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 5 of 8)
JFK: I didn’t lose so much. I was still in the Senate, and finally, of course, you know the ticket didn’t win.
Cannon: Did you think it was going to?
JFK: Well, in September I thought he might, I thought he had a pretty good chance. At the end of the convention we all got excited. I thought even in September he was doing . . . turned out to be a [unclear].
Cannon: Why did you think he was going to win?
JFK: Well, for a little while there, Stevenson was awfully active and Eisenhower wasn’t. I was just talking to Democrats.
Cannon: You’re suggesting that you haven’t had many disappointments in politics. Have you ever lost a race?
JFK: No. I’ve run five times.
Cannon: The only thing you’ve ever lost was the try for the vice presidency.
JFK: That’s right.
Cannon: And it really didn’t hit you very hard.
JFK: No. At the time. I mean, that day it did.
Cannon: What do you do, what did you say to yourself, when it happened?
JFK: I was disappointed that day, and I was damn tired, and we came awfully close, and then we lost. By twenty-eight votes or something. And I was disappointed.
***
Cannon: What did you do, go back to the hotel and go to sleep? Or have a drink?
JFK: No, I think we went to have dinner with Eunice, didn’t we, Jackie? And then we went back afterwards.
Jacqueline Kennedy: You know for five days in Chicago, Jack really hadn’t gone to bed. Nobody had. Except for two hours sleep a night. It just was this incredible . . . brutal thing. You don’t see how any men are that strong to stay up for five days and talk and talk . . .
Bradlee: Do you remember wanting to go into politics?
Cannon: Not really, no.
JFK: And here you are, around these history makers, in Washington. Do you ever think you’d rather be a politician than reporting?
Bradlee: Yup. Yup.
Cannon: I think I can’t afford it. I have two children and . . .
JFK: Well, you couldn’t, I mean, at this point. Now, after the war? What are you now, about forty-two or -three? Forty-one. Now let’s say 1945, you might have been able to.
Cannon: Well, it was not a convenient thing.
JFK: What was it, in ’45, were you in the service?
Cannon: Yeah.
JFK: Well, when you came home, you were pretty much [unclear].
Cannon: Yeah, but I was . . . I’m not talking about myself.
JFK: No, but I’m just trying to say, why wasn’t it possible, really, in ’45?
Cannon: Well, basically, my problem was financial. I recognize that this was something that if you were going to be honest in, you ought to have an independent source of income.
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