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Robert F. Kennedy 1968 presidential campaign

The Robert F. Kennedy presidential campaign began on March 16, 1968, when Robert Francis Kennedy, a United States Senator from New York, mounted an unlikely challenge to incumbent Democratic United States President Lyndon B. Johnson. Following an upset in the New Hampshire primary, Johnson announced on March 31 that he would not seek re-election. Kennedy still faced two rival candidates for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination: the leading challenger United States Senator Eugene McCarthy and Vice President Hubert Humphrey. Humphrey had entered the race after Johnson's withdrawal, but Kennedy and McCarthy remained the main challengers to the policies of the Johnson administration. During the spring of 1968, Kennedy led a leading campaign in presidential primary elections throughout the United States. Kennedy's campaign was especially active in Indiana, Nebraska, Oregon, South Dakota, California, and Washington, D.C. After declaring victory in the California primary on June 4, 1968, Kennedy was assassinated at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. He died on June 6, 1968 at Good Samaritan Hospital. Had Kennedy been elected president, he would have been the first brother of a former U.S. president (John F. Kennedy) to win the presidency himself.

Robert F. Kennedy for President 1968
Campaign1968 United States presidential election (Democratic primaries)
CandidateRobert F. Kennedy
U.S. Senator from New York
(1965–1968)
AffiliationDemocratic Party
StatusAnnounced: March 16, 1968
Assassinated: June 6, 1968
Key peopleJoseph Gargan, chairman[1]

Background edit

 
Campaign poster

When President John F. Kennedy was assassinated on November 22, 1963; Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson succeeded him with tremendous national popularity amid a wave of mourning and sympathy. Robert F. Kennedy remained in the cabinet (as United States attorney general) for several months amid what Johnson staffers began to refer to as "the Bobby problem": despite the personal hatred between the two, Democratic voters overwhelmingly favored Kennedy as Johnson's running mate in the 1964 election.[2] Kennedy began to plan for a nationwide campaign,[3] and in the informal New Hampshire vice-presidential primary, Kennedy defeated Hubert H. Humphrey in a landslide.[4] In July 1964, Johnson issued an official statement ruling out any cabinet member for the vice presidency.[5] In search of a way out of the dilemma, Kennedy asked speechwriter Milton Gwirtzman to write a memo comparing two offices: 1) governor of Massachusetts and 2) U.S. senator from New York, and "which would be a better place from which to make a run for the presidency in future years?"[6] The Massachusetts governorship offered one important advantage: isolation from President Johnson. However, the state was hobbled by debt and an unruly legislature.[7] Gwirtzman informed Kennedy that "you are going to receive invitations to attend dedications and speak around the country and abroad and to undertake other activities in connection with President Kennedy"...and that "it would seem easier to do this as a U.S. senator based in Washington, D.C. than as a governor based in Boston."[8]

In August, Kennedy made up his mind to run for the United States Senate from New York; defeating Republican incumbent Kenneth Keating who attempted to portray Kennedy as an arrogant "carpetbagger" from Massachusetts.[9][10] His opponents accused Kennedy of merely using the state as a convenient launching‐pad for the presidency.[11][12] In an interview with PBS, political journalist Midge Decter stated that "nobody, for one minute, expected that he was going into the Senate to stay there. It was understood that it was the next move on the way to reclaiming what was rightfully the Kennedys, namely, the White House."[13]

Announcement edit

 
Kennedy at a press conference in the Netherlands, c. February 1962

Kennedy was a late entry in making a campaign announcement for the primary race in the Democratic Party's presidential nomination in 1968. His political advisors had been pressuring him to make a decision, fearing Kennedy was running out of time to announce his candidacy.[14] Although Kennedy and his advisors knew it would not be easy to beat the incumbent president, Lyndon B. Johnson,[15] Kennedy had not ruled out entering the race. His younger brother Ted Kennedy was the leading voice against a bid for the presidency. He felt that his brother ought to wait until 1972, after Johnson’s tenure was finished. If RFK ran in 1968 and lost in the primaries to a sitting president, Ted felt that it would destroy his brother's chances later.[16] U.S. Senator Eugene McCarthy of Minnesota had announced his intention to run against Johnson for the Democratic nomination on November 30, 1967. Following McCarthy's announcement, Kennedy remarked to U.S. Senator George McGovern of South Dakota that he was, "worried about [McGovern] and other people making early commitments to [McCarthy]."[17] At a breakfast with reporters at the National Press Club on January 30, 1968, Kennedy once again indicated that he had no plans to run, but a few weeks later he had changed his mind about entering the race.[18]

In early February 1968, after the Tet Offensive in Vietnam, Kennedy received an anguished letter from writer Pete Hamill, noting that poor people in the Watts area of Los Angeles had hung pictures of Kennedy's brother, President John F. Kennedy, in their homes. Hamill's letter reminded Robert Kennedy that he had an "obligation of staying true to whatever it was that put those pictures on those walls."[19] There were other factors that influenced Kennedy's decision to enter the presidential primary race. On February 29, 1968, the Kerner Commission issued a report on the racial unrest that had affected American cities during the previous summer. The Kerner Commission blamed "white racism" for the violence, but its findings were largely dismissed by the Johnson administration.[19] Concerned about President Johnson's policies and actions, Kennedy asked his advisor, historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr.: "How can we possibly survive five more years of Lyndon Johnson?"[15] Disagreement amongst Kennedy's friends, political advisors, and family members further complicated his decision to launch a primary challenge against the incumbent Johnson. Kennedy's wife Ethel supported the idea, but his brother Ted had been opposed to the candidacy. Ted did lend his support once Kennedy entered the race.[15][20]

By late February or early March 1968, Kennedy had finally made the decision to enter the race for president.[17] On March 10, Kennedy traveled to Delano, California, to meet with civil rights activist César Chávez, at the end of a 25-day hunger strike.[21] En route to California, Kennedy told his aide, Peter Edelman, that he had decided to run and had to "figure out how to get McCarthy out of it."[17] The weekend before the New Hampshire primary, Kennedy told several aides that he would run if he could persuade McCarthy to withdraw from the presidential race.[22] Kennedy agreed to McCarthy's request to delay an announcement of his intentions until after the New Hampshire primary.[17] On March 12, when Johnson won an astonishingly narrow victory in the New Hampshire primary against McCarthy, who polled 42 percent of the vote, Kennedy knew it would be unlikely that the Minnesota senator would agree to withdraw. He moved forward with his plans to announce his candidacy.[23]

On March 16, Kennedy declared, "I am today announcing my candidacy for the presidency of the United States. I do not run for the presidency merely to oppose any man, but to propose new policies. I run because I am convinced that this country is on a perilous course and because I have such strong feelings about what must be done, and I feel that I'm obliged to do all I can."[24] Kennedy made this announcement from the same spot in the Caucus Room of the Russell Senate Office Building where John F. Kennedy had announced his presidential candidacy in January 1960.[25][26] McCarthy supporters angrily denounced Kennedy as an opportunist.[27] With Kennedy joining the race, liberal Democrats thought that votes among supporters of the anti-war movement would now be split between McCarthy and Kennedy.[17]

On March 17, Kennedy made his first campaign appearances by marching in the St. Patrick's Day Parades in Boston and New York City.[28][29] The following day, he delivered his first campaign speech at Kansas State University, where he had previously agreed to give a lecture honoring former Kansas governor and Republican Alfred Landon.[17] At Kansas State, Kennedy drew a "record-setting crowd of 14,500 students" for his Landon Lecture. In his speech, Kennedy apologized for early mistakes and attacked President Johnson's Vietnam policy saying, "I was involved in many of the early decisions on Vietnam, decisions which helped set us on our present path."[17] He further acknowledged that "past error is not excuse for its own perpetration."[17] Later that day at the University of Kansas, Kennedy spoke to an audience of 19,000—one of the largest in the university's history. During that speech he said, "I don't think that we have to shoot each other, to beat each other, to curse each other and criticize each other, I think that we can do better in this country. And that is why I run for President of the United States."[17][30] From Kansas, Kennedy went on to campaign in the Democratic primaries in Indiana, Washington, D.C., Nebraska, Oregon, South Dakota, and California.[17]

On March 31, President Johnson stunned the nation by dropping out of the presidential race. He withdrew from the election during a televised speech, where he also announced a partial halt to the bombing of Vietnam and proposed peace negotiations with the North Vietnamese.[31] Vice President Hubert Humphrey, long a champion of labor unions and civil rights, entered the race on April 27.[32][33] Although he was a write-in candidate in some of the contests, Humphrey had announced his candidacy too late to be a formal candidate in most of the primaries. Despite late entry into the primary race, Humphrey had the support of the president and many Democratic insiders, which gave him a better chance at gaining convention delegates in the non-primary states.[34][35] In contrast, Kennedy, like his brother before him, had planned to win the nomination through popular support in the primaries. Because Democratic party leaders would influence delegate selection and convention votes, Kennedy's strategy was to influence the decision-makers with crucial wins in the primary elections. This strategy had worked for John F. Kennedy in 1960, when he defeated Humphrey in the Wisconsin and West Virginia primaries.[17]

