Lectures From an Alternate Timeline Where Teddy Roosevelt is Elected President Again in 1912 Part 3 (The Kennedys)

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Original posts are at: https://www.alternatehistory.com/forum/threads/dbwi-teddy-roosevelt-isn’t-elected-president-in-1912.530992/

The first two Lectures on TR and Churchill are already contained in a single thread in this forum.

JOSEPH P. KENNEDY, JR. HALL: 8:07 AM EST AUGUST 12, 2024

THE KENNEDY FAMILY PRE-MASSACHUSETTS GOVERNORSHIP

Welcome to all of you here today for our lecture on the father and son Presidencies of Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr. and Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. who dominated United States and world politics from the 1940s through 1990s. Before we get started let me pass on my personal condolences to those streaming from our sister institutions in The Imperial Federation and Greater Commonwealth on the passing last week of Queen Elizabeth, who for almost 76 years was the only sovereign the Imperial Federation had known, and of course I’m sure we all wish her son and successor King George well.
Now back to our topic. This lecture will not be on just the Kennedy Administrations but will necessarily include what was going on in the United States and the world from the mid-1920s through the mid-1980s, and beyond. Still, it is fair to say the Kennedy influence is still felt today. Just look at the name of this venue dedicated 25 years ago this month, and our esteemed guest, my good friend, mentor and colleague Professor Emeritus Joseph P. Kennedy III, who prefers to be called Trip.
Trip took no credit, but I can tell you he edited the seminal book on this topic written by his uncle, the late historian, John F. Kennedy (Father to Son, Democrat to Republican, Power to Superpower) which was published posthumously in 1980. Let us not forget Trip’s daughter Senator Rose Kennedy-Nixon, who entered the family business, and sends her regrets for not being able to attend. I’m sure you are all aware she is somewhat busy having been nominated for Vice-President. Trip has his own book coming out this November, John E. Hoover and the National Bureau of Investigation 1927 -1967. He was kind enough to share a copy with me and has allowed me to share today some of the never before released revelations found through Sunshine Act requests and from his late Uncle John’s private papers.
Let us begin by going back to 1914 when Joseph P. Kennedy married Rose Fitzgerald. Both were from staunchly Democratic families. Rose’s father was mayor of Boston, while Joe’s father had been a Massachusetts legislator, and party boss. Joe at aged 25 was a Harvard graduate, a bank President and highly successful businessman.
The young couple likely planned on a big family. Joe junior was born in 1915 and was followed by John Kennedy in 1917. Tragedy struck in mid-1918, when Rose contracted Kansas flu. She survived but lost the child she was carrying. Rose was so weakened that she was not able to carry another child to term. It is believed she contracted the flu on a trip to New York, as she was one of the first recorded cases in Massachusetts. The pandemic was worldwide, and many attribute the spread to the fact that it traveled from Kansas to New York at about the same time as the second session of the Inter-Continental Congress (ICC).
Rose thereafter totally devoted herself to their two sons. Joe Junior and John were very competitive, but also very close. Joe Sr. had already developed business interests that had him away in New York, Florida, and California for weeks at a time, but he still made his first foray into politics in 1919 when he publicly opposed a prohibition amendment. His argument was based largely on what we would call Federalism. Kennedy took the position that alcohol use or abuse was a matter of morality which should be left to states and localities. He said that by outlawing such a widely used substance the Federal Government likely would not substantially reduce consumption, but would create a black market, and reduce respect for the rule of law due to many ignoring any prohibition. Of course, Joe’s investments in several distilleries and a brewery had nothing to do with his position. The amendment had been proposed in 1916 and given the 18th Amendment having given women full voting rights nationwide it was thought Prohibition would pass quickly, but it stalled when it was still four states short, and there was a question when the Louisiana and Massachusetts legislatures each voted to rescind their ratification. Kennedy led a group (informally called "temperate temperance") that proposed a compromise amendment that would in essence waive the supremacy clause for state and local laws regarding alcohol. The wording was "[T]he transportation or importation into any State, territory, or possession of the United States of any intoxicant is hereby prohibited where transportation, importation, or possession is a violation of the law of said State, territory or possession."
The compromise was in fact proposed in the Congress in late 1919. It allowed the states to experiment with prohibition without foreclosing the eventual adoption of complete prohibition. The compromise language became the 19th amendment when New York became the 36th State to ratify on April 4, 1921. It is interesting to note that by 1950 there was no statewide prohibition on alcohol in the United States, but many counties and smaller localities have restrictions and prohibitions. Likewise, since the 19th Amendment did not limit itself to alcohol, many states and the Federal Government do maintain extensive restrictions on “other intoxicants.”
In 1921 Joe, Sr. was surprised to be offered the governorship of the First District of the United States Central Bank (USCB) based in Boston. The offer came from the Republican Hughes Administration, which was attempting to comply with the 1914 Charter of the USCB requiring appointments to the Board of Governors be nonpartisan. Joe accepted the appointment, but only moderately cut back his travel. It should be noted that while Joe did not divest himself of any interests, he was not required to under the rules of the day. Joe Sr. remained with the USCB until mid-1929, and again concentrated on his varied business interests. On leaving the Board of Governors Kennedy issued a public letter of resignation warning that he and other members of the Board had been asking for reforms to include the power to oversee commodity and stock markets, but those reforms were not even being considered by the Congress. Kennedy wrote that close to a majority of investors in the markets were overextended with massive amounts of unsecured debt. Joe Sr. warned there would likely be one or more a crashes, and possibly wide scale bank failures, if not a depression. Few took notice of the resignation until the mini crash of 1930 that preceded the larger crash and worldwide Panic of 1931.
Joe Kennedy and his family were largely immune from the effects of the Panic as he had divested himself and his businesses of most stocks and gotten entirely out of the futures markets. Imagine Kennedy’s surprise when in June 1930, following the February 1930 mini crash he was approached by Republicans to run for Governor. The offer came from former Governor Calvin Coolidge who felt Frank G. Allen, the GOP incumbent, was unelectable due to the effects of the high unemployment, and losses already taking hold throughout New England. In the Northeast and Midwest, the mini crash (which was not considered mini until the following year) started a deep recession long before the bottom fell out completely in 1931. It was felt Kennedy was insulated from being blamed for the bad economy due to his public warning in 1929, and of course being Irish Catholic in Massachusetts didn’t hurt.
Joe, Sr. never wrote a memoir, but we know what he was thinking thanks to his son John’s recollection of a frank family talk (not a discussion as Joe Sr. wasn’t asking for input) recorded in John’s posthumously published book, Father to Son, Democrat to Republican, Power to Superpower. Joe, Sr. confessed he would not have considered the offer even though his ward boss father had already passed away, except he was actually encouraged, behind the scenes of course, by his father-in-law, Honey Fitz. Fitz was acting as a stalking horse for Democratic boss James Curley. It seems Curley and Fitz both felt that even though Joseph B. Ely had the Democratic nomination sewn up it was undeserved due to Ely’s perceived prejudice against Irish Catholics. In reality it appears Curley hoped the Democrats would dump Ely, or at the very worst if Kennedy won, Curly could defeat him in 1935. Ely still secured the nomination, but could not overcome what was frankly an unfair perception of being anti-Catholic. While Joe did not get an outright endorsement from his father-in-law, it was obvious that Fitz was providing support by not robustly turning out the Democratic machine for Ely. Kennedy prevailed as one of the few winning Republicans in a heavily Democratic year. Curly came to regret his machinations when he himself was defeated by Joe Sr. in 1934.
In reality the anti-Catholic bigotry of Ely was largely manufactured by James Curly. So, why would a staunch Democrat like Honey Fitz turn on the party? Well, it was part of a deterioration of the allegiance of Catholics to the Democratic Party that began with Woodrow Wilson’s first nomination in 1912, when Teddy Roosevelt won his third term. Wilson embraced the KKK and shared many of their racist aims, and while he did not specifically endorse the KKK’s anti-Catholic views, Wilson did not take any of the many opportunities he was given to denounce those views. Wilson was nominated twice more, losing to Hughes in 1916 and 1920, without once trying to appeal to Catholics. It is interesting to note Wilson got his first nomination over William Jennings Bryan in part based on an argument that you shouldn’t get a nomination when you already had lost the general election.
1924 was even worse. Wilson had died, so the Democrats nominated his son-in-law, William Gibbs McAdoo, who was even more openly racist and anti-Catholic. McAdoo vowed to enforce state Jim Crow laws on the Federal level and refused to distance himself from the KKK. He lost to Herbert Hoover in a landslide. It was revealed years later that the party bosses wanted to make New York Governor Al Smith the Vice-Presidential nominee, but McAdoo reneged. This started the movement of Catholics from the Democratic Party. The Party overcompensated in 1928 and actually nominated Smith, who also lost to Herbert Hoover, but Smith did better than McAdoo. Even with the Smith nomination the damage was done, as many Catholics were not mollified by the high number of Democrats in 1928 who sat out the election rather than vote for a Catholic. It would take the Panic of 1931 for the Democrats to get their first President since Grover Cleveland, with the election of Franklin D. Roosevelt.
So, it wasn’t all that surprising that Joe Sr. would actually become a Republican. In a way though the Democrats still leant a hand to the Kennedys, as without them nominating a Catholic in 1928, it is doubtful the Republicans would have done so in 1940. More on that later.
JOE, SR. AS GOVERNOR
Governor Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr. came into office with Democrats controlling the lower House of the Legislature, and a slim Republican majority in the Senate. Massachusetts at that time had a large textile industry which was suffering mightily from the economic downturn. Kennedy ordered new uniforms for the Commonwealth Police and the Militia and placed a uniform requirement on more than a dozen other civil service jobs (mostly color-coded coveralls for janitors, parks workers, etc.). He then contracted for the uniforms with sources in four key Legislative Districts. All four Democratic legislators subsequently voted for Kennedy’s proposed bond issues.
The first bond issue was for a proposed Turnpike from Boston to the New York line near Albany. They were 30-year bonds with a 10% premium over the prevailing rate. The issue included a provision that at any point after five years the Commonwealth could redeem the bonds. During Kennedy’s first term there were three similar bond issues, except that instead of the bonds being secured by future tolls they were only guaranteed by the Commonwealth. The funds obtained allowed the Commonwealth to significantly alleviate unemployment and improve infrastructure. Projects included improving Boston Harbor, paving dirt roads throughout Massachusetts. The Turnpike was officially opened in 1937, but it was 1943 before the any early redemptions occurred because Federal and other states borrowing meant the rates of Massachusetts bonds were lower than the prevailing rates.
In 1932 the Republicans were routed around the country. 1933 saw a Democratic President, Congress, and Democrats in control of both Houses of the Massachusetts Legislature. Unlike other Republican governors around the country, Joe Sr. opted to work with Democrats. He had the assistance of his father-in-law, and goodwill built up in his first two years. In fact the last previously mentioned bond issue was put forward so Massachusetts could provide matching funds for Federal initiatives.
The likelihood of war with Japan, and instability around the world, especially in Russia and Germany, led to increases in defense spending sufficient to get the country past the worst effects of the Panic of 1931. In his 1934 reelection bid Kennedy easily defeated Curly, helped in large part from a series of financial scandals that came to light in the Boston Globe showing Curly had taken kickbacks as both a Congressman and as Mayor of Boston. It has been speculated Honey Fitz was the source for the stories, but this has never been confirmed. Republicans even took back slight majorities in both legislative houses.
In his second term Kennedy still cooperated with the Federal Government on infrastructure. He also funded a traveling business exposition that visited other states and foreign countries to attract companies to Massachusetts. On many of the exposition’s stops young Joe, Jr. was there as his father’s representative. It worked well enough that by the time Kennedy left office there were twelve other states with their own traveling expositions.
It should be noted here that Joe, Sr. was quite frankly an anti-Semite. This may be one of the reasons he left no private papers, but recollections of many who knew him attest to this, in fact in many cases it is clear they shared his views. That said, when there was a new diaspora of Jews from Europe starting in the mid-1930s Kennedy welcomed them to Massachusetts. True it may have just been expedient, and he was mainly interested in getting displaced scientists and academics to Massachusetts institutions of higher learning, but he still did it. Further, after 1935 there is no record of him making any new anti-Semitic statement. He evidently, still held those views as his son John wrote he would sometimes make remarks to him and Joe, Jr., but it appears he never let these distasteful personal views effect policy either as Governor or President.
For most of the last two years of his administration the country was caught up in the Pacific War with the Japanese Empire. That conflict was still raging when Kennedy’s term ended, but when Joe Sr. left the governorship in 1939 he was succeeded by war veteran Republican Henry Cabot Lodge, with increased Republican majorities in both Houses.
THE PACIFIC WAR
Joe, Jr. saw there was going to be a war with Japan, so on entering Harvard in 1933 he enrolled in the new Navy Reserve Officers Training Program (ROTC). Two years later John Kennedy did the same in 1935. Their mother was opposed to it, but unbeknownst to her Joe, Sr. actually pulled strings to get John a waiver for a physical ailment, and to get Joe, Sr. a flight school slot, even though this meant him taking a leave of absence from Harvard to accept his commission and attend training in 1936. After War was actually declared in 1937, John also left Harvard and took a commission, going into Naval Intelligence.
In flight school Joe, Jr. made lifelong friends with his roommate Edward Henry O’Hare, better known as Butch. Joe, Jr. qualified as a torpedo bomber pilot, while Butch was a fighter pilot. They each became plank owners on the newly christened USS Enterprise CV-6 out of Cabo San Lucas. The carrier would participate in every major engagement of the Pacific War. In late 1937 Butch O’Hare’s squadron transferred to the USS Saratoga CV-3. Butch ended the war as a squadron leader and double ace with the rank of Lieutenant Commander. In 1941 Joe, Jr. was best man at the marriage of Commander Edward H. O’Hare and Rita Wooster.
Joe, Jr. was credited with successfully torpedoing four ships including a cruiser and light aircraft carrier. His flying career was cut short in mid-1938 when a bomb exploded on the forward deck of Enterprise. Joe, Jr. ran to the explosion and managed to pull a pilot out of his aircraft, but not before being hit by a small piece of hot metal blown from the wreck. Kennedy lost sight in his left eye. Joe, Jr. was awarded the Navy Cross. Joe, Jr. requested Lederman Armed Forces Hospital near San Francisco for his follow up treatment and rehabilitation. As Harvard indicated it would accept work done at Stanford University toward the completion his degree. Kennedy did indeed complete his degree (a B.A. in Government). Joe, Jr. received a medical discharge in September 1938. He had been accepted at Stanford’s Law School but turned it down to oversee his father’s business interests on the west coast.
By the time Joe, Jr. was discharged the United States and Commonwealth forces had achieved air supremacy, and the Navy’s main task was blockading the Japanese home islands. Fierce fighting continued in Indonesia, Formosa, Indochina, the Korean peninsula and Manchuria until land forces and marines virtually destroyed the Japanese Imperial Army. The Emperor overruled his military commanders and sought peace because of the effects of the blockade and the knowledge that an invasion would totally destroy Japan.
John Kennedy remained in the Navy for several months after the War, as he had been detailed from Naval Intelligence to declassify material needed for the war crimes trials that followed the end in hostilities. John did eventually return to Harvard where he finished his degree and went on to get his Doctorate in International Affairs. For the rest of his life Dr. Kennedy was both a professor of History, and unbeknownst to most he was also an analyst for the National Intelligence Service or NIS, formed after the war. John was named NIS director by his brother in 1965 but retired due to health issues in 1970. Before his death in 1973 he completed his last book, the aforementioned Father to Son, Democrat to Republican, Power to Superpower, published in December 1980 in accordance with the author’s wish that two Presidential election cycles pass before its release.
