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- <text id=93HT1293>
- <link 93XP0439>
- <title>
- Kennedy: Man Of The New Frontier
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--Kennedy Portrait
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- November 16, 1960
- Man of the New Frontier
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> [To dramatize his "New Frontier" theme, Campaigner John
- Kennedy often drew on a favorite anecdote about Benjamin
- Franklin. As his fellow delegates to the Constitutional Convention
- rose one by one to sign the newborn document, Franklin observed
- that for many days he had been unable to decide whether the rosy
- sun on the painting behind the president's chair was rising or
- setting. "But now at length," said Franklin, "I have the happiness
- to know that it is a rising and not a setting sun."]
- </p>
- <p> On election morning this week, the rising orange sun flashed
- on the Boston steeples and rooftops and glanced through the mist
- on the old streets as John Fitzgerald Kennedy and his expecting
- wife drove to the stately West End (Congregational) Church in the
- Sixth Ward to vote.
- </p>
- <p> It was, symbolically, Jack Kennedy's rising sun, heralding
- the greatest triumph of all for the Kennedy Clan, which first saw
- the light of political dawn two generations ago in that very city.
- It was there, in the turn-of-the-century days of boisterous
- hurrahs and beer-barrel politics, that his two shanty Irish
- grandfathers ruled: Saloonkeeper Pat Kennedy, the leader of East
- Boston's First Ward, and a state representative and state senator
- to boot; John Francis ("Honey Fitz") Fitzgerald, twice the mayor
- of Boston and a U.S. Congressman, the only man in town who could
- sing Sweet Adeline sober and get away with it. (It was a proud
- Honey Fitz who at 83 climbed upon a table and danced a merry jig
- and sang Sweet Adeline when his grandson Jack won his first term
- in Congress in 1946.)
- </p>
- <p> Jangles & Bristles. It was a long leap from the days of bliss
- and blarney to the days of Ike, Nixon and Lodge, and before the
- moment of victory Jack Kennedy allowed himself to doubt that he
- might make it. In the final swing of the campaign, the Kennedy
- troupe was showing the frazzled edges of fatigue, even
- unaccustomed confusion. The motorcades in Connecticut and New York
- were dogged with inefficiency and out-of-kilter schedules; so
- furious was Kennedy at one point that he stomped about in his
- Manhattan hotel room, called in his weary aides and chewed them
- out. "This," he stormed at one man, "is the most blankety-blank
- day of the entire campaign." His raw-rubbed nerves jangled all
- the more with his determination to win, for in his fatigue he had
- worked up a bitter personal dislike for Richard Nixon. "When I
- first began this campaign," said he grimly, "I just wanted to
- beat Nixon. Now I want to save the country from him."
- </p>
- <p> Slowly, as the Election Day sun rose off the horizon, Jack
- Kennedy's old cool confidence reasserted itself. Returning to his
- home at Hyannisport, he posed for photographers with Jacqueline
- and little Caroline, then changed into slacks and a sports shirt
- and relaxed. Once, he and his brother Bobby went outside and
- tossed a soccer ball around for a few minutes, though even this
- momentary fling lacked the old Kennedy flavor of sibling
- aggressiveness. The rest of the time Bobby kept close to his own
- home (a stone's throw away from Jack's), where he had set up a
- command post bristling with long-distance phone lines and news
- tickers.
- </p>
- <p> Stocking Feet & Black Cigar. On election night the GHQ
- swarmed with Kennedys and staffers. All the brothers and
- sisters--Bobby, Ted, Jean, Eunice and Pat--and their husbands and
- wives scurried about with news bulletins (Old Joe Kennedy and his
- wife watched the returns on TV in the "Big House," near by);
- Brother-in-Law Peter Lawford manned the five wire-association
- tickers in his stocking feet. Press Aide Pierre Salinger, Chief
- Adviser Ted Sorensen, Scheduling Coordinator Kenny O'Donnell, Top
- Organizer Larry O'Brien and Pollster Lou Harris (working
- feverishly with past election records and a slipstick) analyzed
- reports from far-flung observers--90 appointed assistants in
- key precincts all over the nation--who phoned in their findings
- direct. Bobby kept in touch with Democratic National Committee
- Chairman Henry ("Scoop") Jackson in Washington over a direct
- telephone line. He had another private line to Jack's house, but
- frequently Jack went over to the command post himself to look at
- the returns. When the news of the big Connecticut victory came
- over the wires, Jack uttered his favorite exclamation,
- "Fantastic!" jumped for joy and (though he rarely smokes) lit a
- big black cigar, while his gleeful sister Eunice warbled, When
- Irish Eyes Are Smiling.
- </p>
- <p> As the night wore on, crowds gathered outside the Hyannis
- National Guard Armory, where carpenters had set up a makeshift
- platform from which Kennedy would make his nationwide victory
- speech. Pranksters hoisted a stuffed elephant on a telephone pole;
- newsmen milled about, waiting. Agents of the U.S. Secret Service,
- assigned to guard the winning candidate, notified the local police
- that they would move in when certain victory was assured.