Policy positions edit

Kennedy ran on a platform of racial equality, economic justice, non-aggression in foreign policy, decentralization of power, and social improvement.[36][37][38][39] A crucial element of his campaign was youth engagement. "You are the people," Kennedy said, "who have the least ties to the present and the greatest stake in the future."[40]

According to Schlesinger, Kennedy's presidential campaign generated "wild enthusiasm" as well as deep anger.[41] He visited numerous small towns and made himself available to the masses by participating in long motorcades and street-corner stump speeches, often in inner cities.[42] Kennedy's candidacy faced opposition from Southern Democrats, leaders of organized labor, and the business community, where he was viewed as a fiscal liability.[43][44] At one of his university speeches (Indiana University Medical School), he was asked, "Where are we going to get the money to pay for all these new programs you're proposing?" He replied to the medical students, about to enter lucrative careers, "From you."[45]

Vietnam War edit

Kennedy did not support an immediate withdrawal of U.S. military personnel from Vietnam or an immediate end to the war. He sought to end the conflict by strengthening the South Vietnamese military and reducing corruption within the South Vietnamese government. He supported a peace settlement between North and South Vietnam.[46]

Job opportunities and welfare reform edit

Kennedy argued that increased government cooperation with private enterprise would reduce housing and employment woes in the United States.[46] He also argued that the focus of welfare spending should be shifted more towards improving credit and income for farmers.[46]

Law and order edit

In 1968, Kennedy expressed his strong willingness to support a bill that was under consideration for the abolition of the death penalty.[47][better source needed] He argued that rising crime rates could be countered with more job and educational opportunities.[46]

Gun control edit

Kennedy supported laws that would reduce casual firearm purchases.[48] He said he believed in keeping firearms away from "people who have no business" with them—specifying criminals, individuals with mental health issues, and minors as classes of persons who should be prevented from purchasing firearms.[49][50]

Tax reform edit

Kennedy argued for legislation, which would reform flagrant tax loopholes.[46]

Campaign edit

 
1968 Democratic primaries results:
     Robert F. Kennedy
     Hubert H. Humphrey
     Lyndon B. Johnson
     Eugene McCarthy
     George Smathers
     Stephen M. Young

Opinion polling edit

A Gallup poll conducted in the fall of 1965 showed 72% of respondents believed RFK wanted to become the president, and 40% of independents and 56% of Democrats stated their support for a possible bid.[51] Harris and Gallup polls released in August 1966 showed RFK being favored over President Johnson for the nomination by 2% among Democrats and 14% by independents.[52] A late March Gallup poll released shortly before RFK's entry into the primary showed him leading President Johnson by three points at 44% to 41%.[53] A poll released in the early part of April featured Kennedy with a 26-point lead over McCarthy in the Indiana primary, at 46% to 19%.[54] Another April poll in Indiana, the Oliver Quayle survey, showed Kennedy with a three-to-one lead over McCarthy and the state's governor Roger D. Branigin; Schmitt noted the poll featured a large portion of respondents refuting the label that RFK was not trustworthy along with being "too tough and ruthless."[55] An April 28 Gallup poll showed Kennedy at 28% support by Democratic voters, Humphrey behind by three points and McCarthy ahead by five.[56] A May 26 Associated Press (AP) poll showed RFK behind Humphrey among Pennsylvania national convention delegates, 1 to 27.[57] A June 2 Gallup poll showed Kennedy at 19% support among Democratic county chairmen, Humphrey at 67% and McCarthy at 6%.[58] A June 3 poll showed Kennedy leading McCarthy by nine points in the California primary, at 39% to 30%.[59]

Primaries edit

April: Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and Massachusetts edit

After President Johnson's withdrawal, the Wisconsin primary on April 2 was effectively uncontested. Senator Eugene McCarthy won 56–35%; Kennedy received 6 percent as a write-in candidate. Kennedy was ineligible for the ballot because he entered the race following the filing deadline.[60] McCarthy easily won the uncontested Pennsylvania primary on April 23 and the Massachusetts primary on April 30. Vice President Hubert Humphrey announced his candidacy on April 27,[61] and some analysts viewed Humphrey's unexpectedly strong showing in the Massachusetts primary (44,156 write-in votes, or 18 percent of the total) as a clear victory over Kennedy, a Brookline, Massachusetts native, who polled a meager 28 percent write-in vote.[62][63]

May 7: Indiana edit

 
Campaign bumper sticker

On March 27, 1968, Kennedy announced his intention to run against McCarthy in the Indiana primary. His aides told him that a race in Indiana would be an extremely tight race and advised him against it.[64] Despite the concerns of his advisors, Kennedy traveled to Indianapolis the following day and filed to run in the Indiana primary. At the Indiana Statehouse, Kennedy told a cheering crowd that the state was important to his campaign: "If we can win in Indiana, we can win in every other state, and win when we go to the convention in August."[65]

On April 4, 1968, Kennedy made his first campaign stop in Indiana at the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, followed by a speech at Ball State University in Muncie. In his speech at Ball State, Kennedy suggested that the 1968 election would "determine the direction that the United States is going to move" and that the American people should "examine everything. Not take anything for granted."[66] In addition, Kennedy enumerated his concerns about poverty and hunger, lawlessness and violence, jobs and economic development, and foreign policy. He emphasized that Americans had a "moral obligation"[clarification needed] and should "make an honest effort to understand one another and move forward together."[66]

Before boarding a plane to attend campaign rallies in Indianapolis, Kennedy learned that Martin Luther King Jr. had been shot in Memphis. Upon arrival, Kennedy was informed that King had died.[67] Despite fears of riots and concerns for his safety, Kennedy went ahead with plans to attend a rally at 7th and Broadway—an African American neighborhood near the north side of Indianapolis. That evening he addressed the crowd, many of whom had not heard about King's assassination. Instead of the rousing campaign speech they expected, Kennedy offered brief, impassioned remarks for peace.[68] That night, riots erupted in over 100 cities (but not Indianapolis); 43 people were killed and over 3,000 were injured.[69]

The following day, Kennedy addressed the City Club of Cleveland at the Sheraton-Cleveland Hotel in Ohio; delivering the famous "On the Mindless Menace of Violence" speech.[70] After attending King's funeral in Atlanta, Kennedy turned his attention back to the primary campaign. He drew huge crowds at campaign stops across the country.[71] Kennedy's Indiana campaign resumed on April 10.[72]

Kennedy's campaign advisor, John Bartlow Martin, urged the candidate to speak out against violence and rioting, emphasize his "law enforcement experience" as former U.S. attorney general, and promote the idea that the federal government and the private sector should work together to solve domestic issues. Martin also urged Kennedy to speak out on the war in Vietnam—support for the cessation of hostilities and reallocating war funds to domestic programs were ideas which "always got applause."[73] To appeal to Indiana's more-conservative voters, Kennedy "toned down his rhetoric" as well.[71]

Kennedy delivered a speech before the Indianapolis real estate board on May 2, advocating for reliance on private enterprise instead of the federal government. During this speech, Kennedy argued that the national economy would be "restored" by the Vietnam War's conclusion.[74]

The Indiana primary was held on May 7: Kennedy won with 42 percent of the vote; Governor Roger D. Branigin (a "favorite son candidate" and stand-in for Johnson)[75] was second with 31 percent of the vote; and McCarthy, earning 27 percent, came in third.[76][77]

May 7: Washington, D.C. edit

On May 7, Kennedy won the Washington, D.C. primary with 62.5 percent of the vote; Humphrey received 37.5 percent.[78][79] Two-thirds of Washington's 810,000 residents were African American, and Kennedy's campaign staff successfully geared its efforts to win their support. "But here a light turnout and Mr. Humphrey's inaction," reported the Washington Post, "makes this only mildly interesting as a test for popularity."[80]

May 14: Nebraska edit

Campaigning vigorously in Nebraska, Kennedy hoped for a big win to give him momentum going into the California primary, in which McCarthy held a strong presence. While McCarthy made only one visit to Nebraska, Kennedy made numerous appearances.[81] Kennedy's advisors had been worried about his chances in Nebraska, given RFK's lack of experience with the issues of ranching and agriculture—subjects of high importance to Nebraskans—and the short amount of time to campaign in the state after the Indiana primary.[82]

Kennedy won the Nebraska primary on May 14, with 51.4 percent of the vote to McCarthy's 31 percent.[81][83] Kennedy won 24 of the 25 counties that he visited ahead of the vote; of those, Mills noted that the sole county he lost harbored the University of Nebraska, where a plurality of students favored McCarthy, and that Kennedy had been defeated by "precisely two votes."[84] After the results, Kennedy declared that he and McCarthy, both anti-war candidates, had collectively managed to earn over 80 percent of the vote. He described this as "a smashing repudiation" of the Johnson-Humphrey administration.[85]

May 28: Oregon edit

 
Kennedy speaks from the platform of a railway business car on his whistle-stop tour through Oregon's Willamette Valley