There was no immediate widespread demobilization after the Pacific War. While the United States and Commonwealth were attempting by diplomacy and military action to deal with Japanese aggression, communists took the opportunity to launch insurgencies in Spain, France, Italy and Greece in the mid to late 1930s. The ICC called on member states in continental Europe to assist the legitimate governments. Various governments answered the call, but the bulk of troops were provided by the German Empire. After the insurgencies were defeated, the German troops stayed. The French and Dutch were especially vulnerable as they had sent troops to help liberate their colonies in the Pacific War. After the Japanese defeat their relations with the United States and soured when it appeared the Japanese were out, but the plan was for independence and not a return to be colonies.
This was further exacerbated by the Russians, who offered Vladivostok as the site for ICC sponsored peace talks with Japan. The Russians followed the German model. Although they did not participate in the fighting with Japan, after the war Russian troops supplanted Japanese troops in much of Asia. Like the Germans they stayed in place long after they were needed.
THE PACIFIC WAR IMMEDIATE AFTERMATH
The Roosevelt Administration tried to use the ICC to mandate the Germans and Russians end what amounted to occupations. Both powers had each sufficiently entrenched themselves that getting local authorities on the ground to “request” continued presence of foreign troops was easily accomplished by the two powers.
In the 1929 the German National People’s Party took full control of the government. They had previously crushed and outlawed all socialist and communist organizations in the Reich. After the Panic hit Europe in 1931, the Nationalists were anxious to divert blame from themselves. When the Kaiser tried to call elections in 1933, the Reichstag passed a bill abolishing the monarchy, and vesting all power in the Nationalist Party. The Kaiser fled to Britain, where he died in 1941.
They also blamed the Jews and removed citizenship from all non-Christians. The Reich did not conduct pogroms, but largely turned a blind eye to violence against Jews. This of course led to large scale efforts by Jews to emigrate. Those Jews who were better off financially fled the country, and anyone who could went to Britain or the United States. This included many of Germany’s best minds. The most famous was most certainly Albert Einstein who accepted a visiting professorship, arranged with the help of Massachusetts Governor Kennedy in 1936. Needless to say, Einstein never returned to Germany. Einstein was but one of many, but many more Jews could not afford to leave and lived an ever more pitiful existence until the Nationalists were finally turned out after the New Democracy Movement spread throughout Europe in 1953-54.
The German experience was extended to France, Italy, Spain and Greece once the German forces putting down the insurgencies became for all intents and purposes occupiers. By 1937 Italy, Spain and Greece had removed their own monarchs, and while they did not pass their own anti-Semitic statutes, they also denied entry to German Jews. The Dutch, Danes and Belgians were never occupied, but after being pressured to give up their colonies by the Commonwealth and America, they fell into Germany’s orbit. They were closely followed by Luxembourg, Albania, Hungary, the Balkans and even traditionally neutral Switzerland by 1938. Iceland declared itself completely independent in 1939, and this was immediately recognized by the United States and Britain.
American pressure to divest colonies was consistent since the formation of the ICC that any territory that is not to be fully incorporated should be guided to independence. To many Europeans this was a straw argument, as they saw no difference between French Algeria and the United States held Hawaii. The Commonwealth, on the other hand, moved to support freeing the European Powers colonies in Africa, and Asia to keep the resources from Germany and Russia who they perceived as growing threats.
After the Pacific War Russia emulated the Germans. They had already abolished the monarchy when Tsar Alexander II abdicated in 1929 and moved to the UK, but the Duma never really became a Democratic institution. There was no universal suffrage as only male landowners were allowed to vote, and no real parties had formed. They in essence went from strongman to strongman ever since ICC forces had defeated the communists in 1920. They took the opportunity of Japanese withdrawals in 1939 to put their own troops in Korea, Manchuria, and French Indochina. They essentially neutered Norway, Sweden, Finland, the Baltics (including Poland), Romania, and Bulgaria. These nations were reduced to being mere satellites.
Imagine the surprise throughout the Anglo-American Alliance when it was announced on January 1, 1940, that all of continental Europe was had formed its own alliance under German-Russian leadership. The alliance merged German industry and technology with the vast resources of Russia. The ICC was not dead, but it now appeared impotent. 1940 was an election year in the United States, and even though the Pacific War was won under Democratic leadership, the German-Russian alliance made Republicans the party to bet on, and all believed Brigadier General Charles Lindbergh was the man to lead the nation.
THE 1940 ELECTION
Lindbergh of course was the first man to fly solo across the Atlantic in April 1927, was Ambassador Germany from 1933-37, and requested activation of his commission when the Pacific War started. He shot down three Japanese planes before being grounded by Roosevelt out of fear that the country’s morale would not recover from his loss to the enemy. Lindbergh returned to the United States and received his second ticker tape parade down the Great White Way in New York City.
You all of course remember President Lindbergh? No? Well, there were some surprises in 1940. Most of the other candidates at the 1940 Republican Convention were running as favorite sons and hoping for the second place on the ticket. This included Joe, Sr. who, in late 1939, after securing Boston as the site of the convention went on a three month round the world tour that included London, Berlin, Moscow, Saigon, and Sydney. This was followed immediately by a two-month cross country train tour. That tour began in San Francisco where he visited his sons (John was on the staff of the team prosecuting Japanese war criminals at Alcatraz). Joe, Sr. then went to in all the major cities the Boston Business Exposition had visited - Denver, Milwaukee, Chicago, Pittsburg, Washington D.C., Philadelphia and New York, as well as many smaller venues. Wherever he went Joe, Sr. glad handed the local party leaders, and listened to their concerns. When he arrived back in Boston Kennedy believed himself well positioned for the VP nomination.
What no one expected was Lindbergh having to drop out when it was revealed that when he was America’s man in Berlin, “Good Time Charlie,” as he came to be called, had in essence taken a German family. Lindbergh’s wife had not accompanied him to Berlin and stayed behind to raise their two children. The New York Times revealed that Lindbergh routinely spent days away from the Embassy, and at some point, early in his tenure he started living regularly with a young woman in Potsdam, a Berlin suburb. They acted as man and wife, he purchased a home, and fathered two children with her. After his ambassadorship ended Lindbergh returned to Germany at least twice and was paying regular support. He only avoided bigamy charges because there was no proof, he actually went through a marriage ceremony. Needless to say, there is no way he would be trusted to stand up to Germany if needed.
There was almost immediate speculation that Joe, Sr. had arranged the leak. He had visited Berlin just a few months before the Times broke the story on the literal eve of the convention. Kennedy had indeed met with the Times bureau chief when he was in Berlin. The speculation only increased years later when it was revealed that John Kennedy was an intelligence analyst, but in 1976 the Times named the actual source as a relative of the German family who had a falling out with Lindbergh on one of his visits. The Times held the identity of the source until he had passed, but it appears the story was easily confirmed due to the openness of the relationship. It was later confirmed that the story was offered first to Berliner Tageblatt in 1939, but the German government suppressed the story – evidently hoping to have leverage on Lindbergh.
While he may not have been the source of Lindbergh’s dilemma, Kennedy was quick to capitalize on it. He never referred to Lindbergh as “Good Time Charlie,” but neither did he continue to refer to him by his military rank. Joe, Sr. merely said he encouraged “Mr. Lindbergh to be with his family,” left unsaid was whether this included the German family. The Republicans delayed the balloting, but in the end Lindbergh’s name was not even placed in nomination.
A total of seven candidates received votes on the first ballot, including the un-nominated Lindbergh who finished sixth. Kennedy was first throughout the balloting. Frank Merriam, Governor of California finished behind New York Governor Thomas Dewey on the third ballot. After everyone behind him had dropped out, Merriam threw his support to Kennedy who was nominated on the fourth ballot. Surprise - Kennedy chose Frank Merriam for the VP slot. The Democratic ticket was led by House Minority Leader John Nance Garner of Texas, with Senator James Farley of New York, as his running mate. Farley wasn’t merely Catholic – he was a Knight of Malta and had been the first US representative to the Holy See. He was picked to try again to stem the loss of Catholics from the Democrats, but if anything, it made Kennedy more palatable to non-Catholic voters as either way there would be a Catholic elected to National Office.
The contest was much closer than it would have been without the Lindbergh scandal. Republicans ran on Kennedy’s executive experience as a Governor and businessman, and the Democratic Administration ignoring domestic needs to win a war that the Russians were reaping the benefits from. Republicans were short on what they would do differently but were helped by the fact that Garner was a really horrible campaigner. The GOP prevailed in the Electoral College by 295 to 256. They won the popular vote by just under a million votes out of more than 53 million cast. Republicans also took both Houses of Congress, and with the gains they had made in state legislatures in the previous cycle they were well positioned for reapportionment in 1942, as well as 1944 when the Electoral College went from 551 to 555.
JOE, JR. AFTER THE PACIFIC WAR
Before going into the first Kennedy Administration let’s see what Joe, Jr. was doing. When young Kennedy was recuperating at Letterman Armed Forces Hospital there were a large number of Commonwealth personnel who were also patients. Just before his discharge an Entertainment Live Event Troupe (ELET), the Commonwealth version of the USO, put on a show for the patients before doing a tour of bases in the Pacific. It was a variety show under the direction of actor Charles Laughton and included a sister act with Peggy and Maureen FitzSimons. Maureen was just 18, but had impressed Laughton, who wanted to get her into pictures. Joe was immediately smitten, and Laughton arranged an introduction, but Maureen turned him down flat saying she had a beau in the war. Joe was discharged, and Maureen went on her tour, and that was that.
Now to be clear Joe, Jr. was a young, wealthy war hero who was purportedly engaged twice while at Harvard, but still “dated” several women, including a young lady his brother was getting serious with. He was known as a lothario both before and after meeting Miss FitzSimons. In fact, in managing his father’s west coast interests Joe took a special interest in RKO, the movie studio. Like his father Joe was involved with several starlets, but unlike his father some of his assignations became public knowledge at the time.
By early 1939 Charles Laughton was under contract to RKO, and he approached Joe, Jr. who immediately brought up “that Irish girl –Maureen Fitzgerald.” Kennedy had confused her last name with his mother’s maiden name. Laughton corrected him and said she could be in California in short order if Kennedy could arrange a screen test. Joe, Jr. asked about her boyfriend, who Laughton stated had been killed. Laughton later recounted that he had no idea what Maureen’s status was, but to get the test he opted to make her single. Fortunately for the boyfriend he was not dead, but neither was he still her boyfriend. Kennedy agreed to the screen test, but it was done in London, as he wasn’t going to authorize paying for passage from Ireland without knowing a contract would be offered.
Following her screen test Maureen was offered a contract and passage. She arrived in Hollywood in May 1939. In their first meeting Maureen thanked Kennedy, and explained her beau was not dead, but was no longer her beau. Joe, Jr. immediately asked her out, but she demurred, indicating she didn’t want people thinking she was only getting work due to her connection to him. She suggested he ask her again after the release of her first picture. She was cast as Esmerelda in The Hunch back of Notre Dame, with Charles Laughton in the title role. In a television interview in 1980, Maureen confessed her initial rejection was made in part to assure she would actually get cast, and she was shocked to get a call from Kennedy the day after the film’s release. The film was a hit, and Maureen and Joe, Jr. stared dating just before Christmas 1939.
Joe, Jr. and Maureen quickly became what we today call a power couple. While they initially both saw other people, after a few months Maureen told Joe that she would not see anyone else and wanted him to reciprocate. She indicates that Kennedy then responded that they might as well get married if that was the case. Maureen wanted to meet his parents, and likewise wanted him to meet her family. Joe, Jr. introduced Maureen to his father when he visited San Francisco on his round the world tour. John Kennedy was also present. Joe, Sr. was courteous and jovial, but John later wrote that when Maureen had left the room, he said in no uncertain terms that he hoped they weren’t considering marriage as an “uneducated actress” was not an appropriate wife for him. Joe, Jr. thanked his father for his opinion and then called his mother to see if he could bring Maureen to their home for Easter.
After the visit that Easter Rose Kennedy said in front of the entire family that she very much hoped that Joe, Jr. would quickly propose to Maureen, and asked if she might have any sisters who might like to meet her son Jack. Joe, Sr. forced a smile and said he totally agreed. Joe, Sr. never said another negative word about Maureen, and forever after publicly celebrated the happy couple. Shortly thereafter, Joe, Jr. formally proposed. Maureen accepted but still wanted to wait until Joe could meet her family and preferred to first obtain US citizenship. Maureen also explained that she had almost married her former beau, and wanted to make sure the relationship would last. She quite likely was also worried that Joe, Jr. had a “wandering eye,” and marriage would possibly stunt her movie career. They were engaged, but there was no announcement, and Maureen was sometimes linked for publicity purposes to various male stars.
Young Kennedy did not get to Ireland until July 1941 when he accompanied Maureen on a visit. The family loved the young Kennedy; of course, it’s hard to imagine how they could object to a rich, glib Irishman who happened to be the eldest son of the President of the United States. Not known until many years later was that they were civilly married in June 1942, but kept it secret until Maureen was actually a United States citizen. They actually announced their “engagement” on July 4, 1944, when Maureen was sworn in as a United States citizen, and Joe, Jr. and his father were running respectively for their second terms for Congress and Presidency.
When Congressman Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. married Maureen FitzSimons in a Catholic Service on New Year’s Eve 1944 his best man was his brother John, and the groomsmen were Butch O’Hare, fellow California Congressman Dick Nixon, and Michigan Congressman Gerry Ford. They were all Navy veterans of the Pacific War, and respectively became the head of the National Intelligence Service, Chief of Naval Operations, Secretary of State, and Speaker of the House. At my own wedding 37 years ago, I had my brother and two brothers-in-law, who went on to become a landscaper, a police sergeant and a mortician, so you see my affinity for the Kennedy story. They had kept the civil ceremony so secret, that the speculation was Joe, Jr. did it only to get the tax benefit.
Between 1938 and 1944 more than 80 veterans of the Pacific War were elected to Congress, most were under thirty years old. Joe was going to run in 1940, but he decided to sit it out rather than run at the same time his father was seeking the Presidency. His father wanted him to run for a Massachusetts seat, but in 1942 Joe, Jr. chose to run in California, to again make clear he wasn’t just Daddy’s boy. He ran as J. Kennedy and had a safe Republican seat in Orange County. On arriving in Congress, he made fast friends with two other veterans – Californian Dick Nixon, and Michigan Representative Gerry Ford. Both had been elected to the House in 1940. Joe, Jr.’s first term was unremarkable, but he was easily re-elected in 1944.
JPK’s Presidency
On taking office in 1941, Joe, Sr. hit the ground running. He sent signals early on that he had no intention on refighting battles by trying to dismantle social security or other programs initiated under FDR, but as he had done in Massachusetts JPK, as he was now known, would concentrate on infrastructure. He started with highways. Whereas TR had built roads using the justification of post roads from the Constitution, JPK turned them into a true interstate highway system, to include going down both coasts of Canada from Alaska and Greenland using the justification of National Defense. He also cajoled the Senate to finally approve the Treaty for the St. Lawrence Seaway Canal which would take more than a dozen years to complete. The Boulder Dam was also finally completed.

