National Affairs: Where's Jack?
In the great game of U.S. politics, where getting more votes than the other guy on Election Day is the requisite of survival, it is not uncommon for politicians to try to be many things to many voters, to take one tone in a small town and another in a big city, to try to sound conservative to conservatives and liberal to liberals. The art lies in being able to project double images without getting accused of being two-faced. In this political art, Presidential Hopeful John F. Kennedy, for all his youth and boyish charm, is already a master. Items:
Labor: As a sponsor of last year's labor-reform measure, Kennedy can appear before non-labor audiences as a fighter against union corruption (a stance immeasurably helped by Teamster Boss Jimmy Hoffa's implacable hatred). Before farm audiences, traditionally hostile to labor unions, Jack benefits from identification with his younger brother Bob. the aggressive, much-televised counsel of the Senate's McClellan Committee and author of a briskly selling book about labor corruption, The Enemy Within, At the same time, Jack has tried hard to persuade labor leaders that he is organized labor's staunch friend. He damned President Eisenhower's use of the Taft-Hartley Act to call an 80-day halt in last year's steel strike (after the strike had dragged on for twelve weeks with no settlement in prospect) as the "most one-sided, unfortunate and unfair action in this Administration's history." Top A.F.L.-C.I.O. leaders have forgiven him for his sponsorship of labor reform, have even publicly praised him for trying to "get rid of the more obvious injustices" of the Landrum-Griffin reform bill.
Legislative Record: Partly because of his 1956 book, Profiles in Courage, Kennedy has acquired the luster of a courageous, statesmanlike legislator. Yet in his 14 years in the House and Senate, he has never fathered any major legislation. He worked hard on the Senate labor-reform bill (TIME, Sept. 14), but it got so ground up in the congressional mills that the enacted Landrum-Griffin version did not even carry his name (for which he came to be very thankful).
Welfare State: As the son of a multi millionaire and a millionaire himself, Harvard-accented, dark-suited Jack Kennedy carries about an aura that makes him acceptable to many right-leaning Democrats and independents who instinctively reject any unmistakable liberal such as Minnesota's Senator Hubert Humphrey. But Kennedy's stands and voting records on most domestic issues are not widely different from Humphrey's. Kennedy's closest advisers on domestic policies, including Harvard Professors Arthur Schlesinger Jr. and John Kenneth (The Affluent Society) Galbraith, tend to be liberals of the Americans for Democratic Action camp. Kennedy falls easily into such sweeping A.D.A.-type rhetoric as "17 million Americans go to bed hungry every night." Following the liberal line that the U.S. economy is not growing fast enough,
Kennedy calls for a "sufficiently stimulated rate of growth."
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- Sex, Please, We're British: London's Erotica Expo
- The Growing Backlash Against Overparenting
- Toilets
- How a California Judge Is Challenging Obama on Gay Rights
- Woman Loses Benefits over Facebook Photo
- Obama's 'Mistakes': Way Too Early to Judge
- Zhu Zhu Mania: Why Hamsters Are Ruling Christmas
- East Antarctica, Long Stable, Is Now Losing Ice
- The Fall of Greg Craig, Obama's Top Lawyer
- Why Exercise Won't Make You Thin
- The Growing Backlash Against Overparenting
- Zhu Zhu Mania: Why Hamsters Are Ruling Christmas
- Sex, Please, We're British: London's Erotica Expo
- Obama's 'Mistakes': Way Too Early to Judge
- Toilets
- The Dark Side of Darwin's Legacy
- East Antarctica, Long Stable, Is Now Losing Ice
- How a California Judge Is Challenging Obama on Gay Rights
- Will Private Equity Be the Next Meltdown?
- Reburying Albert Camus: A Political Ploy by Sarkozy?







RSS