In contrast to Nebraska, the Oregon primary posed several challenges to Kennedy's campaign. His campaign organization, run by U.S. Congresswoman Edith Green, was not strong and his platform emphasizing poverty, hunger, and minority issues did not resonate with Oregon voters.[86][87] Mills wrote the following about Kennedy's calls for unity amongst Americans: "As far as Oregonians were concerned, America had not fallen apart."[88] The Kennedy campaign circulated material on McCarthy's record; McCarthy had voted against a minimum wage law and repeal of the poll tax in the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The McCarthy campaign responded with charges that Kennedy illegally taped Martin Luther King Jr. as U.S. attorney general. Kennedy admitted these mentions of McCarthy's record did not bother his supporters.[89]

Ten days ahead of the primary, Kennedy recognized the uphill battle he faced in winning the primary: "This state is like one giant suburb. I appeal best to people who have problems."[48] During a speech he gave in California, Kennedy said, "I think that if I get beaten in any primary, I am not a very viable candidate." The comment further intensified the importance of the Oregon primary.[89] Kennedy realized that losing the Oregon primary would pose a risk to his credibility and began what Dary G. Richardson dubbed an "Olympian-like pace". He campaigned for sixteen hours a day; in the weeks before the election, his campaign canvased 50,000 homes.[90] During a May 27 campaign stop in Roseburg, Oregon, Kennedy made an impassioned appeal for federal gun control legislation. "At the present moment, a person who is insane, a man with a long criminal record of killing a dozen people, can go in and buy a rifle," Kennedy remarked.[91]

On May 28, McCarthy won the Oregon primary with 44.7 percent; Kennedy received 38.8 percent of votes.[92] After Kennedy's loss was confirmed, Kennedy sent a congratulatory message to McCarthy in which he asserted that he would remain in the race.[93]

June 4: California and South Dakota edit

Kennedy began campaigning in California before the Oregon primary; after his loss in Oregon, California's winner-take-all primary became crucial to both his and McCarthy's campaigns.[94] In South Dakota, he also hoped to simultaneously pull off an upset victory over McCarthy and Humphrey, both from neighboring Minnesota.[95] For Kennedy, a defeat could have ended his hopes of securing the nomination.[96]

On June 1, Kennedy and McCarthy met in a televised debate on ABC's "Issues and Answers",[97] which observers generally considered a draw.[98] "It was a conversation rather than a debate," said The New York Times, "and it demonstrated that the two rivals are in substantial agreement on every major issue."[99] Though Kennedy considered the debate "indecisive and disappointing," subsequent polling showed that undecided voters favored his performance by a margin of two-to-one.[100]

On June 3, Kennedy made a "final dash" through the state's major urban centers, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and San Diego; along with suburban Long Beach, in a single day.[101] As his motorcade moved slowly through cheering crowds in San Francisco's Chinatown, gun shots appeared to ring out. However, it was just the sound of celebratory firecrackers.[102] The campaign entourage and traveling press were all "scared to death," recalled Bill Eppridge, a Life magazine photographer in the car just ahead of the Kennedys.[103] Polls by CBS showed Kennedy leading McCarthy by 7 percent.[104] On June 4, Kennedy won the California primary with 46 percent of the vote to McCarthy's 42 percent.[105] Author Joseph Palermo referred to the victory as Kennedy's "greatest."[106] Kennedy also won the South Dakota primary, winning approximately 50 percent of the vote.[107] He was now in second place with 393 total delegates, against Humphrey's 561 delegates.[108] Around midnight on June 5, Kennedy addressed supporters at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, confidently promising to heal the many divisions within the country.[109] At approximately 12:10 a.m., concluding his victory speech, Kennedy said: "So my thanks to all of you and on to Chicago and let's win there."[110]

 
Kennedy with supporters in San Francisco (photo by Evan Freed)
 
Kennedy addresses a crowd in Los Angeles
 
A crowd gathers, awaiting Kennedy's arrival to give a speech at San Fernando Valley State College

Assassination edit

After addressing his supporters during the early morning hours of June 5, Kennedy left the Ambassador Hotel's ballroom through a service area to greet kitchen workers. In a crowded kitchen passageway, Sirhan Sirhan, a 24-year-old Palestinian-born Jordanian,[111] opened fire with a .22 caliber revolver and mortally wounded Kennedy. Following the shooting, Kennedy was rushed to Central Receiving Hospital and then transferred to The Good Samaritan Hospital, where he died early in the morning on June 6.[112][113]

 
Robert Kennedy's grave in Arlington National Cemetery

Kennedy's body was returned to New York City, where he lay in repose at St. Patrick's Cathedral for several days before the Requiem Mass was held there on June 8. His younger brother, U.S. Senator Edward "Ted" Kennedy, eulogized him with the words:

"My brother need not be idealized or enlarged in death beyond what he was in life; to be remembered simply as a good and decent man, who saw wrong and tried to right it, saw suffering and tried to heal it, saw war and tried to stop it."[114]

Kennedy concluded the eulogy by paraphrasing George Bernard Shaw, "As he said many times, in many parts of this nation, to those he touched and who sought to touch him: 'Some men see things as they are and say why? I dream things that never were and say why not?' "[114] Later that day, a funeral train carried Kennedy's body from New York's Penn Station to Washington, D.C.'s Union Station, where he was laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery.[115]

Kennedy's death continues to be the subject of much historical analysis, in addition to multiple conspiracy theories.[116]

Relationships with groups and people edit

Black communities edit

Kennedy had been a supporter of the civil rights movement.[117] During the campaign, there were signs in black neighborhoods that read "Kennedy white but alright / The one before, he opened the door."[118] In the Indiana primary, Kennedy secured 86% of the black vote.[119] His performance was strongest in cities with the largest black populations.[120] Richardson noted that Kennedy was appealing to low-earning black voters. Kennedy had received support from black people by "an overwhelming margin."[54] Support amongst black voters was one of the key factors in Kennedy's victory in Indiana, where he gave a notable speech on the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. in Indianapolis days before the primary took place.[121] Samuel Lubell argued that the victory was partially inspired by Kennedy's support for corporate attempts to hire blacks; he wrote that Kennedy had largely won "the Negro wards."[122][123] However, Indianapolis Star journalist Will Higgins noted that Kennedy got a boost from the King assassination speech, which, unlike many other American cities, aided Indianapolis in being spared of riots.[121] Higgins also noted that the crowd which Kennedy spoke with that evening was estimated to be only 2,500 people.[121]

 
Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr., c. June 22, 1963

In the Nebraska primary, Kennedy ended his campaigning in the state with a speech in a black neighborhood in Omaha.[56] While a late May poll showed that only 40% of overall respondents believed Kennedy embodied "many of the same outstanding qualities" of the late President Kennedy, 94% of black respondents agreed with the comparison.[120] When McCarthy revealed that Kennedy had agreed to limited surveillance of Martin Luther King Jr. back in 1963, blacks in California considered switching their support to McCarthy.[90] In Oakland, Kennedy met with Black Panthers amid other minority activists in a midnight session days before the California primary concluded. When he was shouted at, Kennedy prevented a black aide from intervening: "They need to tell people off. They need to tell me off."[124] Kennedy won 90% of the black vote in the California primary.[58] Author Larry Tye later said: "By the time of his death in June 1968, Bobby was the most trusted white man in black America."[125] On the other hand, Michael A. Cohen noted that Kennedy's popularity with blacks had a negative effect on his appeal to the remainder of the electorate: "Rather than create an espirit de corps between the races, his close relationship to the black community turned many whites off."[126]

Working class whites edit

Kennedy had broad support among blue-collar white voters during the campaign.[55] Schmitt observed that "It was the allure of Kennedy as a bare knuckles advocate for their interests that led some of these same white voters to support the insurgent candidacy of George Wallace in the fall of 1968."[55] An internal memo released during the Indiana primary showed that Kennedy-backing voters had favorable opinions of Wallace.[55] Samuel Lubell, though noting Kennedy's support among blacks, stated that he "had also carried the racially sensitive low-income white workers who come in from rural areas to settle in east Omaha."[122]

Farmworkers edit

Kennedy endeared himself to farmworkers through his support of the Delano grape strike and subsequent communications with Cesar Chavez, who told students in California that Kennedy was the candidate for farmworkers.[127] Tye wrote that Kennedy became a hero to farmworkers by questioning local law enforcement methods.[128] Kennedy visited Delano during the campaign to display an endorsement for the grape strike, prompting Chavez to convince the United Farm Workers (UFW) to begin voter turnout and registration campaigns. Marshall Ganz had arranged for Kennedy to speak to farmworkers after his victory speech in the California primary.[129] Roger A. Bruns wrote the following about Kennedy's assassination: "For the country and especially for the farm workers community, the killing of Robert Kennedy was a profoundly tragic loss."[130]

Hispanics edit

Cesar Chavez claimed there were fifty Hispanics supporting the Kennedy campaign for every one that had backed his brother's campaign eight years prior.[129] In the California primary, 95% of voting Hispanics supported Kennedy and he won 100% in several precincts.[58] By the time of the primary, he had become "the leading candidate among Latinos in California."[131] Hispanic input heavily impacted Kennedy's victory.[132]