While there was not a general demobilization following the Pacific War, JPK did do a drawdown of standing forces by enhancing the Reserves and giving the State Militias a dual role as National Reservists or Guardsman as they are known today. This also had the effect of having the Militias and other Reserve Forces training to a single standard. The public works projects largely prevented a downturn in the economy by absorbing the increased labor force.
The previous Roosevelt Administration had been caught flat footed by the German-Russian alliance announced in 1940. Shortly after the alliance was announced FDR received a letter signed by more than a two dozen physicists indicating that in the case of Germany especially there was fear that it had atomic research ongoing likely aimed at creating a chain reaction with fissionable material to split an uranium atom that could be turned into a weapon of immense power. The signatories included Einstein, Enrico Fermi, and Edward Teller. All three were refugees, who emigrated due to growing Anti-Semitism in Europe (Einstein, and Teller were both Jewish, as was Fermi’s wife). Einstein was recognized as the world’s greatest physicist, and both Fermi and Teller would have major roles in the Cambridge Cooperative.
The newly formed NIS was tasked with gathering intelligence on the extent of German-Russian military cooperation in general, and atomic research in particular. JPK named “Wild Bill” Donovan as the Director of the NIS. They soon partnered with the better resourced MI6. It was hoped that the two European powers would revert to their prior competitive (even antagonistic) stances, but they were indeed cooperating. By the time JPK took office intelligence showed there was an atomic program in place. The Germans provided the bulk of scientific personnel, while the Russians provided the resources and a site in Siberia. They were also closely cooperating on making advances in rockets, aircraft, armored vehicles, and submarines. The subs were developed out of pens on the Baltic Sea, while the Germans controlled most of the aircraft and rocket research, and the Russians concentrated on tanks.
By 1943 the alliance’s first U-Boats, and Russian T-42 tank (known in Germany as the Panther), were generations ahead of their Commonwealth and American counterparts. Even so fear of an atomic weapon dropped from a bomber, or mounted on a rocket is what prompted JPK to approach the Commonwealth about cooperating on their own program. Clement Atlee actually met with JPK in April 1941. Remember this was pre-Imperial Federation, and Atlee’s Labour led only the UK at the time, and as a minority government as that. It was therefore decided that the bulk of the work would be done in the United States with theoretical research based at MIT in Cambridge, Massachusetts and Cambridge University in England. The project was thus code named as the Cambridge Cooperative to mask it as a mere academic exchange. The funding was almost exclusively American, but MI6 and MI5 in conjunction with the NIA, NBI, and the United States military provided intelligence and operational security. When Churchill returned as Prime Minister in 1945 he did complain that the Americans had poached virtually every physicist the UK had. He would soon complain even more about rocketry assets, but more on that shortly.
JPK was not overly fond of the British, but just as he, at least publicly, set aside his Anti-Semitism for the good of the country, he did the same for cooperation with both Atlee and Churchill. Their intelligence agencies worked together to undermine the German-Russian alliance, encourage defectors, and do outright sabotage to their various weapons programs. They also used surrogates in Asia and Africa to confront the Russians and Germans respectively.
The most successful of the operations were those that revealed to the Germans how the Russians were not fully sharing data, and vice versa. The operation with the most immediate effect was when an MI6 Russian asset working on the atomic program gave the Germans papers showing their ally had changed important reports being sent to Germany to show less progress than actually occurred. The Germans recalled their scientists for almost eight months in 1943-44. The papers were essentially true but had been altered to make the subterfuge seem worse than it really was. It had a double benefit in that when the Germans returned, they started on another area of research that proved a dead end.
In 1943 MI6 recruited Werner Von Braun, who was second in command of German rocket/missile research. He provided invaluable intelligence to include drawings, and test reports. Von Braun wanted rockets to lead to space exploration and saw the German-Russian alliance only developing them as weapons. Were it just Germany Von Braun would have likely not been susceptible to recruitment, but he later wrote he feared the Russians would eventually turn German developed rockets against them. In early 1944 Von Braun asked the British to get him and his family out of Germany. That June many of the rocket scientists and their families were attending a combined conference and holiday on the Spanish Island of Mallorca. On June 6, 1944, Von Braun, his brother and their families took a Mediterranean cruise north along the Spanish coast to the French Riviera. The cruise was actually arranged by MI6 and took the party south to Gibraltar. Imagine the surprise of MI6 and the NIS when they found three other scientists and their families on the craft.
The British gave the American NIS full access to the defectors. JPK’s younger son John was an analyst with NIS. This really wasn’t his wheelhouse, but John Kennedy was ordered to participate in the debriefings. The debriefings were conducted in Northern Scotland. The accommodations were spartan, and the defectors and their families were uncomfortable. Von Braun was also chagrined that they were not being put to work. The MI6 agent in charge was a Kim Philby, who was not liked by the defectors, as he had expressed doubt on their veracity saying he couldn’t see how they could so easily turn on their country. While just getting over a long winter in February 1945, Von Braun and his cohorts were very receptive to John Kennedy’s “off the cuff” offer to relocate them all to the United States to immediately get to work on America’s rocket program.
On returning to No. 10 in 1945 Churchill was informed of the desire of the scientists to relocate. He was livid, but as the main priority at that time was completing the integration needed to finalize the Imperial federation, he chose not to hold the scientists or pick a fight with the Americans. In exchange the British were guaranteed full access the United States Rocket and Atomic Programs, to include permanently stationed personnel at all facilities involved in the programs. Kim Philby never forgave John Kennedy. When in 1965 John took over the NIS, Philby retired as the number two man in MI6. John Kennedy who allegedly seldom had a bad word to say about anyone –always referred to Philby as “that alcoholic.”
Relations with Germany and Russia became sufficiently tense that the press began referring to the time as an “Era of Phony Peace.” Commonwealth and American operations continued throughout both of JPK’s terms. By 1945 a clear pattern had emerged:
  • The United States would take action to insure stability and prosperity in the Americas and use its influence to foreclose trade or cooperation of Latin American and Caribbean Nations with the German-Russian Alliance. This included recognizing independence for territory still under technical European control and preventing the extracting resources from such territories (this included French, Danish and Dutch holdings).
  • The Commonwealth would undertake similar action in Africa, Indian Ocean and the Pacific (where the French, Dutch, Portuguese, and Belgians still had holdings).
  • On mainland Asia the United States would take the lead on confronting the Russians. This would be done by using local surrogates on the Korean Peninsula, Indochina, and Manchuria combined with a military alliance that would come to include The Philippines, Formosa, Indonesia and Thailand. That alliance of course still exists today and includes Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, China, Tibet, Mongolia, and Japan. The United States was not formally part of the alliance but had an agreement whereby they provided extensive logistical support, equipment and training in exchange for basing rights. The training included on the ground “advisors,” observers, and a deployment of the American Volunteer Force (AVF) consisting of a reinforced Infantry Brigade, three fighter-interceptor squadrons, and a bomber squadron.
  • In Europe the Anglo-American Alliance used diplomatic pressures to split the Germans and Russians. Goods within the German-Russian block were boycotted, and trade was otherwise severely restricted. The Americans used their influence at the ICC to get other nations outside Europe to cooperate. Tariffs on goods coming out of the block were raised, and the Americans and the Commonwealth routinely undercut Block prices for their goods to third party nations.
In his first term JPK sought to improve relations with Latin America by free trade and cooperation on infrastructure improvements. Congress was not inclined to provide funding for these partnerships, but JPK was able to get financing through the newly authorized ICC World Bank. In 1944 the ICC-WB was chartered to provide financing for international projects with funding provide by member states central banks and private entities. There was some dispute as to whether the USCB could participate in such transactions with the ICC-WB. While the matter was still in the courts, in 1945 Congress did approve a proposal, in a bill co-sponsored by Joe, Jr. to allow the USCB to provide $2 in financing for every $1 invested by private US investors, and an additional dollar for dollar match in financing put up by American entities actually doing the work being financed.
The largest projects were Pan-American Highway along the western coasts of the Americas from Prudhoe Bay, Alaska to Quelion, Chile was constructed between 1945 and 1963, the Nicaraguan Canal opened in 1967 (which is now used for all Pacific to Atlantic traffic, while the expanded Panama Canal handles Atlantic to Pacific transit), and the Eastern Highway of the Americas extending from St. John’s Newfoundland to Ushuaia, Argentina with a connection to Quelion was begun in 1966 and completed in 1979. The highways of course intersect in Panama. There were numerous smaller projects including dams, roads, bridges, and as time progressed radio, television, and computer infrastructure. In the Caribbean money was given to improve ports increasing trade and tourism. The largest project completed in Joe, Jr.’s second term is the International Spaceport in what was formerly French Guiana.
More on the ICC-WB later in discussions of JPK’s post-Presidency but suffice it to say the projects did much to wed the interests of Latin America to the United States. The cooperation fostered by the ICC-WB backed programs encouraged regional cooperation, and in point of fact was credited by politicians in both Bolivia and Paraguay as leading to a final settlement of the Chaco War where the belligerents had engaged in several battles over the region in 1934, only to settle into an armed ceasefire with occasional incursions by one side or the other over the following decade. When in 1945 the ICC-WB offered to loan money to develop the oil and other mineral resources the parties agreed within two months to share the resources and draw a border that still exists.
A similar tack was attempted in Africa with somewhat less success. There were several reasons for this. JPK took the lead with Latin America as he saw it as implementing the Monroe Doctrine, with a carrot added to TR’s big stick. The Commonwealth took on the major role in Africa but was working under some handicaps. First, unlike the Americas, much of Africa was still under (or only recently past) colonial rule, with some of the other European powers trying to hold or claw back their holdings. Second there were still numerous tribal, religious and ethnic differences throughout Africa, to include Commonwealth holdings. Finally, the Commonwealth had its own issues on the continent with apartheid in South Africa, and Rhodesia coupled with entering the final phases of creating the Imperial Federation and Greater Commonwealth.
In 1944 both Rhodesia and South Africa declared independence and dissociated themselves from the Commonwealth. They became rogue nations, they ignored all Commonwealth, Federation and ICC resolutions, and sanctions. Despite successes elsewhere in isolating Germany and Russia there was extensive trade forming an “Axis of Evil” between southern Africa and “Shackled Europe,” to quote Churchill. Even so, the aforementioned issues the rest of Africa slowly got past colonialism. Under ICC auspices borders were drawn with local input that took tribal, and ethnic divisions into consideration.
Following America’s “Philippine Model,” the Commonwealth and United States tried to show good faith by freeing those areas that would never be a part of the Imperial federation or as an American State, while maintaining significant ties. In 1945 the Indian sub-Continent was partitioned into the four nations we know today. The United States freed the Philippines in 1946, with the Virgin Islands in 1947, and its Pacific holdings in 1948, and all such areas became “Nations in Free Association with The United States.” In 1949, shortly before the Federation came into full force, the Commonwealth created the nations of Jordan, Palestine and the Jewish state of Israel. As with the Indian sub-continent they remained Commonwealth members, but had borders controlled by troops from other Commonwealth members until 1969. The Israel-Palestine division was especially difficult due to the large numbers of displaced European Jews entering Israel. Allowing other powers former colonial holdings to apply to the Commonwealth or to become Nations in Association with the United States (or both) also served to isolate Shackled Europe. Iceland being the most prominent example.
In Asia there was more direct confrontation of the Russians. Alexander Kerensky had been the Leader of the Duma since the ICC forces had put down the Red rebellion in 1919. Originally it appeared he would guide Russia to a Constitutional Monarchy, but by 1929 the Tsar had been deposed and elections were repeatedly suspended often without explanation. Quite frankly, Kerensky and those around him saw what Germany was doing in Europe and decided to try to get in on the act.
The native armed forces in Asia were not shy about confronting the Russian forces and had the advantage of Russia wanting to avoid direct conflict with the United States or Commonwealth. In 1944 JPK signed the Military Assistance Act (MAA) authorizing the United States to provide virtually anything short of combat troops (and even then advisors were permitted) to “nations or territories under attack or threat from European Powers certified to be enemies of peace.” The Act also allowed Americans to volunteer for service in the armed forces of said nations or territories under attack or threat.
Based on the MAA, in 1945, the American Volunteer Force (AVF) consisting of a reinforced Infantry Brigade, three fighter-interceptor squadrons, and a bomber squadron was formed in the United States, and by 1946 was fully engaged in the Chinese Civil War. Russia called the AVF mercenaries and bandits, but within the year the Russians had formed their own analog (although almost half the manpower came from convicts). So right wing Russia was providing support to the Communists under Mao Tse Tung to undermine Chinese independence. The Russians also provided the Chinese Communists with chemical weapons, which were deployed at least a dozen times in the late 1940s. Russian support for the communists was obvious, but even the fig leaf of neutrality was obliterated by the evidence adduced at Mao’s trial in 1951.
The Anglo-American alliance was finally able to permanently split the Germans and Russians on the day following formation of the Imperial Federation on November 25, 1949. The almost worldwide boycott of Shackled Europe was taking a toll. The Germans were led to believe that were they to abandon Russia more normal relations would at least be open to discussion. Russian aggression in Asia was much more open than German domination in Europe. Germany announced that effective January 1, 1949, there would be a European Community for all of continental Europe save Turkey, and Russia. The irony that no other European nation meant to be a part of this Community issued a statement was lost on the Germans. The Russian response was to abrogate their alliance. The Germans had already left the joint atomic development program but continued basic research (looking to South Africa for Uranium). In the short term the response of the Americans and Federation deeply disappointed the Germans.
Even though German assistance was gone the Russians redoubled their efforts to create an atomic weapon. By early 1948 they actually had a design that would work but had been unable to overcome problems in enriching uranium, and were never able to produce Hesperium (also known as Plutonium). There was also at least one lab accident leading to a release of radiation that killed three of the top Russian scientists in mid-1948. What finally put an end to the program was the display JPK and Churchill jointly authorized on January 10, 1949. The United States exploded a hesperium bomb over Bikini Atoll in the Pacific with representatives from Germany, and Russia invited to observe from a safe distance. They also released a film of the test uranium device exploded the prior month. The films of both tests remain are breathtaking even today. In the statement issued following the demonstration the United States indicated the Anglo-American Alliance had stockpiled several weapons that could be delivered by land or sea based aircraft or missiles, and that within the year they anticipated having an even more powerful weapon known as a fusion bomb. The communique went on to describe in detail the effects of the weapons, to include expected radiological effects on human beings and the general environment. The United States or the Imperial Federation pledged the weapons were only created as a deterrent to Aggressive Powers seeking to dominate weaker nations and territories. They stated that would not use the weapons, and it demanded other non-democratic nations, specifying Germany and Russia, immediately discontinue their research and dismantle any facilities dedicated to creating atomic weapons. More on the results when we get to the JFK post-Presidency.
Most of the discussion of dealing with the German-Russian alliance necessarily extended over both of JPK’s terms. So was there much of a contest when he ran for reelection in 1944? Well not exactly. The country was concerned that JPK was too involved in foreign affairs, and would bring the nation into a European War. Kennedy was able to argue that just as TR’s was proactive in foreign affairs and kept us out of the Great War, he would proactively prevent another European war. The President was once again blessed by poor opponents. The Democrats nominated Governor J. Melville Broughton of North Carolina and Senator Joseph O’Mahoney of Wyoming; O’Mahoney was actually the mirror image of JPK – a Republican turned Democrat. One of the major missed opportunities in JPK’s first term was his total neglect of civil rights. Had the Democrats nominated a more progressive candidate they might have made inroads on the black vote. As it was the Republicans prevailed by 285 to 270. They won the popular vote by under half a million votes out of more than 54 million cast. Republicans also barely held both Houses of Congress. A good result, but in all cases, it was closer than 1940. Joe, Jr. easily won reelection even though he had no particularly great accomplishments to cite.
In his second term JPK doubled down on foreign policy, letting Congress take the lead on domestic issues. This may have been the correct course, but there is no doubt it hurt the Republicans. JPK did try to enforce anti-lynching laws more forcefully, but he still failed to introduce comprehensive voting or civil rights legislation. Northern Democrats were actually willing to join with Republicans to overcome a filibuster by Southern Democrats on such legislation, but Kennedy failed to provide leadership.
One positive effect on civil rights came from JPK’s second term; in 1945 as his third Supreme Court appointment, he named Harold Burton as Chief Justice. Less than a decade later Burton wrote the opinion of a unanimous Court in Parks v. Alabama overruling the Plessy vs. Ferguson separate but equal doctrine. The case of course followed in 1956 by Meredith v. Conner et al wherein the 1954 Civil Rights Act was upheld as applying not only to State actions, but to “public accommodations” operated by private parties.
In the 1946 midterms the Republicans lost the Senate, and barely held the House. Joe, Jr. was reelected, but by a greatly reduced margin from 1942 and 1944. Even with those losses Joe, Sr. actually contemplated running for a third term. The Democrats had revolted when FDR eight years earlier had publicly mused about a third term, the Republicans had a similar reaction to JPK – saying he was no TR. Even though JPK subsequently renounced any intention to run again the result was the 20th Amendment which limited Presidents to two terms (although as with TR that would not limit someone who completed the term of another President from being elected twice in their own right). The Amendment also moved the convening dates of Congress and Inauguration of the President from March to January. The Amendment was not ratified until May 1950, so JPK’s term was not altered.
In foreign affairs at the end of JPK’s second term the United States was firmly allied with the Imperial Federation. Latin America and the Carribean nations were prospering, generally democratic, and on the road to forming what would later be known as the Common Market of the Americas. In Africa the Federation was having less success, with tribal resentments still coming to the surface, but progress was being made with the notable exceptions of South Africa and Rhodesia as well as the nascent Islamic Confederation formed by Turkey, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait being formed from the ashes of the Ottoman Empire. The Anglo-American Alliance had managed to cause a real split between the Germans and Russians, but they each represented an individual threat to peace. Asia was looking more and more like the place where the Alliance and the Russians would actually get into a shooting war.
Congressman Kennedy
On November 22, 1945, the President announced the birth of his first grandchild, Marguerite Rose Kennedy, named for her grandmothers, and on August 20, 1947, our guest today – Joseph P. Kennedy III was born. Joe, Jr. and Maureen were totally devoted to their children. Maureen gave up acting to raise the children. Joe, Jr. remained in Congress, but was not a particular standout while his father was President. After the birth of his daughter Congressman Kennedy dropped the Junior and began referring to himself as simply J.P. to try to move out of his father's shadow; he would later write this was a conscious decision as he did not want to seem to be just an extension of his father. Not surprising is the fact that he kept any disagreements private, saying later there was no value in publicizing where they differed. In reality Joe, Jr. thought the failure to move on Civil Rights was the elder Kennedy’s biggest failure.
J.P. took on somewhat of a leadership role in military and veterans affairs where he and Wisconsin Democrat Joe McCarthy sponsored Military Education Act of 1946. It gave Federal allowances for college, or vocational school for any honorably discharged member of the armed forces. It also set up a system of low interest loans with minimal collateral for any sole proprietorship operated by an honorably discharged service member. The Act has of course been greatly expanded over the years, but it increased recruiting to the extent that there no need for a military draft, and in fact enlistees were usually placed on a waiting list to begin training. Joe, Jr. also co-sponsored legislation reorganizing the active and reserve forces. The partnership of the two Joe's across party lines continued even after J.P. went into the Senate. McCarthy lost his own attempt to enter the Senate after it was revealed he had lied about his war record in the Marines, and subsequently left the House in disgrace. In 1955, when McCarthy died in a one car accident evidently caused by a severe alcohol problem, J.P. was the only member of Congress to attend the funeral.
In 1951 five year old Marguerite Rose Kennedy died of complications from polio. The entire family was devastated by the sudden loss. Marguerite’s uncle John Kennedy later related Rose Kennedy was inconsolable. Unable to have more children after her 1918 bout of Kansas Flu, Rose Kennedy had considered Marguerite to be the daughter she never had. In 1968 John wrote “After Marguerite Rose died my mother essentially ceased to interact with anyone; she took some solace in the Church and the idea of being reunited with her granddaughter in the next life, but she herself died of a broken heart in just over a year.” Joe, Jr. threw himself into his work, and for the rest of his life pulled all stops in insuring funding for vaccines and anything relating to children’s health. The irony of course is that at the time Marguerite contracted polio a vaccine was already in testing, and was approved the following year. The Marguerite Rose Foundation still exists as one of the largest child health charities today.
1948 Election and JPK at the ICC
All predictions were that the Republicans would be swept nationwide in 1948. Just as TR had campaigned tirelessly for Hughes in 1916, so did JPK barnstorm for Dewey-Taft ticket in 1948. Barnstorm is right, as he had in every election cycle since 1940- JPK would often land in a small plane saying he was flown by his naval aviator son "hero of the Pacific War." J.P. later admitted "being blind in one eye meant I would never trust myself to safely fly a kite, never mind my dad, but I would sometimes sit in the copilot seat to give some credence to the story." The Democrats had nominated Kentucky Governor Alben Barkley, and Missouri Senator Harry Truman. The Democrats finally added a strong Civil Rights plank to their platform, and it was thought they could perhaps break the Republican lock on the Black vote. Polls at the time showed Democrats so far ahead that their National Candidates essentially stopped campaigning after Labor Day to avoid making mistakes. On election night all were shocked when the Republicans prevailed with 287 electoral votes to the Democrats 251 votes (17 electors from three Southern States actually cast votes for South Carolina Governor Strom Thurmond, who was not even on the ballot). The Republicans held the House, and the Senate was tied at 48 to 48. J.P. was easily reelected to his seat. Analysis showed a failure of Democrats to make significant inroads in the black vote, as despite the civil rights plank, they still nominated a ticket with candidates from states seen as hostile to blacks. On the other side that same plank likely cost the Democrats Virginia and West Virginia due to many being opposed to expanded civil rights and sitting out the election.
In March 1949 one of Tom Dewey’s first acts was to name JPK as the United States envoy to the ICC. He was the first President since TR to be named as envoy, and as with TR he was named Speaker by the ICC assembly. It should be noted that were it in doubt that JPK would be named Speaker, he would not have accepted the appointment. Even though the title was Speaker of the ICC, since TR, the presiding officer has always been referred to as Mr. or Madame President. JPK used his position to further isolate Russia, Germany and their vassal states. He actually named himself as the head of the board of Governors of the ICC-WB. This role proved more influential than the ICC Speakership. JPK got the board of Governors to start linking ICC-WB loans to the nations seeking funding making electoral reforms. Even more effective was the program reducing outstanding loans to nations that moved toward democracy. This was especially effective in sub-Saharan Africa. JPK was replaced as envoy to the ICC at the end of 1958, but stayed on as head of the ICC-WB until he retired in June 1960. By the time JPK left the bank his policies on lending had been codified.