- </p>
- <p> At Bobby's house, Jack Kennedy checked in a few more times to
- read the reports. His mother came down from the big house to see
- him. By midnight, the jubilation of local Democratic staffers had
- subsided somewhat as they realized that the race was still
- undecided. At a TV set in the early hours of the morning, Kennedy
- watched Richard Nixon's address to campaign workers in Los
- Angeles, decided to follow the Vice President's lead by going to
- bed without delivering any public speech.
- </p>
- <p> The victory was the answer to the call whose theme Jack
- Kennedy had uttered with such pounding force in the two months of
- his campaign. It was a call predicated on the proposition that the
- heirs to the Eisenhower years lacked the courage and vision to
- lead the nation through the troubled '60s. It was a call that
- forced Richard Nixon into a defensive posture from which he never
- fully recovered--even with the last-minute intervention of
- President Eisenhower.
- </p>
- <p> Action & Challenge. With characteristic self-certainty that
- projected through the TV debates to a nation that scarcely knew
- him, Kennedy shook the U.S. hard. To the Republican claim that
- U.S. leadership had halted the march of Communism, he answered
- with the charge that too little had been achieved for the U.S. to
- feel safe, that cold-war initiative had been lost to the Soviets,
- and that as a result, U.S. prestige had dropped to low ebb.
- Against Republicans' warnings that a Democratic victory would
- bring a new wave of inflation and Government control, he preached
- a doctrine of strong federal action in the fields of education,
- economy, farm policy, housing, unemployment and welfare--promising
- price stability as well.
- </p>
- <p> In terms of the popular vote accorded Kennedy, the U.S.
- electorate withheld the resounding mandate that it gave Dwight
- Eisenhower in 1952 and 1956. But because he had stirred sufficient
- numbers of votes to take him and his New Frontier on trust,
- Kennedy's challenge had been accepted.
- </p>
- <p> The Risk. He had offered remarkably little in the way of
- specifics. For a nation grown prosperous and comfortable through
- the eight Eisenhower years (despite recession signs in a number of
- places), Kennedy's victory presupposed a new willingness to risk
- much in the '60s. Kennedy's solution to the multibillion-dollar
- farm scandal--90% price supports--seemed no better than any
- answer offered before. His welfare programs, despite his
- reiterated pledge to retain a sound dollar, carried the threat of
- unbalanced budgets and more inflation at the same time that they
- strove to satisfy human needs. His pronouncements on the need for
- new diplomatic vigor in Western Europe, Africa, Asia and Latin
- America were based on the assumption of a U.S. lag and his
- ability to recreate the atmosphere of F.D.R.'s Good Neighbor
- policy. But the specifics of foreign policy--on Cuba as on
- Quemoy--had raised many hackles and some doubts.
- </p>
- <p> Despite this vagueness of program Kennedy won his victory with
- the strength of personality and tactic. The U.S. had little known
- or cared about the boyish, tousle-haired Massachusetts Senator
- until he erupted on his primary campaign last year. With detached
- fascination they watched him lift the nomination out of the hands
- of seasoned pros, felt the incredible force of his bandwagon
- organization as it coursed over the U.S. Over the months he etched
- the image of a driving personality, the peculiar quality of his
- hasty rhetoric that seemed to magnetize though it lacked warmth.
- Unsmiling for the most part, awkward in gesture, undramatic in
- tone, he hammered again and again at basically one theme--that
- the U.S. was caught on dead center in a dynamic age, and he would
- "get this country moving again."
- </p>
- <p> That single theme, single-mindedly propelled without change
- of pace, without subtlety of approach, had apparently plumbed an
- unsuspected concern in the land. Through the pure force of
- persuasion, Kennedy had won enough Americans to follow him on his
- own terms.
- </p>
- <p> The Amalgam. It was this capacity for leadership that had
- driven Jack Kennedy. First came an amalgam of determination,
- perseverance and political savvy bred in him from the time of Pat
- Kennedy and Honey Fitz. To this was added the spirit of family
- pride and achievement instilled by Joe Kennedy. It was completed,
- in Jack Kennedy's case, by the realities of war, and by his
- maturing under the heavy pressures of the campaign.
- </p>
- <p> John Fitzgerald Kennedy would enter office as the youngest
- President since Teddy Roosevelt and as the first Roman Catholic in
- the nation's history. All good Democrats--or nearly all--had
- come to the aid of the party. And who knew but that as the new sun
- rose on the morning after Election Day in a shabby ward of old
- Boston, some ancient, misty-eyed Irish pol thought he heard Honey
- Fitz shuffling a ghostly old-country jig and rasping out the
- strains of Sweet Adeline.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-