Lyndon B. Johnson edit

 
President Lyndon B. Johnson and Robert F. Kennedy meeting at the White House on October 14, 1964

Even before Kennedy announced his candidacy, President Lyndon B. Johnson was convinced that Kennedy wanted to challenge him.[133] Johnson was convinced that his presidency would be "trapped forever between the two Kennedys" administrations.[119] Jeff Shesol wrote that Johnson took the prospect of a contentious primary seriously, after having underestimated the political skillfulness of John F. Kennedy in 1960.[134] During a December 19, 1967 press conference, Johnson said the following about what he called the Kennedy-McCarthy movement: "I don't know what the effect of the Kennedy-McCarthy movement is having in the country ...I am not privileged to all of the conversations that have taken place ...I do know of the interest of both of them in the Presidency and the ambition of both of them."[135] Prior to Kennedy's announcement of his intentions to run, close friend Arthur Schlesinger Jr. wrote in a journal that he'd never seen Kennedy "so torn about anything...I think that he cannot bear the thought of consigning the country to four more years of LBJ, without having done something to avert this."[136]

Kennedy announced his candidacy after Johnson almost lost the New Hampshire primary. The day after announcing his candidacy, Kennedy predicted that Johnson would lose the general election if he was the party's nominee, if he continued to "follow the same policies we are following at the moment."[137] Kennedy told reporters during a flight to Kansas City: "I didn't want to run for President. But when [Johnson] made it clear the war would go on, and that nothing was going to change, I had no choice." Clarke wrote that Kennedy was conveying he had a moral obligation to do everything in his power to prevent a prolonging of the policies he opposed.[138] In mid-March, during an appearance at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Kennedy charged Johnson's leadership with leading to the divisiveness of the U.S.: "They are the ones, the President of the United States, President Johnson, they are the ones who divide us."[139] In late March, three days before Johnson announced that he would not be seeking the Democratic Party's nomination, James H. Rowe sent Johnson a memorandum charging that Kennedy's backers had said "the president would not run and that the best course for the Democrats was to 'Stay loose and stay committed.' "[140] A late-March Gallup poll showed Kennedy defeating President Johnson in a national election.[141]

Kennedy was at his apartment in the United Nations Plaza the night President Johnson announced his withdrawal from the primary, though unlike his supporters he was not optimistic about the news. He reportedly said, "The joy is premature."[142] Smith observed that Johnson's withdrawal meant Kennedy would have to shift the focus of his critiques from the administration's policies on the Vietnam War.[143] Shesol wrote that Kennedy moved to a praising tone of Johnson, crediting Johnson with fulfillment of "the policies of thirty years" during an April 1 appearance in New Jersey. While in Philadelphia, he called Johnson's withdrawal an "act of leadership and sacrifice."[144] On April 3, 1968, three days after President Johnson announced that he would not seek the nomination, Kennedy and the president met at the White House. When asked about his intentions for the primary, Johnson replied: "Stay out of it." Although Johnson's withdrawal from the race meant Vice-President Humphrey would enter, Kennedy had gained the president's declaration of neutrality.[145] In comments to Henry Ford II and Gregory Peck, Johnson concluded that Kennedy won his June debate with McCarthy.[58]

Eugene McCarthy edit

After the primaries, Senator Eugene McCarthy claimed that Kennedy had promised in November 1967 that he would not run.[146] Prior to entering the race, Kennedy worried McCarthy lacked a platform, as the latter had rarely spoken about domestic issues. In mid-March, Ted Kennedy attempted to broker "a political deal" where his brother would remain out of the race, if McCarthy spoke out on domestic problems. McCarthy declined and the refusal propelled Schlesinger's unsuccessful suggestion that Kennedy endorse McCarthy.[147] The day before Kennedy announced his entry into the primary, he told reporters Hayne Johnson and Jack Newfield: "I can't be a hypocrite anymore. I just don't believe Gene McCarthy would be a good president. If it had been George McGovern who had run in New Hampshire, I wouldn't have gotten into it. But what has McCarthy ever done for the ghettos or for the poor?"[53]

The day Kennedy announced his entry into the primary, McCarthy reversed his decision to not enter the Indiana primary; he didn't want to help Kennedy's chances of winning any primaries.[148] According to Dominic Sandbrook, Kennedy's entry into the primary caused a shift in McCarthy's campaign—McCarthy was forced to further develop his own platform, instead of merely being antagonistic to the Johnson administration's policies.[149] Walter LaFeber believed that animosity between the Kennedy and McCarthy campaigns had grown by the end of March.[119] Following President Johnson's withdrawal from the primary, McCarthy said: "Up to now Bobby was Jack running against Lyndon. Now Bobby has to run against Jack."[150] Mills wrote that Kennedy's focus on providing assistance for the poor and powerless during the Indiana primary was meant to highlight an issue that the McCarthy campaign had neglected.[151] After his Nebraska victory, Kennedy said that McCarthy supporters should support him to prevent the nomination of Humphrey at the Democratic National Convention.[56] McCarthy rebuked Kennedy's proposals about fixing cities during a late May speech at University of California, Davis.[152] The McCarthy campaign believed that if Kennedy did well enough to survive the California primary, it would lead to a fractured Democratic National Convention where McCarthy would be the alternative for those opposed to both Kennedy and Humphrey.[153] After Kennedy's assassination, some Kennedy advisors joined the McCarthy campaign with plans for supporting it toward gaining the nomination.[154]

Hubert Humphrey edit

Two days after Kennedy announced his candidacy, Vice President Hubert Humphrey said that RFK had supported the JFK administration's policies on the Vietnam conflict. Humphrey's office produced a statement from Kennedy, written six years prior, saying the U.S. would win in Vietnam.[155]

Kennedy was in Nebraska when Humphrey entered the race on April 27. Kennedy welcomed Humphrey into the race, saying Humphrey's candidacy offered "clear alternatives" between the Johnson administration's policies and those of the primary candidates.[156]

LaFeber wrote that Humphrey's entry seemed to be hinged entirely on President Johnson's distaste at the idea of Kennedy being the party's nominee in the general election.[157] Kennedy took direct aim at Humphrey's "politics of joy" line during his announcement speech while campaigning in Indiana: "It is easy to say this is the politics of happiness—but if you see children starving in the Delta of Mississippi and despair on the Indian reservations, then you know that everybody in America is not satisfied."[158]

The morning after his Oregon loss, Kennedy hosted a Los Angeles airport press conference in which he critiqued Humphrey for what he called an inability "to present his views to the voters of a single state."[159] Kennedy also emphasized that there would be no anti-war presidential candidate, if Humphrey were the Democratic nominee in the general election against Republican Richard Nixon.[160] After winning the California primary, Kennedy said that he intended to follow Humphrey "all over the country" in pursuit of the nomination.[154][161]

Reflecting on Kennedy's assassination, Humphrey said: "I was doing everything I could to get the nomination, but God knows I didn't want it that way."[162] Humphrey went on to become the Democratic Party's nominee in the general election.

Richard J. Daley edit

Shortly before entering the race, on February 8, 1968, Kennedy met with Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley about the chances of usurping the nomination from the incumbent President Lyndon Johnson. Kennedy wanted Daley to use his influence to sway delegates and the Democratic National Convention in his favor toward nomination. Daley stated that he would remain committed to Johnson. Savage wrote that Daley was worried about a Kennedy presidency because he had, as U.S. attorney general, prosecuted Democratic machine politicians in several states.[163]

Richard Nixon edit

After President Johnson withdrew from the primary, Nixon commented that Kennedy seemed favored for the nomination.[164] When Richard Nixon heard that Kennedy had announced his candidacy, Nixon reportedly said, "We've just seen some very terrible forces unleashed. Something bad is going to come out of this."[165] However, Nixon was relieved by Kennedy's entry into the Democratic primary—he believed the divisions created by Kennedy's candidacy would be an advantage for Republicans. In April, Nixon proposed a debate between Kennedy and himself.[166] Nixon, who during his own campaign for the presidency spoke about federal power to the states and economic empowerment for blacks in a late May speech, said: "Bobby and I have been sounding pretty much alike."[152] Kennedy tied with Nixon in polls conducted in the latter part of 1967.[167] When Kennedy was announced the winner of the California primary, Nixon told his family: "It sure looks like we'll be going against Bobby."[168]

Kennedy family edit

Kennedy's wife, Ethel, regularly joined Kennedy when he was campaigning. His brother Ted and brother-in-law Steve Smith, were involved in the campaign as informal advisors.[169] His sisters Jean Kennedy Smith and Patricia Kennedy Lawford were in the entourage of the Kennedy campaign at the Ambassador Hotel after Kennedy won the California primary.[170] Kennedy met with his father, Joseph P. Kennedy Sr., ahead of making the announcement; the elder Kennedy dropped his head "to his chest in regret." Bzdek wrote, "He no longer wished to see three sons as president; he only wished to see the last two alive."[171]

Endorsements edit

List of political endorsements
Organizations
U.S. Congress
State officials
Notable individuals

