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
(Page 2 of 8)
Bradlee: Then when was the moment that you absolutely were bitten with it?
JFK: Once I started, I worked damn hard, and I did the same thing in ’52 as I am now doing, which may not be successful nationally. Start early. Try to get the support of nonprofessionals, in a sense, who are much more ready to commit themselves early, and then it’s just long, long, long labor. Early.
Cannon: Why?
JFK: Why do it?
Cannon: Why do you do it now? Why do you go to all this effort? Obviously you’re a well-to-do guy, who could live off the fat of the land. Why do you go in for politics?
JFK: I think the rewards are, first, infinite.
Cannon: What are they?
JFK: Well, look now, if you went to law school, and I’d gotten out, which I was going to do [unclear] and then I go and become a member of a big firm, and I’m dealing with some dead, deceased man’s estate, or I’m perhaps fighting in a divorce case, even a case of one kind or another, or some fellow got in an accident, can you compare that, or let’s say more serious work, when you’re participating in a case against the DuPont Company in a general antitrust case, which takes two or three years, can you tell me that that compares in interest with being a member of Congress in trying to write a labor bill, or trying to make a speech on foreign policy? I just think that there’s no comparison.
Toni Bradlee: Can I ask a question?
JFK: Sure.
Toni Bradlee: Is being president the ultimate of everybody that goes into politics?
JFK: In the sense of being head of whatever organization you’re in, I suppose. But most important is the fact that the President today is the seat of all power.
***
Cannon: What you are suggesting is that your interest in politics evolved really after you got into it. Is that correct?
JFK: Well, no . . . well, that’s partially correct. It wasn’t overwhelming. I didn’t participate in political activities in college.
Cannon: Not until really you felt the satisfaction of having made a speech come off?
JFK: I hadn’t even considered myself, because I’m not a political type.
Bradlee: Why?
Cannon: Not even now?
Jacqueline Kennedy: Why? Ben reminds me of Adlai Stevenson. [laughter]
JFK: Well, I mean the political type. I think it’s hard work. My grandfather was a natural political type. Loved to go out to a dinner. Loved to get up and sing with the crowds. Loved to go down and take the train up and talk to eighteen people on the train.
Cannon: What makes you think you aren’t, in a different context?
JFK: I just happen to fit the times. My grandfather, his political career was limited partly because he was part of the immigrant group, who would not achieve success, but partly because he did do these things and therefore he never concentrated enough to get what he really wanted, which was either governor or senator. Now it requires far more work, politics is far more serious business. You really aren’t so much interested in who’s at the . . . really, they try to make, I think the judgment is rather cold in judgment, as to what, the people who have some competence. So the old-type political personality is on his way out. Tele- vision is only one manifestation. I think that the problems are so tough, I don’t think you have to be this hail-fellow-well-met.
Cannon: Why do you say the problems are tough, what are some of these problems?
JFK: I think, all the problems, war, the destruction of the United States and the world, every problem, urban problems, agricultural, they’re all . . . monetary, fiscal, labor-management, inflation. I mean, they’re terribly sophisticated. In the nineteenth century you only have about three problems: the development of the West, slavery, tariff and currency.
***
Bradlee: But did you have any remote idea, Jack, that when you ran for Congress, in 1946, that you would run for president?
JFK: No, I didn’t.
Bradlee: Remote? Not even when you went to bed?
JFK: Never. Never. Never. I thought maybe I’d be governor of Massachusetts someday.
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