This is a good point to break for questions. Please remember if you are getting this on a delayed feed from outside the eastern seaboard, I will answer questions by general email within a day or two.
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Questions

colonel

Donor
QUESTIONS

I.T., Duke University: Hello Professor. It's nice to see you again since the Roosevelt and Churchill lectures. I'd like to have a review on the political positions both the Republican and the Democrats had around this time, as well as any other parties of note.

J.O., Harvard: Well since TR the Democrats have been supportive of big business, but they would say "American Business." They support high tariffs, and with their expansion of social welfare programs they have supported "expanding the tax base." In reality that has meant having much lower wage earners paying an income tax. The Republicans liked to say they are the party of "Small Business," and the American Farmer. They opposed FDR's social programs and the taxes to pay for them, but JPK did nothing to reverse the programs and only moderately reduced taxes. As a result of increased borrowing from the 1930s onward under both Republicans and Democrats the deficit had ballooned so much that many sought a balanced budget Amendment and the States finally called the Second Constitutional Convention in 1993, but that of course is beyond the parameters for this lecture. Up until the mid-1960s the Democrats were split for years between the Southern and Northern branches on Civil Rights (the Southern Branch said the Northerners were forgetting about State's Rights). The Republicans were openly for Civil Rights, but as we previously discussed JPK's inaction was a disappointment in this regard (more on this in the next segment). Both parties had isolationist wings, but as each of these wings are diametrically opposed to everything else their counterparts would stand for there was never a serious attempt at a third party on that basis. The Socialist had a mini revival during the Panic in the 1930s, but that was short lived, and they never elected anyone to statewide office or garnered any electoral votes. The only 3rd party candidate to receive Electoral voted was the States Rights Party under Alabama Governor George Wallace in 1964. More on that later.

T.H., Fordham; I'd like to inquire about the fate of the East Asian sphere after the Pacific War, especially the fates of Japan, China, and Indochina.

A J.O., Harvard: As to your question on the let me just play back my earlier remarks talking about:
using local surrogates on the Korean Peninsula, Indochina, and Manchuria combined with a military alliance that would come to include The Philippines, Formosa, Indonesia and Thailand. That alliance of course still exists today and includes Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, China, Tibet, Mongolia, and Japan. The United States was not formally part of the alliance but had an agreement whereby they provided extensive logistical support, equipment and training in exchange for basing rights.
Again, more on that later.
 
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colonel

Donor
Well back to our lecture:
Joe, Jr. to the Senate
After the 1948 election JPK asked Dewey to head the United States delegation to the investiture of the first Imperial Parliament on November 25th, Thanksgiving Day in the United States. JPK didn’t go himself, as he had a sometimes strained relationship with Winston Churchill. He named Joe, Jr. to the delegation, and he and Maureen stopped in Ireland so her family could meet their children. Joe, Jr. had met Churchill twice before, and the PM sought him out on this occasion. The young Congressman got along well with the elder statesman, and Dewey was a little miffed at not being the center of attention in the US delegation. Joe, Jr. also met the German representative who was allowed to attend despite the frosty relations between the Federation and Germany. The German representative was Vice- Chancellor Albert Speer, and little did anyone know that within two years he would succeed Chancellor Kuno VonWestarp.
In 1950 J.P. was eyeing running for the open California Senate seat. His good friend, Dick Nixon, was also thinking of running for the seat. Unexpectedly, Earl Warren the incumbent Republican Governor announced he was not running for reelection. Kennedy and Nixon between them decided that Nixon would run for Governor and J.P. would make the Senate run. As you would know if you have read Trip’s book it turns out that JPK had approached Dewey who was already displeased with Vice-President Taft, who was from the isolationist wing of the party. Dewey then promised Warren a cabinet position after he left the Governorship, and the number two spot on the 1952 ticket.
J.P. and Nixon both received substantial campaign support from JPK, and both easily won their respective races. Nixon had a somewhat larger margin of victory, but J.P. was facing James Roosevelt, eldest son of FDR, so you had two sons of Presidents running against each other. When asked about Nixon’s wider margin, J.P. famously remarked that “dad would pay for a win but wouldn’t pay for a landslide.” Maureen Kennedy remarked that she was happy that with his father out of the White House “Joe was finally able to show his sense of humor.” Of course, it was only a few months before they lost Marguerite Rose. In his memoir J.P. later said he didn’t regret running for higher office in 1950, but always wondered if Marguerite would have avoided polio if they had stayed in California instead of Washington, D.C.
In the Senate J.P. started to assume a more high profile role. He had ended his House career as Chairman of the sub-Committee on Military Reorganization, but the Republicans had lost Senate seats in 1950 so J.P. was a freshman in the minority party. J.P. led a group of first termers from both houses of both parties in drafting a Civil Rights bill that included outlawing literacy tests and poll taxes for voting in Federal elections. In the 1952 session Representative Humphrey from Minnesota actually got the Humphrey-Kennedy bill through the House with a big boost from then Minority leader Gerry Ford. Kennedy agreed to significantly water down the Senate version in hopes of getting the bill fixed in conference, but after the bill got out of committee it was denied a vote on the floor when a group of Southern Democrats led by Arkansas’ William J. Fulbright filibustered.
In 1952 Dewey kept his word and dumped Taft in favor of Warren, who he had made Attorney General in 1951. It did little good. Unemployment was at a ten year high, and the nation was getting tired of United States involvement in what seemed to be never ending conflicts in Asia. The Republicans suffered losses in both Houses and lost the Presidency by three million votes with a 303 to 256 result in the Electoral College. Adlai Stevenson and Lyndon Johnson took office in January 1953 with the closest thing the Democrats had to a mandate in 20 years.
J.P. decided to immediately reintroduce his Civil Rights bill. Even though the Republicans had lost seats they had been replaced by Democrats that also supported Civil Rights. The only new Democrat that opposed the bill was Tennessee’s Al Gore, Sr., but he merely replaced another opponent. More important was Texas as John Connolly was appointed to replace Vice-President Johnson and Ralph Yarborough won the open seat. Both were Democrats, but Lyndon Johnson committed to Civil Rights when Stevenson put him on the ticket, and he would look foolish and two faced if what everyone knew to be his handpicked successor filibustered the bill. Yarborough simply said he supported the bill and wouldn’t filibuster. The other Southern Democrats tried to filibuster both before and after conference but were broken each time with a Vice-President from the South presiding. J.P. later said Johnson told him that with the GOP loss Kennedy had been able “to turn chicken shit into chicken salad.” Humphrey-Kennedy not only passed with all of the voting provisions intact, but an attempt to amend the Bill to remove reasonable accommodations mandates on nongovernment entities failed when Johnson cast the tie breaking vote rejecting removal. Humphrey-Kennedy was signed into law as the Civil Rights Act of 1954.
J.P. spent the rest of his first term in the Senate concentrating of military readiness and reform and foreign affairs. In 1952 in memory of his daughter, the Kennedy family chartered the Marguerite Rose Foundation, with Maureen Kennedy as the first chair, shortly thereafter Rose Kennedy passed away. Before her death, Pope Pius XII had named Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy a Papal Countess. She was buried in Massachusetts, and in addition to her family and representatives from the dozen charities she supported her funeral was attended by President Dewey, two Cardinals, eight bishops, four foreign ambassadors, six sitting or former Governors, 127 sitting or former members of the House and Senate, and none other than Prime Minister Winston Churchill of the Imperial Federation.
THE ICC GERMAN NEGOTIATIONS AND AGREEMENT
Churchill was a regular visitor to the United States up until his retirement in 1953, and even later as an informal envoy. He did this to consult with President Dewey and JPK who was at the ICC. They were still concerned with containing Germany and Russia. In fact, John Kennedy later wrote his father remarked he saw Churchill more in the four years following his Presidency then he had during his entire eight-year term. During many of the consultations with both Dewey and JPK, J.P. was often present. Churchill wrote in his own memoir he found “the young Senator gave sound advice on what could or could not get through the American Congress; as well as to how to best ‘package’ potentially controversial proposals.”
When in September 1951 German Chancellor Kuno von Westarp died, the world waited to see if there would be a peaceful succession. Von Westarp was 88 when he passed, and Germany had essentially been run in secret run by a committee of leaders of the National People’s Party for almost a decade. Technically they were all elected members of the Reichstag, but since deposing the Kaiser and outlawing other parties there had been no real democracy in Germany in almost 20 years. Shortly after the death of von Westarp several senior members of the party announced their retirements for various reasons. On October 31st, yes Halloween, it was announced that Albert Speer would become Chancellor. Even though he had been Vice-Chancellor for three years, Speer was a surprise choice as he was only 46, and more than 15 years younger than anyone else thought to be in contention. Still, he moved quickly to consolidate power. Both MI6 and the NIS initially thought he was likely seen as a caretaker, until the real power struggle was over. Imagine their surprise when on December 7, 1951, at 1500 GMT the German Ambassadors to the United States and Imperial Federation, simultaneously requested of the American Secretary of State and Imperial Federation Foreign Minister, “that talks be initiated under the auspices of the ICC, to allow Germany and her partners in Europe to rejoin the Community of Nations.” The communique went on to say Germany sought no preconditions except that such talks remain secret until they had come to a favorable conclusion. Well, JPK was going to remain a very busy man.
Dewey and Churchill were both caught off guard by Speer’s offer. They took over a month to respond. They accepted the proposal, and agreed to talks between the United States, Imperial Federation and Germany under the auspices of the ICC. The talks would be held at the Catoctin Mountain Presidential Retreat, today known as Camp Marguerite, in Maryland, as it was protected by US Marines, and would allow for the negotiations to be held in secret. The acceptance came with a single precondition – Germany had to announce that before the end of 1952 it was withdrawing all military forces from other European nations. On January 27th Speer made an address carried live on radio, and in the small number of television sets then operating throughout Europe. He indicated that with the formation of the European Community there was no longer a need for Reich forces to provide protection to their neighbors, and that Germany was therefore withdrawing all forces back to the Reich. Speer exempted normal military, naval and air attaches, but promised all German bases would be turned over to the host nations, and all personnel including advisors left to assist in the transition would return to Germany by Christmas 1952. Speer promised Germany would of course be available to render aid to any member of the Community requiring military assistance in the future.
The talks began on February 14th, which besides being Valentine’s Day was the first day of the Winter Olympics in Quebec City which served as a good cover for a large number of Germans traveling to North America. JPK sat for the first session but left the actual negotiations to personnel on loan from the United States and Imperial Federation governments. One junior member of the ICC team was an academic Harvard PhD named Henry Kissinger. Kissinger was put on the team in part because he was a Jewish refugee who had emigrated from Germany at age 13 in 1936. It was to remind Germany that they could not merely forget the last decades.
That is essentially what the Germans were hoping for. They wanted the ICC to lift sanctions, allow Germany and their vassal states to resume voting status, and resume full normal diplomatic relations with other ICC states, in exchange for providing full support for any actions contemplated against Russia. The ICC position was that Germany and the other states had to move toward real democratic reforms, grant full citizenship to and a right to unhindered return to any Jews, Gypsies and others who had been persecuted. These same groups would also be allowed to seek compensation for damages reasonably attributed to the action or inaction of the German government. These action could be brought in courts in any nation where displaced persons had settled. Finally, the ICC representatives demanded the Germans, reduce their armed forces and fully share with the Anglo-American Alliance information on any military weapons and equipment already fielded or in development, to include a complete history and the current status of any atomic research.
Negotiations stalled almost immediately, as the Germans seemed surprised by the ICC demands, and requested a recess to seek instructions from Berlin. Immediately after the German request for negotiation MI6 and the NIS had gone back over old intelligence to try to find some clue as to why Speer had made the overture. They came to the conclusion that ICC sanctions combined with trying to maintain a first class military had essentially gutted the German economy. Speer himself had been named Vice Chancellor and then Chancellor because he was considered the wunderkind who had at first been in charge of German infrastructure, and then expanded his portfolio to include munitions and military equipment and managed to succeed. The problem was the successes of Germany in general, and Speer in particular were illusory. His confiscation of property from emigrating Jews could only be done once, and what was taken from “partners” in Europe could barely cover the costs of billeting troops. When something went wrong and could not be covered up Speer had always been sure to have another bureaucrat available to take the blame – several of whom were imprisoned for corruption and at least one who was executed. So the US and Federation knew they had leverage sufficient to make the previously outlined demands.
When negotiations resumed the Germans did not reject any demand out of hand. The talks continued for a little over four months. In the end Germany conceded on almost all counts. On July 4, 1952, an announcement was made in London by JPK, in that an agreement had been made between the Inter-Continental Congress and the German Nation. Present on the dais for the announcement were Chancellor Speer, President Dewey and Prime Minister Churchill. The terms announced were:

  • Germany and the other members of the European Community will immediately have their full ICC voting privileges restored. All nations of the European Community hereby give up any claims to territory or colonial possessions outside of continental Europe.
  • All nations in the European Community will move to reform their democratic institutions such that no later than 1960, they will be parliamentary democracies, republics, or constitutional monarchies wherein political power will rest with representatives and/or executives elected by universal suffrage with no person being disqualified by reason of race, gender, or creed.
  • Sanctions currently in place shall be reduced on the schedule provided in the addendum to this agreement contingent on progress made to the provision regarding the other provisions in this agreement.
  • Individuals previously denied or stripped of citizenship based on their creed, ethnicity or espoused political speech, shall have their citizenship promptly granted or restored on application. Further any individuals or groups having suffered due to the inhumane policies of the German Government since January 1, 1930, and ending July 1, 1952, may make a claim, and if the German shall not promptly pay such claim in full such individuals or groups may submit the matter to arbitration by the ICC under rules contained in the addendum to this agreement. No claim can be submitted after December 31, 1954. No costs shall accrue to claimants seeking arbitration under this provision.
The Germans got a single body to arbitrate claims with firm dates on filing, as opposed to being subject to various courts around the globe. The giving up claims on colonial possessions actually applied to Belgium, France, The Netherlands, Denmark, and Portugal, but it really just recognized facts on the ground. The ICC had wanted to make the democracy provision take force by 1955, but the Germans got 1960 – as we’ll see shortly that quickly became a moot point. Elections were also to be monitored by the ICC. Sanctions were reduced in stages to insure German compliance. There were also secret provisions to the agreement wherein the Germans agreed to provide any military information sought by the United States or Imperial Federation, but there was no mandate to reduce their armed forces. The ICC also agreed that no German official could be held personally liable for any payments, and only Germany could try German officials for any crimes.
NEW EUROPE
The announcement of what amounted to German capitulation was welcomed around the globe, but most especially in continental Europe. Initially there were only cautious moves made by the Europeans. This appears to have been because they wanted to make sure the Germans would actually keep their word, and more importantly because the leaders in place were almost all German lackeys. The ICC named teams for each nation to oversee the democratic reforms called for in the agreement; and in Germany and many other cases the teams included at least one refugee who had fled Europe due to oppression. On September 1, 1952 the Swiss announced that each of its Cantons would schedule elections before the end of the year, with National elections to occur by February 1953. Following the German withdrawal of their last troops from France in early November, the other nations quickly announced dates for local and National elections. Germany actually announced its own dates on January 1, 1953, surprisingly before both Luxembourg, and Poland later that same month.
Elections occurred in every nation within the European Community during 1953. In some three cases (Italy, Spain, and Greece), the results were not certified as fair by the ICC due to fraud by the incumbents and were run a second time. Generally, the incumbents were thrown out of office. Some like Mussolini in Italy and Franco in Spain were tried for election fraud and barred from holding office in the future. By mid-1954 the New Democracy Movement, as it came to be known, had even seen free elections in Germany. Communists were allowed to run, and although they failed to win a majority or even a plurality of seats in any nation, they were parts of minority coalitions in Greece, Germany and Albania.
Albert Speer and his party were routed in the elections. Speer was shocked in 1956 when he was arrested for public corruption. He and the other fifteen party officials who had secured immunity from foreign prosecutions were found guilty by the German Courts after the new government had repealed various immunity statutes passed before the elections in 1954. Speer himself was sentenced to eight years but released after just three “given his service to the Fatherland in bringing Germany back into the Community of Nations.” This was done at the same time the Kaiser’s grandson returned as Wilhelm III. Europe choose to keep the European Community, Germany was just another member with no special privileges. Russia and Turkey were still excluded, but Iceland which by then was recognized as a member of the Greater Commonwealth and a Nation in Free Association with the United States actually joined the Community in 1958. The post 1980 expansion and transformation of the community are for another lecture.
Europe choose to keep the European Community, but Germany was just another member with no special privileges. Russia and Turkey were still excluded, but Iceland which by then was recognized as a member of the Greater Commonwealth and a Nation in Free Association with the United States actually joined the Community in 1958. The post 1980 expansion and transformation of the community are for another lecture.
In 1954 Pope Pius XII convened the 3rd Council of Lyons. It was thought His Holiness choose the venue in part as a message because the 1st Council of Lyons had largely excluded Germans. The reforms initiated by that Council are of course far beyond the parameters of this lecture. I would refer those with questions to my colleague Fr. Callahan at Fordham, who I know is streaming this lecture. Will someone at Fordham please nudge Pat and tell him I mentioned his name.
In 1955 the Nobel Prizes were awarded to scientists outside of continental Europe for the first time in a generation, and JPK accepted the Peace Prize awarded to the ICC. Germany and the other nations in Europe all substantially cut back on their military spending. The Anglo-American Alliance gleaned the information attained from Germany and determined that thanks to Von Braun and his team they were actually ahead in rocket research. They were able to make significant strides in armor and submarine technology thanks to the Germans. What concerned them was the information that the cooperation with South Africa was much greater than previously thought, and that nation was now exchanging information with Russia.
Thanks in large part to Von Braun by 1955 the Alliance had missiles were actually capable of delivering fusion or fission bombs across the globe that could be launched from land or submarines at sea. They demonstrated this capability by launching the world’s first satellite from Mitchell airbase at Cabo San Lucas on October 4, 1955. Unfortunately this was not a deterrent to Russia.
SENATOR KENNEDY’S SECOND TERM
Even before his second term J.P. was trying to expand his portfolio. With his Civil Rights initiative J.P. certainly made a mark on a vital domestic issue. He was still deeply committed to a strong military, and after the German revelations about the state of their military came to his attention, he doubled down on the assumption that the Russians were either on par with the United States, or close behind. J.P. was almost alone in this assessment. He had gotten himself a seat on the Aeronautics and Space sub-Committee and was one of the dignitaries invited to view NACA’s launch of Vanguard the world’s first artificial satellite from the flight deck of his old ship U.S.S. Enterprise which was being retired later that month in 1955.
J.P. was no longer alone in thinking Russia was matching Anglo-American Technology when on January 5, 1956, they detonated a fusion bomb, and launched their own satellite called Sputnik. Russian archives tell us Sputnik was actually ready for launch before Vanguard, but the Russians, not knowing of the American launch until the day prior, held off. They wanted to send a message by making the detonation and launch on the same day. The Russians had a mole in the United States program. One of the scientists who defected with Von Braun was Helmut Grottrup. Grottrup had been turned by the Russians when they were allied with Germany, after he defected, he just continued to provide the Russians with intelligence on the Alliance Rocket program. His knowledge was so thorough that the Russians were never more than a year behind in Rocket development. John Kennedy’s papers reveal that after the launch of Sputnik MI6 and NIS both went on a mole hunt, analysis quickly showed the leak was likely from one of the German defectors, and with access to German intelligence records they determined Grottrup to be the most likely suspect. He confessed when confronted in August 1956. Rather than arrest Grottrup, they made him a double agent and he fed the Russians misinformation for more than three years when it became obvious the Russians had figured out Grottrup was a double agent. He escaped prison, but in 1960 returned to Germany. The Russians had a number of low level spies in the Alliance Atomic Program, but the bulk of the tech they used to develop their own bomb came from the program they had run with Germany and purchased from South Africa.
J.P. won a second term in 1956 by almost landslide proportions, even though Democrats took the Presidency and both Houses. Stevenson was reelected by a small margin despite a mild recession in 1956. Most say the victory was based in large part on the revelation just before Election Day in 1956 that before Dewey left office in January 1953 the USCB at his request had guaranteed ICC-WB loans to Germany, to pay the equivalent of billions of dollars in claims under the agreement. Had the arbitration not thrown out claims made by other European governments the price tag would have likely been many times that amount. Dewey was trying to avoid a total German collapse, and emphasized it was only guarantying loans. Harold Stassen the Republican candidate in 1956 pointed out there had been no German default, and in any event he had nothing to do with the loans, but that tune didn’t play with the electorate.
In his second term Kennedy continued to work across the aisle. He continued to argue against cuts to the Armed Forces due to the threat from Russia, especially after Russia allied with the Islamic Confederation led by Turkey. Despite the Germany pacification, J.P. fought against calls to cut the military, and he became a strong advocate for funding NACA to ensure the United States maintained supremacy over the Russians.
In 1955 J.P. had become the ranking member of the Aeronautics and Space sub-Committee. He would be the ranking member or chairman of that Committee until taking over the Armed Forces Committee Chair in 1961. Thanks in no small part due to J.P.’s actions NACA started a manned space program in 1957. The public began to think Sputnik was an aberration. After all the Anglo-American Alliance had been far ahead of everyone else in aeronautics since the Pacifica War. The first practical military jets were fielded in 1943. Commander Scott Crossfield a combat fighter veteran from the AVF in China returned to the Navy in 1949 and broke the speed of sound in the X-1, and his compatriot, Chuck Yeager, who started in the AVF as a mechanic and became a pilot with seven kills in China, received an Air Force Commission on his return in 1954, became the first man to touch the edge of space in the X-7 in 1957. The Alliance’s complacency was soon to be shattered.
On October 16, 1959, the same day Douglas Aircraft announced they had presold over 100 DC-9 jet aircraft for commercial use, the Russians announced that Air Force Major Yuri Gagarin had been safely returned after twice orbiting the earth. President Johnson announced the following evening that we had a “space race,” and he was forming a Space Committee consisting of members from Government, Science, and Industry to meet the challenge. J.P. was named as a Vice-Chair of the Committee; Werner Von Braun was the Chair. I should also mention that it turns out Gagarin was actually the third Russian attempt to put a man in orbit. One actually blew up on the launch pad, and the second was killed when he failed to eject from his capsule, yes you heard that right, until 1962 the Russian cosmonauts had to parachute out of their capsules to insure survival. None of this was revealed for decades. The joint Anglo-American Program would not send a man into orbit until Alan Shepard on December 4, 1960. By that time the Russians had sent four men into orbit.
No one was prepared when on August 21, 1959, President Stevenson was assassinated by two Puerto Rican Terrorists, from a group called the FALN, seeking Puerto Rican Independence. The President was walking up the Capitol steps to greet the newly sworn in Representative and Senators from Hawaii. The terrorists targeted the President because he had remarked when making a similar excursion earlier in the year to greet the Alaska delegation, that “we would soon see Hawaii, Baja and Puerto Rico in the Union.” J.P. witnessed the shooting along with about fifty other spectators. Forensics showed President Stevenson died three days later without regaining consciousness. The secret Service killed both terrorists on the spot. In reality, in 1959 there was no plan to immediately admit Baja or Puerto Rico. In Puerto Rico English fluency was approaching 80% at that time, but there was still lingering resentment against the English only policy TR had imposed more than 50 years earlier. Likely Puerto Rico would have been admitted in 1969 at the same time as Baja, but the assassination of the President and the bombings that continued into the early 1960’s, when the FALN was finally broken, delayed admission until 1982 when it was admitted with Greenland, which had barely met the then minimum 300,000 population.
The assassination resulted in the 22nd Amendment. It provided that when there was a vacancy in the office of Vice-President, the President could to appoint a replacement provided a majority of each House of Congress approved. It further provided that if the President was incapacitated, the Vice-President, at the direction of the President or with the written consent of the Speaker of the House of Representatives and President Pro Tempore of the Senate, could assume the duties of the President until the President communicates to the Congress that the incapacitation no longer exists. As the 21st Amendment, dealing with Congressional compensation had originally been proposed as part of the Bill of Rights passed in 1950, shortly after the 20th Amendment. Congress was worried that other old Amendments on Child Labor, the size of the House, Prohibition, etc. could suddenly become part of the Constitution, so the 22nd Amendment provided “That neither this Amendment, or past or future proposed Amendments to this Constitution not already ratified shall become part of this Constitution if they have not been ratified within seven years from submission for ratification.” The 22nd Amendment was ratified on September 1, 1961.
In December 1959 President Johnson asked J.P. to succeed his father at the ICC. J.P. rightly thought that LBJ was merely trying to take J.P. out of the 1960 Presidential race. Besides not wanting to run for President from the ICC, J.P. demurred because his father was still the President of the ICC-WB, and the Imperial Federation Envoy had assumed the role of Fist Secretary/Speaker. LBJ did manage to get one potential rival, when Dick Nixon, who had just finished his second term as California Governor accepted the appointment.
J.P. continued his emphasis on Civil Rights. He began working with the three King brothers, Martin, Alfred and James, who were advocating for “peaceful confrontation,” against discrimination. More on this later. In February 1960 J.P. introduced a bill to allow Washington D.C. to have its own elected City Government, and to retrocede the land back to Maryland, as had been done with Alexandria more than a century earlier. The bill did not pass in that session because Maryland and the District were concerned, they would have no tax base with so many Federal facilities in the city. In the next session the bill was passed with a formula for the United States to make equalizing payments to the State and City. It was signed into law in March 1962.
On April 4, 1960, Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. announced he was a candidate for President of the United States.
THE 1960 CAMPAIGN
Since the 1940s, primaries had become more important for both parties in picking a Presidential Nominee, but the party bosses still carried enormous weight. In this regard J.P. had a distinct advantage. JPK was still popular and was generous in providing campaign funding as well giving Republican candidates at all levels access to a network of volunteers and donors, so the younger Kennedy had a large measure of goodwill to draw on within the party. Plus, as John Kennedy later wrote “my father knew how to hold a grudge.” J.P. spent freely in the primaries on television, radio, print media, telephone calls and generally just getting his supporters to the polls. His primary opponents included Senators Dirksen of Illinois, Scott of Pennsylvania and Bush of Connecticut, as well as Governor Goldwater of Arizona. Three Governors ran as favorite sons, Romney of Michigan, Rockefeller of New York, and Lodge of Massachusetts. Kennedy went into the Omaha convention with a slight plurality of pledged delegates, but was still well short of a majority, and Goldwater was behind by only a handful of votes.
LBJ had no opposition for the nomination, so J.P. wanted to get the Republican nod on the first ballot to show GOP unity. He won the New Hampshire primary on March 8th, even though he hadn’t formally announced until April 4th, but from mid-April until the California primary in June J.P. was actually behind Goldwater. By the eve of the convention Bush, Lodge and Scott had dropped out and urged their delegates to vote for Kennedy. Also dropping were Scott who threw his support to Goldwater, and Romney who made no endorsement. Dirksen and J.P. entered the Senate together and were in lockstep on most every issue, but he still instructed his delegates to vote Goldwater. We know now from Dirksen’s private papers released in 1979, 10 years after his death, that he was irked at Kennedy because he found that he was not only trading appointments but offering the same appointment to multiple candidates. J.P. admitted this in his memoir saying, ”I knew I was in danger of losing to Barry, because I had to promise the Vice-Presidency three times and he was getting away with only two Vice-Presidents.” Rockefeller had still made no sign of endorsing either Kennedy or Goldwater when the Convention was gaveled open.
Governor Barry Goldwater was born in Arizona while it was still a territory. His family owned a Department Store in Phoenix. Goldwater flew transports for the Army Air Corps in the Pacific War and later became a bomber pilot for the AVF, flying 54 missions before returning to the United States. He maintained a Reserve Commission as an Air Force Colonel, and had been elected Governor of Arizona in 1954, and reelected in 1958. He and J.P. agreed on most issues, but if anything, Goldwater was in favor of an even stronger military and more direct confrontation of Russia. The convention could go either way, but if Rockefeller didn’t drop there would likely be a second ballot.
Kennedy surmised that without Rockefeller’s delegates he would probably be just behind Goldwater on the first ballot. So, it was that Nelson Rockefeller after his name was placed in nomination thanked the delegates for the honor, but withdrew with a “wholehearted” endorsement of Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. It turns out that even without the Rockefeller delegates J.P. would have led the first ballot, but there would have been a second ballot. J.P. gratefully accepted the nomination and promptly asked the convention to nominate Governor Rockefeller to be his running mate. There was a movement to make Goldwater the VP nominee, but he demurred.
When the Democrats nominated President Johnson two weeks later, he named Illinois Governor Raymond McKeough as his running mate. McKeough was 72, but he had succeeded Stevenson as Governor so “it was just good politics,” as LBJ later admitted. LBJ delighted in comparing his choice with the Republican ticket saying Democrats can be on a National ticket even if they have less than $10,000,000.
1960 should have been a Republican year. The economy was weak, with rising inflation and high taxes to support increased social spending, and a military the United States wasn’t really using effectively to combat seemingly endless conflicts in Asia. Even so J.P. had to be careful in criticizing the Democratic Administration, as it was barely a year since President Stevenson had been gunned down, and criticizing nonuse of the military would have been interpreted as warmongering.
Every time the Republicans criticized the economy LBJ would cite the net worth of his opponents – saying he was just a poor boy from the Texas Hill country, but he knew better than someone handed a $10,000,000 trust funded by his forbears. $10,000,000 was probably about right for each of the Republican candidates, but the amount seemed to increase every time LBJ made a speech. When the amount reached $100,000,000 Kennedy put out a commercial with voiceovers from LBJ and other Democrats giving the same argument with ever increasing amounts, and then had the announcer intone that it showed how much “inflation was increasing, but your wages aren’t matching Democratic spending.” LBJ had also benefited financially from his time in office, he was no longer the poor boy from the Texas Hill country.
It was a close race. The Republicans had taken the House and Senate in 1958, and by the end of election night it was clear they would hold the Senate by a 52-48 margin and increase their numbers in the House, the final total determined days later was 257 to 208. It would take ten days for the Presidential race to be called. There were several close races, but all but Illinois had been called by the Friday after Election Day. A week later it was finally called for the Democrats. That gave LBJ 284 electoral votes to Kennedy’s 281, and Kennedy in the end had about a quarter million vote margin in the popular vote. It has never been proven, but many believe Vice President Raymond McKeough got the Chicago Democratic machine in Cook County to deliver, and it took a week to produce the votes because of the Republicans had performed so well everywhere else. LBJ’s later quote on picking 72 year old McKeough that “it was just good politics,” takes on a duel meaning when you consider McKeough was a product of Chicago Machine.
J.P. achieved something neither he nor his father had done before – he lost an election. The Democrats did something they hadn’t done since the election of Martin Van Buren in 1836 – they won a third Presidential contest in a row.
Despite calls to contest the election, J.P. called to congratulate Johnson within an hour of the announcement. In his memoir J.P. wrote “I didn’t want to put the country through that. It did hurt in that had I delayed the admission of Alaska or Hawaii I would have prevailed. Besides, Lyndon was too good at that kind of thing to leave fingerprints, and I knew I would have another shot.” John Kennedy later commented that his brother in private was not so magnanimous, and that was when he learned from their father the benefits of holding a grudge.
ON TO 1964
In January 1961 the Democrats held the Presidency, but the Republicans held both Houses of Congress, and generally believed the Presidential election and a House seat had been stolen by the Chicago Democratic machine, in which the Vice-President was a member in good standing. Many cited the nickname of “Landslide Johnson,” which LBJ picked up after his 1948 primary for the Senate wherein a box of ballots was found just before LBJ’s opponent was to be announced the winner, and the votes in that box skewed heavily toward Johnson, giving him just enough to win.
J.P. wanted to run again, so he was careful not to do anything himself that could be deemed retribution. Senator Dirksen, one of J.P.’s primary opponents had no such qualms. Dirksen was the Senate Majority Leader, and in the same posthumously published papers where he criticized J.P. for offering multiple opponents the same posts to secure his nomination, he recorded that he was sure that Vice President McKeough had stolen the election. Dirksen was from Illinois, so he had experience with Chicago Democrats. He knew it would be a waste of time to try to prove anything, but he proceeded to do everything possible to frustrate the Administration’s agenda. In that regard he was aided by Speaker of the House Ford who had been an usher at J.P.’s wedding. Nominations were slow walked, and the President’s legislative agenda was almost at a standstill.