Notes edit

  1. ^ Damore, Leo (1988). Senatorial Privilege; The Chappaquiddick Cover-up. New York: Dell Publishing. p. 64.
  2. ^ Donaldson, Gary (2003). Liberalism's Last Hurrah: The Presidential Campaign of 1964. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe. p. 103. ISBN 0-7656-1119-8.
  3. ^ Bohrer, John R. (May 24, 2017). "Robert Kennedy's Secret Campaign to Become Lyndon Johnson's Vice President". Daily Beast. Retrieved December 26, 2022.
  4. ^ Donaldson, Gary (2003). Liberalism's Last Hurrah: The Presidential Campaign of 1964. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 0-7656-1119-8.
  5. ^ Sabato, Larry J. (2014). The Kennedy Half-Century: The Presidency, Assassination, and Lasting Legacy of John F. Kennedy. Bloomsbury USA. pp. 269–271. ISBN 978-1620402825.
  6. ^ Shesol, Jeff (1998). Mutual Contempt: Lyndon Johnson, Robert Kennedy, and the Feud that Defined a Decade. W. W. Norton. p. 179.
  7. ^ Shesol, Jeff (1998). Mutual Contempt: Lyndon Johnson, Robert Kennedy, and the Feud that Defined a Decade. W. W. Norton. p. 180.
  8. ^ Shesol, Jeff (1998). Mutual Contempt: Lyndon Johnson, Robert Kennedy, and the Feud that Defined a Decade. W. W. Norton. p. 180.
  9. ^ Levy, Daniel S. (June 5, 2018). "Robert F. Kennedy Was Killed While Campaigning for President. Here's What Drove Him to Run". TIME.
  10. ^ McNearney, Allison. "Watch RFK's Speech from his 1964 Senate Campaign". History.com.
  11. ^ "Another Senator Kennedy?". The New York Times. May 16, 1964. Retrieved April 16, 2023.
  12. ^ Tye, Larry (2017). Bobby Kennedy: The Making of a Liberal Icon. Random House Publishing Group. pp. 319–320.
  13. ^ "The Kennedys". PBS American Experience.
  14. ^ Thomas, Evan (2000). Robert F. Kennedy: His Life. New York: Simon and Schuster. p. 351. ISBN 978-0684834801.
  15. ^ a b c Boomhower, Ray E. (2008). Robert F. Kennedy and the 1968 Indiana Primary. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. p. 13. ISBN 978-0253350893.
  16. ^ Bzdek, Vincent (2009). The Kennedy Legacy: Jack, Bobby and Ted and a Family Dream Fulfilled. St. Martin's Press. p. 130. ISBN 978-0230613676.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Clark, Thurston (June 2008). . Vanity Fair. Archived from the original on 2014-12-20. Retrieved 2012-05-18. Excerpt from The Last Campaign: Robert F. Kennedy and the 82 Days that Inspired America (New York, Henry Holt, 2008) by Thurston Clark.
  18. ^ Thomas, p. 356.
  19. ^ a b Thomas, p. 357.
  20. ^ Thomas, pp. 357–358.
  21. ^ PBS, "American Experience" (2004-07-01). "RFK, People and Events: Cesar Chavez". PBS. from the original on 2016-08-23. Retrieved 2012-05-24.
  22. ^ Schlesinger, Arthur M. (1978). Robert Kennedy and His Times. Vol. 2 (book club ed.). Boston: Houghton Mifflin. p. 884.
  23. ^ Thomas, p. 359.
  24. ^ Kennedy, Robert F., "Robert F. Kennedy's Announcement of his candidacy for president" 2012-02-05 at the Wayback Machine (speech, Washington, DC, 1968-03-16). Retrieved 2012-05-17.
  25. ^ Thomas, p. 360.
  26. ^ On September 14, 2009, the U.S. Senate passed a resolution to rename the Senate Caucus Room in the Russell Senate Office Building (RSOB) to the Kennedy Senate Caucus Room in honor of the three Kennedy brothers who served in the Senate chamber. John F. Kennedy and Robert F. Kennedy announced their presidential campaigns in the room and their younger brother, the late Senator Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts, who died of cancer in August 2009, chaired hearings in the room on a health-care bill that bore his name. CNN Political Tracker blog (2009-09-14). "Senate Caucus Room renamed to honor Kennedy brothers". CNN Political Tracker. Retrieved 2012-05-18. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  27. ^ Schlesinger, p. 860.
  28. ^ Tye, p. 405.
  29. ^ "1968, A Seismic Year" (PDF). John F. Kennedy Presidential Library & Museum. 2018. Retrieved 19 January 2024. Robert F. Kennedy campaigns for the presidency in South Boston, Massachusetts, March 17, 1968
  30. ^ Kennedy, Robert F., "Remarks at the University of Kansas" (speech, Lawrence, KS, 1968-03-18), John F. Kennedy Library. Retrieved May 18, 2012.
  31. ^ Thomas, p. 365.
  32. ^ Solberg, Carl (1984). Hubert Humphrey: A Biography. New York: W.W. Norton. p. 332. ISBN 9780393018066.
  33. ^ Schlesinger, p. 923.
  34. ^ Solberg, pp. 327–328.
  35. ^ Cook, Rhodes (2000). United States Presidential Primary Elections 1968–1996: A Handbook of Election Statistics. Washington, DC: CQ Press. pp. 202, 487, 340. ISBN 9781568024516.
  36. ^ "Robert F. Kennedy 1968 for President Campaign Brochure". Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  37. ^ Newfield, Jack (1969). RFK: A Memoir. pp. 36–37, 73–74.
  38. ^ Schlesinger (2002) [1978], p. xii, xv.
  39. ^ "Robert F. Kennedy and the 1968 Campaign". John F. Kennedy Presidential Library & Museum.
  40. ^ Sullivan, Patricia (2021). Justice Rising: Robert Kennedy's America in Black and White. Harvard University Press. p. 393.
  41. ^ Cite error: The named reference Schlesinger 2002 1978, p. xvi was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  42. ^ Clarke, p. 26, 166, 255.
  43. ^ Newfield, Jack (1969). RFK: A Memoir. p. 230.
  44. ^ Zeitz, Joshua (June 5, 2018). "The Bobby Kennedy Myth". Politico.
  45. ^ Thomas, p. 371.
  46. ^ a b c d e Robert F. Kennedy 1968 for President Campaign Brochure Accessed May 20, 2018.
  47. ^ Parise, Theresa (2006-01-17). . John F. Kennedy Presidential Library. Archived from the original on 2009-03-03. Retrieved 2009-05-03.
  48. ^ a b "New Robert F. Kennedy biography examines historic loss in Oregon presidential primary". oregonlive.com. July 5, 2016. from the original on September 14, 2016.
  49. ^ . oregonlive.com. October 4, 2015. Archived from the original on August 23, 2016.
  50. ^ Levenson, Eric (October 6, 2015). "Video: Robert F. Kennedy once spoke about gun control in Roseburg, Oregon". Boston.com. from the original on June 17, 2016.
  51. ^ Shesol, p. 305.
  52. ^ Shesol, p. 344.
  53. ^ a b Richardson, Dary G. (2002). A Nation Divided: The 1968 Presidential Campaign. iUniverse. pp. 52–55. ISBN 978-0595236992.
  54. ^ a b Richardson, pp. 87–89.
  55. ^ a b c d Schmitt, pp. 210–211.
  56. ^ a b c Savage, Sean J. (2004). JFK, LBJ, and the Democratic Party. State University of New York Press. p. 301. ISBN 978-0791461693.
  57. ^ "Hubert Tops Pennsylvania Delegate Poll". Chicago Tribune. May 27, 1968.
  58. ^ a b c d Savage, Sean J. (2004). JFK, LBJ, and the Democratic Party. State University of New York Press. p. 305. ISBN 978-0791461693.
  59. ^ Clarke, p. 262.
  60. ^ "McCarthy Wins Easily in Wisconsin Primary". St. Petersburg Times. April 3, 1968. Retrieved 26 November 2023.
  61. ^ Solberg, Carl (1984). Hubert Humphrey: A Biography. New York: W.W. Norton. p. 332. ISBN 9780393018066.
  62. ^ Richardson, Darcy G. (2002). A Nation Divided: The 1968 Presidential Campaign. p. 81.
  63. ^ Rosen, Adele M. (May 1, 1968). "Rocky Shines in Primary; Kennedy Edges Humphrey". The Harvard Crimson.
  64. ^ Herbers, John (March 28, 1968). "Kennedy to Enter Indiana's PrimaryE". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  65. ^ Boomhower, p. 43.
  66. ^ a b Kennedy, Robert F., "Speech at Ball State University" (speech, Ball State University, Muncie, IN, 1968-04-04). Retrieved 2012-05-24.
  67. ^ Boomhower, pp. 62–63.
  68. ^ Boomhower, pp. 67–68.
  69. ^ Thomas, p. 368.
  70. ^ "On The Mindless Menace of Violence". The City Club of Cleveland. Retrieved February 18, 2017.
  71. ^ a b Thomas, p. 369.
  72. ^ Boomhower, p. 76.
  73. ^ Boomhower, p. 78.
  74. ^ Manly, Chesely (May 3, 1968). "Kennedy Tells Housing Plan". Chicago Tribune.
  75. ^ Thomas, p. 369.
  76. ^ Thomas, p. 375.
  77. ^ PBS, "American Experience". "Shock Year: 1968 – May 7, Indiana Primary". PBS. from the original on 2016-08-23. Retrieved 2012-05-24.
  78. ^ "Fast Facts about Robert F. Kennedy". John F. Kennedy Presidential Library & Museum.
  79. ^ "KENNEDY CAPTURES CAPITAL'S DELEGATES". The New York Times. New York, New York. May 8, 1972. Retrieved October 5, 2023.
  80. ^ Wainstock, Dennis (2012). Election Year 1968: The Turning Point. Enigma Books. p. 78.
  81. ^ a b Thomas, p. 377.
