Kennedy After Dark: A Dinner Party About Politics and Power
In this exclusive transcript from the JFK library, hear what he had to say just days after announcing his candidacy for the presidency
- By Ted Widmer
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2012, Subscribe
On January 5, 1960, just three days after announcing that he would run for president, Senator John F. Kennedy and his wife, Jacqueline, held a small dinner party in Washington, D.C. Their guests included Ben Bradlee, then Newsweek’s Washington bureau chief, and his then-wife, Tony, and Newsweek correspondent James M. Cannon. Cannon taped the conversation for research on a book he was writing. After he died, in September 2011, the tapes became part of the collection of the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library in Boston; a transcript is published for the first time in the new book Listening In: The Secret White House Recordings of John F. Kennedy, edited by Ted Widmer. In this exclusive excerpt, the candidate muses on the sources and purpose of power.
JFK: This is on? Can it get me from there?
Bradlee: [unclear] How come? Was it Joe’s death that started the . . . ?
Cannon: Why did you get started in politics? Why were you ever interested in it?
JFK: In the thirties, when I was home from school, the conversation was always about politics. Want a cigar?
Cannon: It’s all right. Talk loud.
JFK: Not in the sense of sort of being emotionally stirred about great issues, but really, just about the whole interest of my father was [unclear] in politics, in the Roosevelt administration.
Cannon: . . . When did you take your first step? What year was that?
JFK: January ’46, with the election in June.
Cannon: This was for a seat in . . . ?
JFK: Congress.
Cannon: In what district?
JFK: The eleventh congressional district, which my grandfather once represented in Congress. But I didn’t know anybody in Boston; I hadn’t really lived there much. The war, I’d been away. I’d been at Harvard University. I’d been to Choate School before that, and lived in New York. So I went to live with my grandfather at the Bellevue Hotel, and I began to run, at a much earlier time than anyone else. [To Jacqueline Kennedy and Toni Bradlee: “You might want to go sit in the other room. . . .”]
Bradlee: No, no, no.
JFK: They don’t want to listen to this.
Bradlee: They do!
Toni Bradlee: We do, Jack! We love it, Jack!
JFK: Toni doesn’t, and I know Jackie doesn’t.
Toni: Yes I do, Jack! I’m so interested.
Bradlee: Bullshit!
Toni: If it makes you uncomfortable, we won’t . . .
Bradlee: It’s going to be all stilted unless we can have some of that.
Jacqueline Kennedy: Ben said we should interrupt and I should show my views and grasp of issues.
Bradlee: And provoke! Is that not right?
Cannon: Absolutely.
JFK: You don’t think it’s working, do you?
Cannon: It’s working.
Bradlee: Don’t stare at it.
JFK: OK, now we’re in January 1946.
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