One of the only areas to see progress was the NACA budget, as that was an area where Republicans agreed with LBJ, and the more reticent Democrats went along to support their President. In July 1962 the first Gemini mission with two astronauts was launched. LBJ was deeply embarrassed when J.P. and Werner Von Braun held a press conference after the Gemini launch to say there was a viable plan in place to put Americans on the moon before the end of the decade. The President had not been invited to participate in the press conference, and although there technically was a plan to go to the moon, the Space Council had not been cleared to share that information. LBJ wanted to fire Von Braun, and remove Senator Kennedy from the Council, but saw that would be a public relations disaster losing him what little support he retained in Congress. LBJ, Jr., who retired from the House in 2005, after thirty years of service wrote “They made my dad eat shit, he could forgive Kennedy because he was trying to settle a score, but he could never forgive that fat fascist Von Braun who had gotten everything he had asked for. The Kraut bastard didn’t even give a heads-up as to what they were going to try to commit the country to.” In August 1962 the President issued a statement that he was asking for a supplemental appropriation to begin funding the moon shot to be called Project Zeus. LBJ went on to say that the new director of NACA, who would be duel hatted as the head of Project Zeus, would be Dr. Kurt Debus. Debus was Von Braun’s Deputy in the military’s rocket and satellite joint program. By promoting Von Braun’s Deputy over him LBJ had delivered some payback. In his next budget the Space Council funding was cut to near zero, ostensibly to help fund Zeus.
Cuts to military spending backfired when the Russians became more aggressive. In a single day they wiped out AVF bases in Manchuria, and on the Korean Peninsula. On January 5, 1963, Russian planes heavily damaged the USS Reuben James, a destroyer escort transiting the Sea of Japan, with the loss of 37 sailors including the ship’s Commanding Officer. The Russians claimed the attack was an error, in that they thought it was a Chinese ship spying on their bases near Vladivostok, but this was patently absurd. The State Department sent a formal protest but took no other action. The Imperial Federation sortied ships from the Royal Navy to harass Russian shipping in the Pacific, the Baltic, and the Black Sea. J.P. took to the Senate floor to thank our Federation Allies for their support, and to bemoan the Administration response as: “If you kill Americans be prepared for a strong letter to follow.” Things only looked worse when, on September 1, 1964, the Islamic Federation and Russia invaded Afghanistan from separate sides.
The Reuben Incident occurred just as the new Congress was being seated. The mid-terms saw substantial gains for the Republicans. They had increased their majorities in Congress and controlled over 60% of state legislative seats, which in turn gave them a leg up on reapportionment. This was due in large measure to inflation which was averaging 6.5% in November 1962. Inflation was at almost 9% by January 1964, and the USCB made its 5th interest rate hike in a row to put the interest it charged banks at 7.5%. This was done to bring down inflation, but it also slowed down industry, increased unemployment, and caused the bottom to fall out of the housing market.
On March 2, 1964, LBJ announced he was standing for reelection. Vice President McKeough announced he would not be a candidate. McKeough didn’t see the ticket as having much of a chance and was hoping retirement might get Republicans to drop the multiple investigations, they were running against him. It didn’t work, as in 1965 the former Vice-President was indicted and plead guilty to three counts of income tax invasion. The three year sentence was commuted to time served by President JPK, Jr. after McKeough had served eleven months.
J.P. himself announced he was a candidate on March 9th. That same day Senator Eugene McCarthy of Minnesota announced he was entering the Democratic primaries to oppose LBJ.
THE 1964 ELECTION
The Republican field was much smaller than 1960. Besides J.P., you had fellow Californian Dick Nixon who had been in New York at the ICC for most of the prior six years, plus sitting Governors Goldwater and Rockefeller who had each run in 1960. By 1964 both parties had transitioned to having the delegates chosen by primaries, with party leaders having a say only if conventions went to a second ballot. Republicans used a winner take all approach, meaning whoever got a plurality in a particular contest took all of the delegates, so long as they had at least 30% of the vote, whereas if no one got at least 30% the delegates were unpledged. Democrats gave each candidate delegates in proportion to how they performed in the primary, so that even someone getting as little as 10% of the vote would potentially get delegates. The only unpledged delegates would be the ones assigned to candidates who subsequently dropped out. It wasn’t until 1968, as a result of what happened in 1964, that the Democrats started using Super-Delegates.
Even though J.P. had not formally announced he was running until the eve of the New Hampshire Primary, as in 1960, his name was already on the New Hampshire primary ballot. The same applied to the other candidates for both parties. In 1964 a candidate announcing for the Presidency before the beginning of the election year was unheard of. In the Republican field J.P. finished first with 34% of the vote, Goldwater was second with 24%, followed by Nixon at 22% and Rockefeller at 20%. Had J.P. not run, Nixon almost assuredly would have gotten most of his votes and vice versa, as they were both in the GOP mainstream consisting of about half of the party nationwide. While Goldwater and Rockefeller occupied the right and left wings respectively. Even so, in the Republican contests that followed while Nixon and Kennedy won the bulk of primaries Goldwater and Rockefeller each won four primaries by pluralities, and in another three states (New Jersey, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania) no one cracked 30% of the vote, so their delegates were unpledged. Then came California.
It looked like J.P. was going to fall short in a bid for a first ballot nomination. He led in the delegate count, but Nixon and Goldwater weren’t far behind, and while there was no real path for Rockefeller, he could again potentially play Kingmaker. It came down to the June 9th California primary. J.P. was a California Senator, but Nixon had served two terms as Governor of California and was counting on a win to put him ahead of Kennedy. Nixon and Kennedy were friends from their days in the House, and in fact Nixon had been in J.P.’s wedding party. There were no real attack ads on either by the other, but Nixon at a debate in San Diego pointed out that unlike the other candidates on the stage, J.P. lacked executive experience. J.P. in the same debate concentrated on California issues like water rights, and trade with the Common Market of the Americas, and not so subtly suggested “Dick’s time in New York these past few years, put him a little of touch with our needs here in California.” J.P. also pulled out all the stops, fielding hundreds of volunteers, and blanketing the state with ads on television, radio, in print, and on billboards. Kennedy even went on Dutch Reagan’s Tonight show on the eve of the primary, and while he was talking to Dutch, lo and behold Barry Goldwater walks out, shakes J.P.’s hand, announces he is withdrawing and throwing his support to Kennedy, shakes Dutch’s hand and walks off. Dutch then commented his only regret with hosting his show was that he never made news. Of course, the “surprise” appearance of Goldwater had been negotiated in the days before the appearance, but it had the intended effect. Kennedy actually got 52% of the vote to 41% for Nixon. Goldwater, despite withdrawing, still got 4% to Rockefeller’s 3%.
Nixon didn’t wait until the Los Angeles convention to withdraw. Were they not from the same state, J.P. likely would have considered Nixon for the VP slot, but instead chose Goldwater. Nixon nominated J.P., and Rockefeller the VP candidate from 1960 seconded. They did a roll call vote where all states passed until JPK answered the roll call for Massachusetts casting the first votes for Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. and then continued until J.P. was just short of a majority when the states again passed until Maureen Kennedy cast California’s votes for her husband. By a call from the chair Kennedy and Goldwater were then declared the Party’s Nominees by acclamation.
LBJ had a somewhat tougher time then he expected. Even though he had over 75% of the vote in New Hampshire McCarthy sill picked up delegates there, and in every contest to follow. Also, while LBJ continued to have large wins the margins were reduced until California was only a 59% to 41% contest. Democratic Governors in South Carolina, Alabama, and Mississippi also ran as favorite sons and while LBJ got pluralities in each state he was denied majorities. Had not Governors Thurmond and Wallace been denied having their names put in nomination due to having already taken action to run as States Rights Party candidates, it is just possible LBJ would have been denied a first ballot re-nomination. The Chicago convention was a disaster. McCarthy made the Democrats do a full roll call vote, and only after LBJ had won did he give a lackluster endorsement. After Thurmond and Wallace were denied their seats, several Southern delegations tried to take away the credentials of black members of their delegations. This included James King, the youngest of the King brothers, who had become a Democrat to give the Democrats “a chance to prove they are not racists.” Even though all of the black delegates retained their seats the damage was done and had been broadcast on National Television. When LBJ asked the Convention to nominate ardent Civil Rights Proponent Hubert Humphrey for VP, almost 100 white delegates abstained from voting. Democratic inroads into the black vote were largely reversed.
Strom Thurmond did not run on the States Rights ticket, largely because the Miami Herald revealed he had fathered two little girls with his black housekeeper. The States Rights Party did nominate Governor George Wallace of Alabama for President, and he chose former Brigadier General Edwin Walker of Texas. Wallace was an ardent segregationist who had resisted all efforts to integrate in Alabama, while Walker was a veteran of the Pacific War who was forced to resign for questioning civilian control of the military and calling for segregation in the armed forces. They were on the ballot in just 16 states, but still had a significant impact on the election.
Inflation, other problems with the economy and the total failure to answer Russian and Islamic Confederation aggression would have likely made 1964 a Republican year, but the Democratic infighting combined with a disastrous convention made it a landslide. The topper was of course the single debate between J.P. and LBJ. 1964 was the first year there was a Presidential Debate. The States Rights and other smaller parties were not included. LBJ agreed only because, given the polls, he had nothing to lose. In the debate LBJ tried to point out Kennedy’s lack of Executive experience, but J.P. countered that while it was true, he had no experience in running an economy into the ground, or ignoring Americans being murdered by a hostile foreign power, he didn’t see that as a handicap. LBJ looked tired and drawn, while Kennedy, especially to those viewing on color television looked healthy, rested and came off as well informed without being glib or condescending.
The Republicans took 44 states in the Electoral College for a total of 498 votes to the Democrats 69 votes. The States Rights Party garnered not a single electoral vote, but due to their presence on the ballot, Republicans took many states that normally would have gone Democratic. That was the last election where the States Rights Party fielded anyone for office at any level. In the Senate the Republicans increased to 59 seats to 41, and in the House, they garnered a 289 to178 majority. J.P. had a mandate by any definition.
When LBJ saw J.P. on Inauguration Day in January 1965 he made a statement similar to what Buchanan said to Lincoln in 1861: “If you are half as happy to be here as I am to leave you are the second happiest man in this city today.”
1965
No matter how much the President-elect tried to differentiate himself from his father with variations on his name, by at various times being J. Kennedy, J.P., or J.P. Kennedy he was in fact called JPK, Jr. in the press and by the public at large, so he finally relented, and adopted the moniker himself. In his Inaugural Address the new President, made clear that Russia would have to be confronted head on “both in the peaceful competition of the space race, and if necessary, in a call to arms to defend self-determination and Freedom wherever it may be threatened.” He also indicated that the economy would take time to fix stating “interest rates will rise, but inflation will be beaten back. . . . proposed tax cuts will help protect the country from recession but make no mistake there will be short term pain now, so as to protect this great nation for our children and grandchildren.” Some criticized the address as more of a State of the Union Message, but JPK, Jr. rightly gambled that with his large majorities in Congress he had to immediately start spending his political capital, or risk losing it.
As expected the USCB continued to raise interest rates and got no push back from the Administration. The Russian War naturally changed the equation, but after the war ended the policies continued. In the third quarter of FY 1965 the rates topped off at 8.5 %, with unemployment topping 7%, but inflation was down to less than 5% and still dropping. The economy slowed but the Administration’s tax cuts passed, and GNP never turned negative. Even with the War, by the end of 1965 inflation and unemployment were down and the USCB had dropped interest rates to 8.25%, with a message that no new increases were contemplated.
In February 1965 Douglas MacArthur, Field Marshal of the Philippine Armed Forces died. MacArthur had actually been the Chief of Staff of the United States Army when in 1934 he was sent to command American Forces in the Pacific from the Philippines. When the Pacific War started, he was promoted to full General but given his total inability to get along with his counterparts in the Navy, Marines, Army Air Force or the Commonwealth when advances were made to the mainland FDR sidelined the General by having him keep his headquarters in Manila. MacArthur’s Deputy Lieutenant General George Marshal was named to oversee all United States Army Forces on the Mainland, with Major General Hap Arnold commanding Air Forces, and Major General Dwight Eisenhower commanding ground forces, all three were later promoted to full General.
MacArthur stayed in the Philippines, and even before independence was granted in 1946, he had accepted appointment as Field Marshal Commanding all Philippine Forces. Once the Philippines entered the Asian Treaty Organization (ASO), MacArthur took a leading role in expanding the organization, and from 1949 until his death was the Supreme Military Commander of the Alliance. JPK, Jr. took the opportunity of MacArthur’s death to attend the funeral and meet with representatives from the Alliance which, besides the Philippines, by the included Korea, Formosa, Indonesia, Thailand. Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, China, Tibet, Mongolia, and Japan. Of course, Russia was still occupying large parts of China, Mongolia and Indochina. It was announced shortly after the funeral that the ASO would conduct of national leaders In Singapore from 10 – 14 April 1965, to name a new military commander and discuss future strategy. The United States and Imperial Federation were invited to send representatives.
At 11:07 am local time on April 12, 1965, a Russian launched ICBM landed on off the west coast of Sentosa Island near Singapore. The missile had a nuclear warhead which failed to detonate. It was obvious that the Russians were attempting to wipe out the Heads of State of the ASO, along with President Kennedy, Secretary of State Nixon, ICC Representative Kissinger, and Imperial Federation Prime Minister Harold Holt. The Russians tried to claim the United States had mounted a false flag operation, but the recovered warhead was quickly established to have been of Russian design.
This resulted in all the nations attending including the United States and Imperial Federation declaring War on Russia. At the ICC a number of South American nations agreed to lend support to the war effort against Russia. Europe had largely disarmed since the German capitulation but offered bases and other support to the alliance. The Islamic Confederation, which had partnered with Russia in Afghanistan and become bogged down in the conflict, declared neutrality. South Africa and Rhodesia remained silent.
The United States was prepared for war, but while its forces had fought well in the Pacific War of the 1930s, aside from members of the military who had served with the AVF there was almost no real combat experience. Even so it appears the investment in submarines, fast surface ships, and aircraft carriers paid off for the Navy. Combined with Imperial Federation assets the seas were swept of Russian shipping by August 1, 1965. Air superiority in the Pacific and up to 100 miles from the coasts of Asia to the interior was established by September 15th, and air supremacy, meaning if the Russians tried to fly anything it would be shot down, in those areas by October 12th. All areas of Indochina, Manchuria, and Mongolia that had been occupied by Russia or its local surrogates were under complete ATO control by the end of 1965.
JPK, Jr. did not promise no first use of nuclear weapons, but in his address after the Declaration of War he made clear that if Russia “again deployed or attempted to deploy any weapons of mass destruction, be it chemical, biological or atomic then the United States will respond with immediate and overwhelming force with every weapon available.” He went on to say that any other party giving aid in any form to Russia would be considered “an enemy of the United States.”
At the start of the war the United States had hit all suspected Russian atomic facilities with bombers and ICBMs carrying conventional warheads. Once they had freed the occupied territory in Asia the Alliance debated whether to invade Russia proper in the New Year or see if Russia wanted to seek a settlement. They were surprised when, on Christmas Day 1965, the Russians attacked west into Finland, the Baltics, and Poland in what the Germans called a Blitzkrieg. It was a new War indeed.
John Kennedy at the NIS
In January 1966, John Kennedy was finally confirmed as Director of the NIA. He had been acting in that role since President Kennedy had fired the top leadership of the Intelligence agency when they had failed to detect the Russian intentions prior to the April ICBM attack. The Senate had held up that nomination citing concerns about nepotism, but yielded to the argument that a fully empowered director was needed when intelligence again failed to predict the Russian 1965 Christmas attacks. John Kennedy, not caring about nepotism charges, immediately installed his wife Jeane Jordan as the head of the clandestine service. She would later succeed John as Director.
They had met at the NIS, where Jeane was doing a tour at headquarters after serving in Russia under diplomatic cover. John was 10 years her senior, and Jeane was certainly not the glamourous type the younger Kennedy brother had previously been involved with, but they married in 1955, despite Jeane not being Catholic, and raised three daughters. When John Kennedy’s Health forced him to resign at the end of 1970, Jeane would succeed him as Director.
After John was confirmed, he concentrated on getting accurate intelligence in a timely manner. Now this may sound self-evident, but right or wrong John Kennedy largely ignored Congressional oversight, and besides dealing with MI6, the agency greatly expanded its assets, often dealing with unsavory contacts, and running operations in neutral countries without their knowledge to get needed intelligence. The NIS was able to ascertain that Kerensky and a handful of cronies were desperate and out of control. This explained both their attack on Singapore and the incursions in Europe. The Russian leadership reasoned they would likely meet the same fate as the Germans, or worse. Rather than being subjected to War crimes trials they decided to scare the Anglo-American Alliance into backing off or go down fighting. The NIS assessment, concurred in by MI6, was that the Russians would not surrender until the entire massive country was occupied unless the leadership was captured, killed or overthrown. For the rest of the Russian War the President had no reason to complain about intelligence failures.
John Kennedy’s other role not revealed until Trip’s book was to neutralize John E. Hoover, the NIB director. Hoover had been collecting information on politicians, diplomats and other notable citizens for over three decades. This included every President since Hoover, no relation, most major candidates, actors, reporters and Civil Rights Advocates, including two of the King brothers. John Kennedy used former NBI agents recruited to the NIS to write a detailed report on Hoover and his Deputy, who resided together. The report intimated a homosexual relationship between the two and also contained information indicating it was likely Hoover was receiving bribes to sabotage certain investigations into organized crime. John Kennedy’s papers reveal the actions he took were illegal, and the report was based more on innuendo and rumor then investigation. Even so it had the desired effect in that when he showed it to Hoover in February 1967 resignation followed within a week. The President named Mark Felt as the new NBI Director, and there after the NIS and NIB worked hand in hand.
1966-1968
Just before the Russian incursions into Europe in December 1965, the Congress passed a bill making Winston Churchill a United States citizen. The President had asked for the bill to honor Churchill who was thought to be near the end of his life. JPK, Jr. also wanted to firm up the Anglo-American Alliance. Unlike today where Imperial Parliamentary elections have the entire membership elected at the same time, prior to 1974 members were chosen at the same times as the parliaments of Australia, Canada, and the other constituent parts, so membership was in almost constant flux. In the 1960s coalitions changed often, and the Prime Minister’s office went back and forth between Lester “Mike’ Pearson of Ontario, and Harold Holt of Victoria four times. Pearson who was left of center, had been Ambassador to the United States and felt he knew America, but was wary of becoming too entangled in the Alliance, whereas Harold Holt of Victoria was right of center and extremely Pro-Alliance. In early January the President dispatched his father to make the presentation to Sir Winston, and both Pearson and Holt were asked to attend. Despite their earlier differences JPK, Sr. and Churchill had a very friendly meeting with only Churchill’s wife Clementine present. After the death of JPK, Sr. Clementine revealed that “Winston had some trouble speaking, but he managed to communicate his warm feelings to the elder President Kennedy, and said he was confident his American born mother was smiling on his turning down a Dukedom but accepting United States citizenship.” The formal presentation on January 24, 1966, went well and as JPK, Sr. emphasized that “the special relationship was not dependent on who held office in either Union.” Within two weeks Sir Winston had passed, but more unexpectedly was the fact that JPK, Sr. died just five days later on February 11th, 1966, after suffering a massive stroke on February 9th.
Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr. was laid to rest next to his wife after being given an Irish wake in accordance with the wishes he had made known to his sons. The late President had asked that there be no formal proceedings or lying in state besides a simple funeral and “a gathering where people should feel free to have a beer and tell bawdy stories.” Both of his sons eulogized Joe, Sr. at the standing room only funeral Mass at the Cathedral of the Holy Cross in Boston. Shortly after the funeral Congress passed appropriations to build two memorials the late President had lobbied for – the John Adams memorial to be added to the Lincoln and Jefferson memorials built under FDR, and a Pacific War Memorial. The JPK, Sr. memorial would not come until the 21st century.