  82. ^ Clarke, pp. 194–195.
  83. ^ Dooley, Brian (1996). Robert Kennedy: The Final Years. New York: St. Martin's Press. p. 128. ISBN 9780312161309.
  84. ^ Mills, p. 428.
  85. ^ Schlesinger, p. 929.
  86. ^ Dooley, p. 129.
  87. ^ Schlesinger, p. 906.
  88. ^ Mills, Judie (1998). Robert Kennedy. Millbrook Press. pp. 430–432. ISBN 978-1562942502.
  89. ^ a b Gould, p. 73.
  90. ^ a b Richardson, Darcy (2002). A Nation Divided: The 1968 Presidential Campaign. iUniverse. p. 100. ISBN 978-0595236992.
  91. ^ "Watch: RFK talks gun control in Roseburg, Oregon in 1968". CBS News.
  92. ^ Thomas, p. 382.
  93. ^ Korman, Seymour (May 29, 1968). "McCarthy Defeats Bobby". Chicago Tribune.
  94. ^ "Remembering Robert F. Kennedy". California Secretary of State.
  95. ^ Clarke, p. 156.
  96. ^ Thomas, p. 24.
  97. ^ Wainstock, Dennis (2012). Election Year 1968: The Turning Point. Enigma Books. p. 86.
  98. ^ Schlesinger, pp. 910–912.
  99. ^ Wainstock, Dennis (2012). Election Year 1968: The Turning Point. Enigma Books. p. 89.
  100. ^ Mills 1998, p. 443.
  101. ^ Schlesinger, p. 912.
  102. ^ Schlesinger, p. 912.
  103. ^ Thomas, pp. 24–25.
  104. ^ Clarke, p. 265.
  105. ^ Clarke, p. 268.
  106. ^ Palermo, Joseph A. (2001). In His Own Right: The Political Odyssey of Senator Robert F. Kennedy. Columbia University Press. p. 245.
  107. ^ Clarke, p. 266.
  108. ^ Smith, Jeffrey K. (2010). Bad Blood: Lyndon B. Johnson, Robert F. Kennedy, and the Tumultuous 1960s. p. 266.
  109. ^ Thomas, p. 387.
  110. ^ "Remembering Robert Kennedy 50 Years After His Assassination". CBS News.
  111. ^ Martinez, Michael (2011-03-01). "Sirhan Sirhan, convicted RFK assassin, to face parole board". CNN. from the original on 2012-11-10. Retrieved 2012-05-24.
  112. ^ Issenberg, Sasha (2008-06-05). "Slaying gave US a first taste of Mideast terror". Boston.com. The Boston Globe. from the original on 2012-01-11. Retrieved 2012-05-17.
  113. ^ Dooley, p. 140.
  114. ^ a b "Edward M. Kennedy Address at the Public Memorial Service for Robert F. Kennedy". American Rhetoric: Top 100 Speeches. from the original on 2008-05-09. Retrieved 2009-08-29.
  115. ^ Thomas, p. 393.
  116. ^ Arango, Tim (2018-06-05). "A Campaign, a Murder, a Legacy: Robert F. Kennedy's California Story". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-04-28.
  117. ^ Isaacson, Walter (2011). Profiles in Leadership: Historians on the Elusive Quality of Greatness. W.W. Norton & Company. p. 287. ISBN 978-0393340761.
  118. ^ Clarke, Thurston (2008). The Last Campaign: Robert F. Kennedy and 82 Days That Inspired America. Henry Holt and Co. pp. 62–63. ISBN 978-0805077926.
  119. ^ a b c LaFeber, Walter (2005). The Deadly Bet: LBJ, Vietnam, and the 1968 Election (Vietnam: America in the War Years). Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 89–94. ISBN 978-0742543928.
  120. ^ a b Cohen, p. 129.
  121. ^ a b c Higgins, Will (April 2, 2015). "April 4, 1968: How RFK saved Indianapolis". The Indianapolis Star. Retrieved August 30, 2020.
  122. ^ a b Stricherz, Mark (February 21, 2008). "The Death of the Bobby Kennedy Coalition". Crisis Magazine.
  123. ^ Why the Democrats are Blue: How Secular Liberals Hijacked the People's Party. Encounter Books. 2007. p. 126. ISBN 978-1594032059.
  124. ^ Tye, p. 430.
  125. ^ Tye, Larry (July 7, 2016). "The Most Trusted White Man in Black America". Politico. from the original on November 16, 2016.
  126. ^ Cohen, p. 82.
  127. ^ Pawel, Miriam. The Crusades of Cesar Chavez: A Biography. Bloomsbury Press. p. 170.
  128. ^ Tye, p. 359.
  129. ^ a b Pedersen, Carl (2009). Obama's America. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 78–79. ISBN 978-0748638949.
  130. ^ Bruns, Roger A. (2013). Encyclopedia of Cesar Chavez: The Farm Workers' Fight for Rights and Justice (Movements of the American Mosaic). Greenwood. p. 139. ISBN 978-1440803802.
  131. ^ Capps, Steven A. (May 31, 1998). "30 YEARS AGO: Remembering Robert F. Kennedy's California campaign". Kitsapsun.com.
  132. ^ Caldwell, Christopher (January 26, 2000). "The Electorate Bobby Built". from the original on January 24, 2015.
  133. ^ Smith, Jeffery K. (2010). Bad Blood: Lyndon B. Johnson, Robert F. Kennedy, and the Tumultuous 1960s. AuthorHouse. p. 230. ISBN 978-1452084435.
  134. ^ Shesol, p. 309.
  135. ^ Savage, Sean J. (2004). JFK, LBJ, and the Democratic Party. State University of New York Press. p. 289. ISBN 978-0791461693.
  136. ^ Smith, p. 235.
  137. ^ King, William (March 18, 1968). "Bobby Has Grave Reservations About Backing LBJ in '68 Race". Chicago Tribune.
  138. ^ Clarke, p. 29.
  139. ^ Cohen, Michael A. (2016). American Maelstrom: The 1968 Election and the Politics of Division. Oxford University Press. p. 104. ISBN 978-0199777563.
  140. ^ Gould, Lewis L. (1993). 1968: The Election That Changed America. Ivan R. Dee. p. 45. ISBN 978-1566630092.
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  142. ^ Shesol, p. 439.
  143. ^ Smith, p. 244.
  144. ^ Shesol, pp. 446–447.
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  146. ^ Sandbrook, Dominic (2004). Eugene McCarthy: The Rise and Fall of Postwar American Liberalism. Knopf. p. 191. ISBN 978-1400041053.
  147. ^ Smith, p. 237.
  148. ^ Wainstock, Dennis (2012). Election Year 1968: The Turning Point. Enigma Books. p. 76. ISBN 978-1936274413.
  149. ^ Sandbrook, pp. 187–188.
  150. ^ Cohen, p. 115.
  151. ^ Mills, p. 401.
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  153. ^ Cohen, p. 136.
  154. ^ a b Mills, p. 446.
  155. ^ "RFK Reverses Self On Viet, Hubert Says". Chicago Tribune. March 19, 1968.
  156. ^ "Bobby Welcomes Hubert to Vote Race". Chicago Tribune. April 28, 1968.
  157. ^ LaFeber, p. 122.
  158. ^ Solberg, p. 333.
  159. ^ Schlesinger, p. 907.
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  161. ^ Thomas, p. 388.
  162. ^ Solberg, Carl (2005). Hubert Humphrey: A Biography. Borealis Books. p. 340. ISBN 978-0873514736.
  163. ^ Savage, pp. 308–309.
  164. ^ Gould, p. 48.
  165. ^ Clarke, pp. 22–24.
  166. ^ Black, Conrad (2007). Richard M. Nixon: A Life in Full. Public Affairs. p. 523. ISBN 978-1586485191.
  167. ^ Shesol, Jeff (1998). Mutual Contempt: Lyndon Johnson, Robert Kennedy, and the Feud that Defined a Decade. W.W. Norton & Company. p. 379. ISBN 978-0393318555.
  168. ^ Nixon, Richard (1978). RN: The Memoirs of Richard Nixon. Grosset & Dunlap. ISBN 978-0333230213. I believed that Hubert Humphrey had waited too long before declaring his candidacy, and I saw no way a Kennedy juggernaut could be stopped once it had acquired the momentum of a California victory.
  169. ^ Bzdek, p. 133.
  170. ^ Oppenheimer, Jerry (2015). RFK Jr.: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and the Dark Side of the Dream. St. Martin's Press. p. 26. ISBN 978-1250032959.
  171. ^ Bzdek, Vincent (2009). The Kennedy Legacy: Jack, Bobby and Ted and a Family Dream Fulfilled. St. Martin's Press. p. 130. ISBN 978-0230613676.
  172. ^ "Here's What RFK Did in California in 1968".
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  174. ^ Cite error: The named reference obit was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  175. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Cite error: The named reference celebrity endorsements was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  176. ^ “Celebrities Endorse Candidates,” Daily Collegian (State College, PA), May 5, 1968.
  177. ^ “Celebrities Endorse Candidates,” Daily Collegian (State College, PA), May 5, 1968.
  178. ^ In His Own Right: The Political Odyssey of Senator Robert F. Kennedy; Joseph Palermo, 2001
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  180. ^ “Celebrities Endorse Candidates,” Daily Collegian (State College, PA), May 5, 1968.
  181. ^ “Celebrities Endorse Candidates,” Daily Collegian (State College, PA), May 5, 1968.
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  183. ^ LIFE; May 10, 1968
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  189. ^ In His Own Right: The Political Odyssey of Senator Robert F. Kennedy; Joseph Palermo, 2001
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  205. ^ In His Own Right: The Political Odyssey of Senator Robert F. Kennedy; Joseph Palermo, 2001

