as he's demonstrated in his
recent calls for shared
sacrifice and national service. "America needs
you on the frontlines,"
he recently told graduating seniors at New
Orleans' Southern University.
"We need you to give some of your time and
energy to the great cause
of reducing illiteracy, preserving our
environment, providing after-school
care, helping our seniors live in
dignity, building new homes
for those who need them -- and in all of this,
building a nation that really
is one America."
In fact, it was Kerry's ancestor,
John Winthrop, who founded Massachusetts
and coined the political
ideal of a "shining city upon a hill" -- a vision
that then became associated
with the Kennedys and Camelot. John Kerry
could lead us back to that
noble ideal for American democracy.
So why then is Kerry still
neck-and-neck in the polls with George Bush,
whose idea of transformational
leadership consists of turning his "base"
-- very rich people -- into
even richer people?
The problem is that Kerry
is still only doling out his vision in drips and
dribbles. He has not connected
the dots with a bold narrative. He has not
yet shown Americans how
he will lead the country forward and fulfill the
promise the Kennedys made
to the nation.
The irony is that the Kerry
narrative is one of the great narratives in
the history of American
politics -- a personal tale that links his life
story to the history of
our times, to his vision for the renewal of
America.
For starters, there is the
fact that -- unlike so many of those hawkish
deferment junkies in the
Bush administration -- Kerry actually volunteered
to serve his country, inspired
in no small part by President Kennedy's
call to national duty and
his heroic service in WW II aboard PT-109.
Kerry’s life shows the courage
it takes to get America back on track, and
to end our national detour
into fear. The courage to stand up for what’s
right, and speak unpopular
truth about what’s wrong.
Kerry’s political narrative
starts on June 5, 1968 -- the night Bobby
Kennedy was assassinated:
John Kerry is on board the USS Gridley,
returning home from Vietnam.
He carries with him a dog-eared copy of
RFK's political manifesto
"To Seek a Newer World." During the last month,
Kerry has been using the
ship's radio to follow Kennedy's remarkable
campaign run. But
when he tunes in to hear the results of the California
primary, the crackling radio
delivers the horrifying news that Bobby has
been gunned down -- news
that rocks Kerry to his core. "It was strange,"
he says, "coming home from
a place of violence to a place of violence… a
violence that shook our
very sense of the order of things."
This was the beginning of
his coming of age as a leader, which culminated
three years later with his
1971 testimony before the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee.
With the help of former RFK speechwriter Adam
Walinsky, Kerry crafted
a compelling, unflinching speech filled with all
the moral clarity, fearlessness,
and boldness our current times demand.
"How do you ask a man to
be the last man to die for a mistake?" memorably
asked Lt. Kerry -- wrenching
words just as applicable to today's Iraq as
they were to Vietnam in
'71.
RFK's influence can also
be seen in Kerry's willingness to dream big. His
campaign speeches often
consciously evoke Bobby's famous challenge to
dream of things that
never were and ask, “Why not?”: "Why not give every
working American access
to high-quality, affordable health care? Why not
have public schools where
children set out on a lifetime of learning and
possibility? Why not preserve
our environment so our great-grandchildren
can breathe clean air and
drink clean water? Why not have a leadership
committed to civil rights,
equal rights, and affirmative action? And why
not have a foreign policy
that strengthens our nation and our interests by
advancing our values?"
The hallmark of Robert Kennedy's
presidential campaign was the urgency he
brought to the problems
of race and poverty. And as Douglas Brinkley
wrote in "Tour of Duty":
"Like Robert F. Kennedy, for a young white man
of privileged background,
Kerry always displayed an uncommonly incongruous
instinct for siding with
the underdog."
Speaking this week in Topeka,
Kansas on the 50th anniversary of the
Supreme Court's landmark
Brown school desegregation ruling, John Kerry
echoed Kennedy's concerns:
"We have not met the promise
of Brown when one-third of all
African-American children
are living in poverty. We have not met the
promise of Brown when only
fifty percent of African-American men in New
York City have a job.
We have not met the promise of Brown when nearly
twenty million black and
Hispanic Americans don't have basic health
insurance. And we
certainly have not met the promise of Brown when, in
too many parts of our country,
our school systems are not separate but
equal - but they are separate
and unequal… For America to be America for
any of us, America must
be America for all of us."
There is a memorable moment
in the PBS documentary when Bobby Kennedy
makes one of his first campaign
appearances in the Midwest, at the
University of Kansas, in
front of a jam-packed audience that responds to
his call for abandoning
"the bankrupt policies we're following at the
present" with thunderous
cheers.
A photographer for Life magazine
traveling with Kennedy can't believe what
he's seeing. Walinsky
recounts how the man turned to him and yelled:
"This is Kansas, fucking
Kansas… He's going all the fucking way!"
Kennedy's ability to move
beyond divisions that threatened to tear our
country apart and reach
out to all Americans -- black and white, rich and
poor, young and old, urban
and rural -- meant that every place, even a
bastion of conservatism
like Kansas, was suddenly in play. Every state
was a swing state.
Now, John Kerry has the opportunity
to draw a clear line between the
politics of hope and the
politics of fear. If he does, and offers a bold
vision forged by his unique
personal narrative to connect with, inspire,
and empower voters all across
the country, he too can catch fire and turn
red states blue -- winning
not in a toss up, but in a landslide.
© 2004 ARIANNA HUFFINGTON.