House of Representatives
While Kennedy was still serving, his older brother, Joseph
P. Kennedy, Jr., was killed in action on August 12, 1944, while part of
Operation Aphrodite. Since Joe Jr. had been the family's political
standard-bearer, the task now fell to John.
In 1946, U.S. Representative James Michael Curley vacated
his seat in the strongly Democratic 11th Congressional district in
Massachusetts—at Joe's urging—to become mayor of Boston. Kennedy ran for the
seat, beating his Republican opponent by a large margin. He served as a congressman
for six years.
Senate
In the 1952 election, he defeated incumbent Republican Henry
Cabot Lodge, Jr. for the U.S. Senate seat. The following year he was married to
Jacqueline.
Kennedy underwent several spinal operations over the
following two years. Often absent from the Senate, he was at times critically
ill and received Catholic last rites. During his convalescence in 1956, he
published Profiles in Courage, a book about U.S. Senators who risked their
careers for their personal beliefs, and which received the Pulitzer Prize for
Biography in 1957. Rumors that this work was co-authored by his close adviser
and speechwriter, Ted Sorensen, were confirmed in Sorensen's 2008
autobiography.
At the 1956 Democratic National Convention, Kennedy was
nominated for Vice President on a ticket with presidential nominee Adlai
Stevenson, but finished second in the balloting to Senator Estes Kefauver of
Tennessee. Kennedy received national exposure from that episode; his father
thought it just as well that his son lost, due to the political debility of his
Catholicism and the strength of the Eisenhower ticket.
One of the matters demanding Kennedy's attention in the
Senate was President Eisenhower's bill for the Civil Rights Act of 1957.
Kennedy cast a procedural vote on this, which was considered by some as an
appeasement of Southern Democratic opponents of the bill. Kennedy did vote for
Title III of the act, which would have given the Attorney General powers to
enjoin, but Majority Leader Lyndon Johnson agreed to let the provision die as a
compromise measure. Kennedy also voted for Title IV, termed the "Jury
Trial Amendment". Many civil rights advocates at the time criticized that
vote as one which would weaken the act. A final compromise bill, which Kennedy
supported, was passed in September 1957. In 1958, Kennedy was re-elected to a
second term in the Senate, defeating his Republican opponent, Boston lawyer
Vincent J. Celeste, by a wide margin. It was during his re-election campaign that
Kennedy's press secretary at this time Robert E Thompson, put together a film
entitled "The U.S. Senator John F. Kennedy Story," which exhibited a
day in the life of the Senator and showcased his family life as well as the
inner-workings of his office. It is the most comprehensive film produced about
Kennedy up to that point in time.
Senator Joseph McCarthy was a friend of the Kennedy family;
Joseph Kennedy, Sr. was a leading McCarthy supporter, Robert F. Kennedy worked
for McCarthy's subcommittee, and McCarthy dated Patricia Kennedy. In 1954, when
the Senate voted to censure McCarthy, Kennedy drafted a speech supporting the
censure. The speech was not delivered, because he was in the hospital. Though
absent, he could have participated procedurally by "pairing" his vote
against that of another senator, but did not do so. He never indicated how he
would have voted, but the episode damaged Kennedy's support among members of
the liberal community, including Eleanor Roosevelt, in the 1956 and 1960
elections.
| Jack Paar interviews Senator Kennedy on The Tonight Show (1959) |
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