It was agreed by the Alliance that Russia would have to be pushed back on at least two fronts. Despite Russian proclamations that they sought no further territorial gains as the areas already taken were historically part of the Russian Empire, all members of the European Community were now firmly in the Alliance’s camp. However, their armed forces in the prior decade had been reduced to almost laughable levels, as evidenced by the swiftness of the Russian advance. Still, Anglo-American might was able to quickly take over ports and bases in Europe and stop the Russians from going even further. Given United States industrial might the European manpower pool was quickly mobilized and equipped, with the applying to Europe of earlier legislation passed to assist Asia in resisting Russian aggression. It was decided to do a holding action in Asia and try to first take back occupied territory in Europe. Air superiority was established over almost all of Russia and the occupied nations by August 1966, air supremacy would not be achieved until almost a year later.
The Russians were unable to launch ICBM’s due to the taking out of all installations early in the War. So they could not make threats to the Alliance outside Europe. Satellite surveillance showing any possible rebuilding or relocation of ABC (atomic, biological, or chemical) research or delivery systems was met with immediate attack by bombers, ICBMs, or submarine launched missiles. This naturally put an end to the Russian space program. Interestingly enough the American program continued without interruption, and missile research likely enhanced the program allowing Air Force Colonel Virgil Grissom and Navy Captain Walter Schirria to step onto the moon before the end of the decade.
Even with air superiority it was 1967 before the Alliance was able to commence offensive ground operations in Europe. In the meantime, MI6 and the NIS fostered rebellions against Russia in Ukraine, Armenia, and the majority Islamic areas. The decision to foment anarchy in Islamic territories came to have long term consequences given the Islamic Confederation, but hindsight is 20/20, and that is for another lecture. By the end of the war the Russians lost all of the areas where the Allies had fomented rebellion. The tactic did draw Russian assets away from the occupied areas such that by the end of 1967 the Polish –Lithuanian Commonwealth, Latvia and part of Estonia had been freed. The Russians utterly destroyed the areas as they retreated.
Seeing what was happening with the Russian War, brought the Common Market of the Americas closer. The Americas Peso became the currency of the Americas in October 1966, and by the end of 1967 had been adopted by all members. In 1972, with the creation of the Euro and the formation of the ITT Trade Organization (or ITT-TO) the United States Dollar, Imperial Pound, Americas Peso and the Euro would have their values pegged to each other.
The 1966 mid-terms saw modest losses for the GOP. The Democrats won back some of the seats they really should not have ever lost in 1964. There was general support for the war effort, and major candidate voiced opposition to Civil Rights. The Republicans maintained healthy majorities in both Houses. One major surprise was the Republican loss of the California Governorship. Talk show host Dutch Reagan who had hosted JPK, Jr. on the eve of the California primary had been raised as a Democrat, but switched to the GOP in 1938, only to return to the Democrats when he announced for Governor. Most believe he switched only because he didn’t believe the Republicans would nominate him. We all know where Dutch eventually wound up.
In the new Congress what would become the 23rd Amendment in time for the 1968 election, prohibiting poll taxes and giving 18-year-olds the vote, was submitted for ratification. The President gave it his full support saying, “if you’re old enough to fight for our country you should have some say in picking who has the power to send you into those fights.” Legislation was also passed strengthening the Veteran Education Act and creating the Serviceman’s Bill of Rights to provide protections to mobilized members of the Armed Forces and their families, and to outline reemployment rights to returning Veterans.
On March 3, 1967 the United States was rocked by the assassination of Vernon King, the second son of Martin Luther King, Sr. Vernon was the most charismatic of the three brothers. Vernon with his older brother Martin, Jr., and younger brother James had blanketed the American South to fight segregation and discrimination, traveling on chartered buses from city to city with like-minded Americans dubbed Freedom Riders. Felt at the NBI, ordered that anytime a bus was driving between cities in different states, at least one Federal agent would ride along. The segregationist who committed the heinous act was shot by a spectator who grabbed his gun while trying to escape. Even though the act caught by television cameras on site there were still numerous conspiracy theories. The gunman’s act had the opposite effect of what he wanted to achieve. There was some rioting, but surprisingly this occurred in more northern cities than southern cities and came to almost a complete stop when the King family publicly called for calm. JPK, Jr., every other living former President, and the living losing Candidates for President from the two major parties all attended the funeral. It was presided over by Martin, Jr. who took over as the Pastor of their father’s Church. Martin channeled Vernon’s eloquence at the service, as did their brother James who went onto serve in Congress and eventually become the nation’s first Black Vice-President.
1968 saw the Allies on the move. Even before they had completed the recovery of the Baltic States and Finland, they started moving out of their bases in Asia to confront Russia east of the Urals. The Russians gave little resistance on the Eastern front, but the sheer vastness of the territory to be taken and occupied meant the Allies had to proceed slowly so as to keep their supply lines intact. West of the Urals the Russians evacuated the rest of Estonia and Finland in June 1968, and unlike the earlier retreats this time the infrastructure was spared. Shortly after the evacuation the Kerensky government sent out peace feelers suggesting the Islamic Confederation, or South Africa to sponsor negotiations. On July 4, 1968, the United States, Imperial Federation, European Community and ICC issued a joint declaration that absent a complete unconditional surrender by Russia hostilities would continue. The declaration did give a five-day ceasefire to allow the Russians time to respond. Kerensky tried to set conditions in its July 9th response. The Allied response was the resumption of offensive action. By August 30th the American led forces had reached the Urals, and Imperial Federation led forces were less than 150 kilometers from Moscow. On September 1st, just as the Alliance was beginning what it hoped would be the final offensive, Victor Grishin, the mayor of Moscow, announced that Kerensky had committed suicide and his cabinet was being held for trial. Grishin stated Moscow was now an open city, and he was asking for terms. The allies again announced a five-day ceasefire but demanded unconditional surrender. On September 3rd Grishin communicated that as “Acting Leader” of all the Russias he was ordering all Russian forces to lay down their arms and unconditionally surrender to the Allies. He also ordered the civilian populace to fully cooperate with the Allies. By the way it was known to the Allies by this time that Kerensky had been executed by his own bodyguards and had not committed suicide.
There was another problem in that Grishin was only a mayor, and as Secretary of State Nixon later said, “the title of Acting Leader was no more official than Secret Santa.” Still the Allies took the chance and accepted the unconditional surrender. The risk generally paid off, although some guerilla groups formed and remained active for almost two years, the vast majority of Russian forces were spent and quickly complied with Grishin’s instructions.
In the Presidential election of 1968, Kennedy and Goldwater were re-nominated by the Republicans without opposition. The Democrats nominated Washington Governor Henry Jackson, and South Dakota Senator George McGovern. The only real issue was how to deal with post-war Russia and Europe. The Democrats were calling for largescale demobilization and withdrawal of the bulk of our forces. Beyond saying an occupation of Russia would be necessary The President demurred saying we would decide how to proceed in conjunction with allies in the ICC. Republicans had 56 Senate seats, and 260 House seats. Kennedy actually increased his percentage of the popular vote, garnering 54%, but with no States Rights Party drawing from the Democrats the electoral vote was closer than 1964. Republicans took 39 states and 401 Electoral votes to the Democrats 11 states representing 166 electoral votes. JPK, Jr. retained his mandate.
RUSSIAN WAR AFTERMATH
JPK. Jr. was surprised when he found that even though it was the first time they could vote, less than 30% of 18-21 years olds actually voted, and of those that did vote, a solid 54% voted for the Democrats. Research later revealed this was because of the perception that the Democrats would demobilize, while Republicans would likely call on those same young people to fight again. The exit polls also showed that while Kennedy had majorities of men and woman, his majority among woman was more than three points less than the male vote. This was the beginning of what would later be called the gender gap.
Kennedy tried to sell keeping a large military by explaining weakness would invite future conflicts. In Russia there was no longer a national government, and in most areas of the country there was little or no government. Both the United States and Imperial Federation were tempted to have Russia occupied by its European and Asian neighbors, while the ICC supervised rebuilding some kind of democratic state. They resisted this temptation because of concerns of a repeat of what happened with Germany occupying Europe following the Red battles in the 1920s and 1930s, and the Russian incursions that followed when the allies essentially left much of Asia.
They decided that occupation by Anglo-Alliance troops in the short term could not be avoided. In the longer term these forces would be supplemented on a rotating basis by troops from other ICC members that did not border Russia. Even so, this foreclosed the possibility of any immediate largescale demobilization. By 1970 it was decided that all non-Russian areas would be granted independence. In 1971 Moldova was first and actually agreed to unite with Romania. They were quickly followed by Ukraine, Georgia, and Armenia. Finally, the majority Islamic republics of Uzbek, Turkmen, Tajik, Kirghiz, Kazakh, and Azerbaijan were given independence during throughout 1972. This of course later proved Kennedy’s warnings about disengagement prescient as these new majority Islamic nations later came under the influence of the Islamic Confederation – but that again is for another lecture.
The rest of Russia was administered in geographic sectors, and sub-sectors. West of the Urals there were two sectors consisting of European Russia and Belarus. East of the Urals there was East Asia sector, Central Asia Sector, and West Asia Sector. It was never intended for these divisions to become permanent. Despite an initial occupying force of over 500,000, large areas of the country had no allied presence. Organized crime gained footholds in the cities and there was outright banditry often combined with insurgencies in the country. The ICC plan announce on January 27, 1969, was to draw down the occupation starting in five years with completion in ten years. It was emphasized that this was aspirational only and was dependent on free elections combined with progress on paying reparations to repair the destruction Russia had inflicted on its neighbors. This was to be accomplished by actually developing Russia. In Siberia especially there were billions of dollars in mineral resources. The plan developed was fair and served to somewhat pacify the Russian populace. The ICC-WB would finance the development with private industry, and until the reparations were paid profits would go one-third each to Russia, Reparations and the developers. It would take more than twenty years, but reparations were paid without keeping Russia in a perpetual state of bankruptcy.
By 1972 it was clear that the Anglo-American Alliance could not immediately substantially reduce their forces. By that time there were commitments from the Americas, and African nations to provide close to 200,000 troops under ICC auspices. Kissinger at the ICC then suggested the alliance could get an additional 150,000 troops each from Asia and Europe if the European troops went to Asia and vice versa. This gave the allies approximately one million troops. These new troops were put in previously pacified areas and freed the Anglo-American forces to deploy to the “hot zones.” This worked such that January 1974 Anglo-American forces were reduced by 100,000, and the forces from other nations were similarly reduced. Each year a similar drawdown took place until 1979 when the last occupation forces were withdrawn. By that time the United States and Imperial Federation had negotiated a Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) with the functioning Russian Government to retain air, ground and naval bases in Russia with less than 25,000 personnel permanently stationed in the country.
JPK, JR. SECOND PRESIDENTIAL TERM
Although the aftermath of the Russian War took up much of the Administration’s time, JPK did have some major achievements on the Domestic front. The most ambitious program was the beginnings of National Healthcare System (NHS). Elder-Care had been passed under LBJ in the wake of the Stevenson assassination. The plan worked well, except costs were exploding. The President also looked to the Imperial Federation where universal care had existed since 1950, but he did not like the fact that many people had to wait so long for care that they actually died on a waiting list. The United States saw fairly large numbers of the well-off coming down from Canada to pay for treatment in the United States. Kennedy asked Congress to send him a plan that would provide universal or near universal basic and catastrophic coverage, but he insisted each state be free to develop their own plans, and they would receive two to one matching funds if the plans met with federal approval. Each plan also had to provide for keeping a viable private healthcare system. The 1970 Healthcare Act actually only passed because of Democratic votes in each House. Some Democrats were jealous of JPK, Jr. stealing one of their issues, and Republicans argued the President was carrying water for the Democrats. The First Lady lobbying for the provision to provide health care for pre-school children in households below the poverty line, brought in enough votes to insure strong bipartisan majorities. Per the terms of the Act the programs were reviewed in 1980, this was later extended to 1983. It served as the basis for the 1982 Act which provided for numerous provisions that had worked in the states including tort reform, insurance portability across state lines, and high-risk pools for pre-existing conditions. It didn’t happen under Kennedy, but he planted the seed.
1969 also saw a 51st star added to the flag. JPK, Jr. emulated Stevenson and welcomed the new Baja Congressional Delegation on the Capitol steps. He also spoke of Greenland and Puerto Rico joining the Union as well. Of course, this would not occur until 1982.
In early 1970 the president’s brother John resigned as NIS Director due to ill health. His wife Jeane Jordan-Kennedy succeeded him. Jeane was asked to stay on by President Goldwater, but she wanted to spend what time John had left with Him and their daughters. Jeane was replaced by William Casey, the second “Wild Bill” to head the Service, whose exploits in running covert operations against the Islamic Confederation became legendary, even if their legality was questionable at best. John Kennedy passed on November 1, 1973, having essentially completed his seminal work on the Presidencies of his brother and father, which his nephew JPK III edited and released in 1980.
With the end of the War in Russia the Imperial Federation and the Greater Commonwealth finally took action to support the indigenous insurgencies in Rhodesia and South Africa. The United States lent support through the ICC, but the only troops employed were from other Commonwealth members, with other African, Australian and New Zealand Regiments in the bulk of the force. Years of embargos, and isolation weakened the resolve of the white minority, and many of them were already calling for throwing out Apartheid, but there had still been no meaningful reforms. The first troops landed on May 1, 1969, and by July 18th the Rhodesia had been renamed Zimbabwe, and along with South Africa applied for readmission to the Greater Commonwealth. Both nations were granted membership, after guaranteeing universal suffrage, with guarantees that with the exception of certain high ranking officials no actions would be taken against the white minority. Imperial Federation officials were worried that there would be reprisals against the white population. Commonwealth forces stayed in place for a three year period to ensure the new governments were functioning. There were reprisals in Zimbabwe and a lesser number in South Africa, but by 1971 there was an uneasy peace between the various tribes and ethnicities. Before he left office in 1973, JPK, Jr. hosted a State Dinner for South African President Nelson Mandela.
With no date on the horizon drawdown in forces occupying Russia, many Americans were concerned. The 1970 mid-terms saw the Republicans suffer losses in both House. They retained bare majorities with a 52 – 50 margin in the Senate and 238 -233 in the House, with the state legislatures and Governorships also being closely divided. Even though they retained their majorities the GOP had fallen a long way since the 1964 elections.
In 1972 the sub-Saharan nations of Africa took a page from the Common Market of the Americas and formed the African Free Trade Organization. The ICC-WB was able to loan substantial sums for infrastructure and other projects conditioned on maintaining democratic institutions, the nations of Northern Africa looked to the European Community. Lebanon, Israel, Palestine, Jordan, Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco applied en mass to join the Community. These Moslem, Jewish and Christian populations saw the Islamic Confederation making inroads in Afghanistan, the Arabian Peninsula and the former Islamic majority Russian territories. They were afraid there would be a caliphate or restoration of the Ottoman Empire. The Europeans deferred, but they did agree to a free trade agreement with what became known as the Mediterranean Group, and as we know this was the first step in what would eventually be the Euro-Mediterranean Union. This of course came to fruition years after JPK, Jr. left office, but is mentioned because as with so many other initiatives the beginnings came during his Presidency.
Even with greatly reduced majorities Kennedy still refused to make substantial military cuts. One area where he made grudging cuts was the space program. Fellow Republicans argued that having successfully landed on the Moon meant “mission Accomplished.” When the last Zeus crew to return visited the White House with the other living astronauts in December 1972 the President predicted it would be a decade before man again set foot on the Moon. Of course, we know it took almost a quarter of a century.
The 1972 election had Vice President Goldwater with Ohio Governor Jim Rhodes running against Democratic Senators John Connolly of Texas and George McGovern of South Dakota. The economy seemed strong, but everyone predicted a nail biter. JPK strongly endorsed the Republican ticket but was much less energetic than his father was in campaigning for his successor. Goldwater pulled it out, but it was extremely close. To this day there is a dispute as to who had the larger popular vote, as in many states where the race wasn’t close, they did not count absentee ballots. The final electoral count gave the Republicans 290 Electoral Votes to the Democrats 285. The Senate remained 52 to 50 Republican with four seats having been traded from one party to the other, and the House was divided for the Republicans with only a three vote majority.
JPK, Jr. and the First Lady were looking forward to retirement, but it wouldn’t come quite yet.
JPK, JR. POST PRESIDENCY
In his Post-Presidency JPK, Jr. tried to remain above politics. He did advise Goldwater behind the scenes but lamented in his memoir that “Barry seldom took my advice, but I understood because in many ways he had it tougher than I did.” What Kennedy was referring to was the fact that the country grew restive with the slow drawdown in the military, and the 1974-75 recession made things only worse for Republicans. They lost both Houses of Congress in the midterms, and for the first time since the Panic the Democrats took the majority of Governorships. The Democrats then decided to give Goldwater a little payback for LBJ’s last term and passed almost no legislation, while slow-walking appointments and investigating the Administration from top to bottom. Most of what did pass was vetoed by Goldwater. In the election the freshman Democratic LBJ, Jr. emphasized that “if he survived a second term, the President would be the oldest man to hold the office, and of course poor William Henry Harrison died after only a month.” Of course, no one mentioned that Dutch Reagan was only three years younger, and in fact was the oldest to hold the office when he finished his second term in 1985; but Goldwater, especially in the debates, seemed tired and worn out, while Reagan was cheerful, and energetic. Kennedy wrote that Goldwater underestimated Reagan, and “I told him Reagan’s not stupid, and people love it when he tells stories about the boy finding horseshit, and getting excited because he thinks he’s getting a pony.”
The former President and First Lady did enjoy being able to attend almost every major event of the Olympic Games that were held in Los Angeles. Just prior to those Games JPK, Jr. had completed his role as Chairman of the United States Bicentennial Commission which saw celebrations in all the states and territories. Maureen Kennedy by this time had already greatly expanded the Marguerite Foundation, from advocating for child health to all facets of childcare and wellbeing including, nutrition, clean drinking water, early learning programs, and foster care reform.
Aside from attending conventions, JPK, Jr. stayed out of politics until his granddaughter Rose, one of the Navy’s first female fighter pilots ran for a House seat in representing Fairfax. We all know how that turned out. The former President took no position on the second Constitutional Convention in 1993. In 1989 JPK, Jr. and Maureen joined with the Reagans to raise money for relief following the 1989 San Francisco – Oakland earthquake. All four were Californians by choice and worked together to raise almost $52,000,000 for the cause. Shortly after that effort Dutch Reagan started his long goodbye, announcing he was suffering from Alzheimer’s.
Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. passed away after a short illness on July 19, 1994, he had just turned 79. Maureen announced he had wanted something simple like his father, but then said “we’re going to ignore that. This was a great man, who was President of the United States.” He received a state funeral with full military honors, after lying in state in the Capitol Rotunda. Although the Ceremony was at Arlington, Kennedy was actually buried next to Marguerite after a much smaller private service.
Maureen returned to acting for a television movie, Mothers Know Best or Else, again teaming with fellow First Lady Jane Wyman in 1992 where they played matriarchs that were longtime foes. When their children announce they are engaged the woman work together to turn the couple against each other, only to work together again to reunite the kids when the mothers see how miserable they made their progeny. Both women agreed the film was corny, but it was quite successful. A sequel, Grandmothers Know Best or Else, was planned, but never made due to Maureen dropping out after her husband’s death. Maureen remained in generally good health until she passed peacefully on October 11, 2015. She was buried with her late husband and daughter.
For the final portion of this presentation, Dr. Joseph P. Kennedy III has agreed to answer some of the questions that you had previously submitted. Just take a break in place while the old timer makes his way to the podium – you know he’s twelve years older than me.
 