Bibliography edit

  • Clarke, Thurston (June 2008). . Vanity Fair. Archived from the original on 2014-12-20.
  • Damore, Leo (1988). Senatorial Privilege: The Chappaquiddick Cover-up. New York: Dell Publishing. ISBN 0-440-20416-X.
  • Hersh, Burton (2007). Bobby and J. Edgar: The Historic Face-Off Between the Kennedys and J. Edgar Hoover That Transformed America. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0786719822.

robert, kennedy, 1968, presidential, campaign, robert, kennedy, presidential, campaign, began, march, 1968, when, robert, francis, kennedy, united, states, senator, from, york, mounted, unlikely, challenge, incumbent, democratic, united, states, president, lyn. The Robert F Kennedy presidential campaign began on March 16 1968 when Robert Francis Kennedy a United States Senator from New York mounted an unlikely challenge to incumbent Democratic United States President Lyndon B Johnson Following an upset in the New Hampshire primary Johnson announced on March 31 that he would not seek re election Kennedy still faced two rival candidates for the Democratic Party s presidential nomination the leading challenger United States Senator Eugene McCarthy and Vice President Hubert Humphrey Humphrey had entered the race after Johnson s withdrawal but Kennedy and McCarthy remained the main challengers to the policies of the Johnson administration During the spring of 1968 Kennedy led a leading campaign in presidential primary elections throughout the United States Kennedy s campaign was especially active in Indiana Nebraska Oregon South Dakota California and Washington D C After declaring victory in the California primary on June 4 1968 Kennedy was assassinated at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles He died on June 6 1968 at Good Samaritan Hospital Had Kennedy been elected president he would have been the first brother of a former U S president John F Kennedy to win the presidency himself Robert F Kennedy for President 1968Campaign1968 United States presidential election Democratic primaries CandidateRobert F KennedyU S Senator from New York 1965 1968 AffiliationDemocratic PartyStatusAnnounced March 16 1968Assassinated June 6 1968Key peopleJoseph Gargan chairman 1 Contents 1 Background 2 Announcement 3 Policy positions 3 1 Vietnam War 3 2 Job opportunities and welfare reform 3 3 Law and order 3 4 Gun control 3 5 Tax reform 4 Campaign 4 1 Opinion polling 4 2 Primaries 4 2 1 April Wisconsin Pennsylvania and Massachusetts 4 2 2 May 7 Indiana 4 2 3 May 7 Washington D C 4 2 4 May 14 Nebraska 4 2 5 May 28 Oregon 4 2 6 June 4 California and South Dakota 4 3 Assassination 5 Relationships with groups and people 5 1 Black communities 5 2 Working class whites 5 3 Farmworkers 5 4 Hispanics 5 5 Lyndon B Johnson 5 6 Eugene McCarthy 5 7 Hubert Humphrey 5 8 Richard J Daley 5 9 Richard Nixon 5 10 Kennedy family 6 Endorsements 7 Notes 8 BibliographyBackground edit nbsp Campaign posterWhen President John F Kennedy was assassinated on November 22 1963 Vice President Lyndon B Johnson succeeded him with tremendous national popularity amid a wave of mourning and sympathy Robert F Kennedy remained in the cabinet as United States attorney general for several months amid what Johnson staffers began to refer to as the Bobby problem despite the personal hatred between the two Democratic voters overwhelmingly favored Kennedy as Johnson s running mate in the 1964 election 2 Kennedy began to plan for a nationwide campaign 3 and in the informal New Hampshire vice presidential primary Kennedy defeated Hubert H Humphrey in a landslide 4 In July 1964 Johnson issued an official statement ruling out any cabinet member for the vice presidency 5 In search of a way out of the dilemma Kennedy asked speechwriter Milton Gwirtzman to write a memo comparing two offices 1 governor of Massachusetts and 2 U S senator from New York and which would be a better place from which to make a run for the presidency in future years 6 The Massachusetts governorship offered one important advantage isolation from President Johnson However the state was hobbled by debt and an unruly legislature 7 Gwirtzman informed Kennedy that you are going to receive invitations to attend dedications and speak around the country and abroad and to undertake other activities in connection with President Kennedy and that it would seem easier to do this as a U S senator based in Washington D C than as a governor based in Boston 8 In August Kennedy made up his mind to run for the United States Senate from New York defeating Republican incumbent Kenneth Keating who attempted to portray Kennedy as an arrogant carpetbagger from Massachusetts 9 10 His opponents accused Kennedy of merely using the state as a convenient launching pad for the presidency 11 12 In an interview with PBS political journalist Midge Decter stated that nobody for one minute expected that he was going into the Senate to stay there It was understood that it was the next move on the way to reclaiming what was rightfully the Kennedys namely the White House 13 Announcement edit nbsp Kennedy at a press conference in the Netherlands c February 1962Kennedy was a late entry in making a campaign announcement for the primary race in the Democratic Party s presidential nomination in 1968 His political advisors had been pressuring him to make a decision fearing Kennedy was running out of time to announce his candidacy 14 Although Kennedy and his advisors knew it would not be easy to beat the incumbent president Lyndon B Johnson 15 Kennedy had not ruled out entering the race His younger brother Ted Kennedy was the leading voice against a bid for the presidency He felt that his brother ought to wait until 1972 after Johnson s tenure was finished If RFK ran in 1968 and lost in the primaries to a sitting president Ted felt that it would destroy his brother s chances later 16 U S Senator Eugene McCarthy of Minnesota had announced his intention to run against Johnson for the Democratic nomination on November 30 1967 Following McCarthy s announcement Kennedy remarked to U S Senator George McGovern of South Dakota that he was worried about McGovern and other people making early commitments to McCarthy 17 At a breakfast with reporters at the National Press Club on January 30 1968 Kennedy once again indicated that he had no plans to run but a few weeks later he had changed his mind about entering the race 18 In early February 1968 after the Tet Offensive in Vietnam Kennedy received an anguished letter from writer Pete Hamill noting that poor people in the Watts area of Los Angeles had hung pictures of Kennedy s brother President John F Kennedy in their homes Hamill s letter reminded Robert Kennedy that he had an obligation of staying true to whatever it was that put those pictures on those walls 19 There were other factors that influenced Kennedy s decision to enter the presidential primary race On February 29 1968 the Kerner Commission issued a report on the racial unrest that had affected American cities during the previous summer The Kerner Commission blamed white racism for the violence but its findings were largely dismissed by the Johnson administration 19 Concerned about President Johnson s policies and actions Kennedy asked his advisor historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr How can we possibly survive five more years of Lyndon Johnson 15 Disagreement amongst Kennedy s friends political advisors and family members further complicated his decision to launch a primary challenge against the incumbent Johnson Kennedy s wife Ethel supported the idea but his brother Ted had been opposed to the candidacy Ted did lend his support once Kennedy entered the race 15 20 By late February or early March 1968 Kennedy had finally made the decision to enter the race for president 17 On March 10 Kennedy traveled to Delano California to meet with civil rights activist Cesar Chavez at the end of a 25 day hunger strike 21 En route to California Kennedy told his aide Peter Edelman that he had decided to run and had to figure out how to get McCarthy out of it 17 The weekend before the New Hampshire primary Kennedy told several aides that he would run if he could persuade McCarthy to withdraw from the presidential race 22 Kennedy agreed to McCarthy s request to delay an announcement of his intentions until after the New Hampshire primary 17 On March 12 when Johnson won an astonishingly narrow victory in the New Hampshire primary against McCarthy who polled 42 percent of the vote Kennedy knew it would be unlikely that the Minnesota senator would agree to withdraw He moved forward with his plans to announce his candidacy 23 On March 16 Kennedy declared I am today announcing my candidacy for the presidency of the United States I do not run for the presidency merely to oppose any man but to propose new policies I run because I am convinced that this country is on a perilous course and because I have such strong feelings about what must be done and I feel that I m obliged to do all I can 24 Kennedy made this announcement from the same spot in the Caucus Room of the Russell Senate Office Building where John F Kennedy had announced his presidential candidacy in January 1960 25 26 McCarthy supporters angrily denounced Kennedy as an opportunist 27 With Kennedy joining the race liberal Democrats thought that votes among supporters of the anti war movement would now be split between McCarthy and Kennedy 17 On March 17 Kennedy made his first campaign appearances by marching in the St Patrick s Day Parades in Boston and New York City 28 29 The following day he delivered his first campaign speech at Kansas State University where he had previously agreed to give a lecture honoring former Kansas governor and Republican Alfred Landon 17 At Kansas State Kennedy drew a record setting crowd of 14 500 students for his Landon Lecture In