colonel

Donor
CONCLUSION

JK:
Thank you so much Jim. I confess I did nod off for a second, but don’t mind at all taking some questions before you begin what I’m sure will be one of your exciting lectures.

Now I’m only going to answer a handful of questions. If you don’t hear your question don’t think I didn’t see it. It could be repetitive of another question, it could be something I don’t have an answer to, it could be something I cover in my forthcoming book on John E. Hoover and the NBI, or most likely I just thought it was a stupid question. Don’t let that bother you I only answered one in ten of your professor’s questions when he was a student, and somehow, he got a Doctorate.

#1: What is your favorite memory of your grandfather? Your dad as well?

JK:
Well, when I was born my grandfather was near the end of his Presidency, so I just saw him as grandpa. True a very, very rich grandpa, but grandpa none the less. My favorite memory is the summer of 1961, when we he took me to every single Red Sox game, home and away, until Ted Williams broke Babe Ruth’s Home Run record. My grandfather always seemed so much happier than my dad. Mom said Dad became much more serious after my sister died, but he still tried to be a good dad. I recall in 1963 when I was in Scouts, he took time to accompany my Scout Troop to Philmont Ranch in New Mexico. He had already run for President, everyone knew he would run again, but he went without any press release either before or after the trip.

#2: Do you have any comment on rumors of multiple extra-marital affairs by your grandfather, father and uncle?

JK:
I took this question because I believe that history demands honesty. It is generally known that my grandfather was not always faithful to my grandmother. I don’t why he was unfaithful, but it evidently preceded my grandma’s illness from Kansas Flu. He did father a child with another woman, but as the late mother of that child and the child wish to remain anonymous, I will not comment further except to say both my father and Uncle Jack acknowledged their sibling and formed a cordial relationship.

As to my dad I don’t believe he ever had an extra marital affair. I can say that I looked into rumors of various assignations but could not find any corroborating evidence. Indeed, I found positive evidence refuting most of the allegations.

As for Uncle Jack, I never looked into the allegations about his being unfaithful and have no intention of ever looking into them. I do know my Aunt Jeane thought him a good husband, and my cousins adored their father who was taken too soon.

#3: Did you ever considering running for political office? How come, other than Rose, we hear very little about your children and grandchildren? Is there a Joseph P. Kennedy IV?

JK:
I did consider running for office at one point. It only lasted until my dad stopped laughing. You don’t hear about my Kennedy cousins, my son and other daughter, or grandchildren because they are private people. I will acknowledge that there is a Joseph P. Kennedy IV, who hated that name, but still named his oldest Joseph P. Kennedy V.

#4: Did you serve in the military? If so, did you see combat? Did you form any friendships that lasted, or did your status prevent that?

JK:
This of course was a planted question. Yes, I did serve. Like my dad I left Harvard early to take flight training in 1967. I trained on flying helicopters. My flight instructor was then Lieutenant John S. McCain III, who had already earned a reputation in the war with daring air-sea rescues. John was the son and grandson of Admirals, and we bonded over being disappointed in not being able to stack up against our forebears. John told me he was the fifth of five children and while his parents loved his four sisters they continued until they had the “Namesake.” John was the class goat at Annapolis, but he later became not just an Admiral, but the Chief of the Joint Services Board. I point your attention to this excerpt from John’s book You Too Can Run the United States Military If You Can Only Keep Your Mouth Shut, describing our first meeting:

McCain: Ensign Kennedy, are you related to the President?
Kennedy: Yes Sir, he is my father.
McCain: So, you’re the former President’s grandson?
Kennedy: Unless my grandmother was a liar, yes.
McCain: No one likes a smartass Kennedy. Your name means nothing here. My grandfather was a Rear Admiral, and my father is a Vice Admiral, so your contacts mean nothing to me.
Kennedy: I agree Sir. My Godfather is in the Navy, and he told me almost the exact same thing.
McCain: Who might that be?
Kennedy: I call him Uncle Butch, but you probably know him as Admiral O’Hare, the CNO. I’m marrying his youngest daughter after flight school. Do you want to come to the wedding?


That isn’t exactly how I remembered the exchange, but it was close enough. John did come to the wedding and surprised the hell out his parents who were also guests. When John told my dad and Uncle Butch the story, dad was a little peeved, but Butch loved it. John was my friend until the day he died.

I did deploy to the Pacific on the namesake of my dad’s ship USS Enterprise CVN-60 but saw no real action as the war was far inland by that time. After the war I found I enjoyed doing helicopter rescue work and transferred to the Coast Guard Reserve. I did deploy to the Mediterranean during the conflict with the Islamic Confederation and retired as a Captain in 2000.

#5: What can you tell us about your mother’s side of your family? Is it true that you played her son in her last movie?

JK:
Mom’s family was a gregarious bunch. Stereotypical Irish. My grandpa Charles and Grandma Marguerite remained in Dublin where they owned a Pub, and the majority interest in a football club. I did not see them as often as I would have liked but that is where I get my love of soccer and Guinness. I did see my aunts and uncles often as they emigrated to America and, except for Aunt Peg who became a nun, they had varying degrees of success in the entertainment industry. I did not play my mom’s son in her last movie – I was too old at that time. I actually mentioned to mom that she and Jane Wyman were a little too old to be playing mothers of a couple of 25 year olds, but she responded “yes, but people love us, and are too polite to say anything.”

#6 Did you really write your uncle’s last book on the Kennedy Presidencies?

JK:
The book was all Uncle Jack, and by the way family called him Jack and not John. I did some minor editing only. He asked me to do it because I was then working toward my Doctorate, and he knew of my intention to become an academic. The only reason for the delay was Jack’s request that at least two Presidential cycles pass before publication.

#7 Is your daughter Rose married to Dick Nixon’s son? Why aren’t you more active in her campaign?

JK:
What do you live under a rock? No, my daughter is not married to Dick Nixon’s son, she is married to Ambassador Richard J. Nixon. Ritchie, he hates when I call him that, is a grandson of the late Secretary of State Richard M. Nixon, and son of my childhood friend and sometimes arch enemy Joseph R. Nixon, former Attorney General and law professor emeritus at this institution.

I am not more active in my daughter’s campaign for the Vice-Presidency because I sincerely want her to win.

#8 What do you view as your father’s greatest political regret? Same question as to your grandfather.

JK:
Well, my dad always regretted the gutting of the space program. He did get the International Spaceport built during his Administration, and hoped an International effort could pick up where the United States left off, but we still didn’t return to the Moon before he died.
My grandad is a tougher call, because he never wrote a memoir, and gave few interviews. I would have to say he was most disappointed in my dad losing in 1960, in private he always said the election was stolen.

Thank you for your kind attention. Jim they’re all yours. End JK.

Thank you, Dr. Kennedy. It was from you that I picked up my rambling disjointed style. Seriously, your insights are always appreciated, and I truly envy how you can entertain and educate at the same time.
Next year’s lecture topic has not been finalized. Suggestions may be submitted up until September1st. It should be something with major impact from the late twentieth century. My personal choice is President Dutch Reagan a Democrat turned Republican, turned Democrat; sportscaster turned talk show host, turned politician. The second President to be married to a movie star (and unlike Maureen FitzSimons, Jane Wyman kept her maiden name and kept working as an actress throughout her husband’s career). I would encourage you all to read my book The President, The Prime Minister, and The Pope, a history of the peace, prosperity, and problems brought on by Dutch Reagan, Peggy Thatcher, and Pope Paul VII. Even if you do not agree please buy the book as I desperately need the royalties. Good day, and as my hero TR would say “Bully.”
 
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