his speech Kennedy apologized for early mistakes and attacked President Johnson s Vietnam policy saying I was involved in many of the early decisions on Vietnam decisions which helped set us on our present path 17 He further acknowledged that past error is not excuse for its own perpetration 17 Later that day at the University of Kansas Kennedy spoke to an audience of 19 000 one of the largest in the university s history During that speech he said I don t think that we have to shoot each other to beat each other to curse each other and criticize each other I think that we can do better in this country And that is why I run for President of the United States 17 30 From Kansas Kennedy went on to campaign in the Democratic primaries in Indiana Washington D C Nebraska Oregon South Dakota and California 17 On March 31 President Johnson stunned the nation by dropping out of the presidential race He withdrew from the election during a televised speech where he also announced a partial halt to the bombing of Vietnam and proposed peace negotiations with the North Vietnamese 31 Vice President Hubert Humphrey long a champion of labor unions and civil rights entered the race on April 27 32 33 Although he was a write in candidate in some of the contests Humphrey had announced his candidacy too late to be a formal candidate in most of the primaries Despite late entry into the primary race Humphrey had the support of the president and many Democratic insiders which gave him a better chance at gaining convention delegates in the non primary states 34 35 In contrast Kennedy like his brother before him had planned to win the nomination through popular support in the primaries Because Democratic party leaders would influence delegate selection and convention votes Kennedy s strategy was to influence the decision makers with crucial wins in the primary elections This strategy had worked for John F Kennedy in 1960 when he defeated Humphrey in the Wisconsin and West Virginia primaries 17 Policy positions editKennedy ran on a platform of racial equality economic justice non aggression in foreign policy decentralization of power and social improvement 36 37 38 39 A crucial element of his campaign was youth engagement You are the people Kennedy said who have the least ties to the present and the greatest stake in the future 40 According to Schlesinger Kennedy s presidential campaign generated wild enthusiasm as well as deep anger 41 He visited numerous small towns and made himself available to the masses by participating in long motorcades and street corner stump speeches often in inner cities 42 Kennedy s candidacy faced opposition from Southern Democrats leaders of organized labor and the business community where he was viewed as a fiscal liability 43 44 At one of his university speeches Indiana University Medical School he was asked Where are we going to get the money to pay for all these new programs you re proposing He replied to the medical students about to enter lucrative careers From you 45 Vietnam War edit Kennedy did not support an immediate withdrawal of U S military personnel from Vietnam or an immediate end to the war He sought to end the conflict by strengthening the South Vietnamese military and reducing corruption within the South Vietnamese government He supported a peace settlement between North and South Vietnam 46 Job opportunities and welfare reform edit Kennedy argued that increased government cooperation with private enterprise would reduce housing and employment woes in the United States 46 He also argued that the focus of welfare spending should be shifted more towards improving credit and income for farmers 46 Law and order edit In 1968 Kennedy expressed his strong willingness to support a bill that was under consideration for the abolition of the death penalty 47 better source needed He argued that rising crime rates could be countered with more job and educational opportunities 46 Gun control edit Kennedy supported laws that would reduce casual firearm purchases 48 He said he believed in keeping firearms away from people who have no business with them specifying criminals individuals with mental health issues and minors as classes of persons who should be prevented from purchasing firearms 49 50 Tax reform edit Kennedy argued for legislation which would reform flagrant tax loopholes 46 Campaign edit nbsp 1968 Democratic primaries results Robert F Kennedy Hubert H Humphrey Lyndon B Johnson Eugene McCarthy George Smathers Stephen M YoungOpinion polling edit A Gallup poll conducted in the fall of 1965 showed 72 of respondents believed RFK wanted to become the president and 40 of independents and 56 of Democrats stated their support for a possible bid 51 Harris and Gallup polls released in August 1966 showed RFK being favored over President Johnson for the nomination by 2 among Democrats and 14 by independents 52 A late March Gallup poll released shortly before RFK s entry into the primary showed him leading President Johnson by three points at 44 to 41 53 A poll released in the early part of April featured Kennedy with a 26 point lead over McCarthy in the Indiana primary at 46 to 19 54 Another April poll in Indiana the Oliver Quayle survey showed Kennedy with a three to one lead over McCarthy and the state s governor Roger D Branigin Schmitt noted the poll featured a large portion of respondents refuting the label that RFK was not trustworthy along with being too tough and ruthless 55 An April 28 Gallup poll showed Kennedy at 28 support by Democratic voters Humphrey behind by three points and McCarthy ahead by five 56 A May 26 Associated Press AP poll showed RFK behind Humphrey among Pennsylvania national convention delegates 1 to 27 57 A June 2 Gallup poll showed Kennedy at 19 support among Democratic county chairmen Humphrey at 67 and McCarthy at 6 58 A June 3 poll showed Kennedy leading McCarthy by nine points in the California primary at 39 to 30 59 Primaries edit April Wisconsin Pennsylvania and Massachusetts edit After President Johnson s withdrawal the Wisconsin primary on April 2 was effectively uncontested Senator Eugene McCarthy won 56 35 Kennedy received 6 percent as a write in candidate Kennedy was ineligible for the ballot because he entered the race following the filing deadline 60 McCarthy easily won the uncontested Pennsylvania primary on April 23 and the Massachusetts primary on April 30 Vice President Hubert Humphrey announced his candidacy on April 27 61 and some analysts viewed Humphrey s unexpectedly strong showing in the Massachusetts primary 44 156 write in votes or 18 percent of the total as a clear victory over Kennedy a Brookline Massachusetts native who polled a meager 28 percent write in vote 62 63 May 7 Indiana edit nbsp Campaign bumper stickerOn March 27 1968 Kennedy announced his intention to run against McCarthy in the Indiana primary His aides told him that a race in Indiana would be an extremely tight race and advised him against it 64 Despite the concerns of his advisors Kennedy traveled to Indianapolis the following day and filed to run in the Indiana primary At the Indiana Statehouse Kennedy told a cheering crowd that the state was important to his campaign If we can win in Indiana we can win in every other state and win when we go to the convention in August 65 On April 4 1968 Kennedy made his first campaign stop in Indiana at the University of Notre Dame in South Bend followed by a speech at Ball State University in Muncie In his speech at Ball State Kennedy suggested that the 1968 election would determine the direction that the United States is going to move and that the American people should examine everything Not take anything for granted 66 In addition Kennedy enumerated his concerns about poverty and hunger lawlessness and violence jobs and economic development and foreign policy He emphasized that Americans had a moral obligation clarification needed and should make an honest effort to understand one another and move forward together 66 Audio of Kennedy s speech on the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr source source track Problems playing this file See media help Before boarding a plane to attend campaign rallies in Indianapolis Kennedy learned that Martin Luther King Jr had been shot in Memphis Upon arrival Kennedy was informed that King had died 67 Despite fears of riots and concerns for his safety Kennedy went ahead with plans to attend a rally at 7th and Broadway an African American neighborhood near the north side of Indianapolis That evening he addressed the crowd many of whom had not heard about King s assassination Instead of the rousing campaign speech they expected Kennedy offered brief impassioned remarks for peace 68 That night riots erupted in over 100 cities but not Indianapolis 43 people were killed and over 3 000 were injured 69 The following day Kennedy addressed the City Club of Cleveland at the Sheraton Cleveland Hotel in Ohio delivering the famous On the Mindless Menace of Violence speech 70 After attending King s funeral in Atlanta Kennedy turned his attention back to the primary campaign He drew huge crowds at campaign stops across the country 71 Kennedy s Indiana campaign resumed on April 10 72 Kennedy s campaign advisor John Bartlow Martin urged the candidate to speak out against violence and rioting emphasize his law enforcement experience as former U S attorney general and promote the idea that the federal government and the private sector should work together to solve domestic issues Martin also urged Kennedy to speak out on the war in Vietnam support for the cessation of hostilities and reallocating war funds to domestic programs were ideas which always got applause 73 To appeal to Indiana s more conservative voters Kennedy toned down his rhetoric as well 71 Kennedy delivered a speech before the Indianapolis real estate board on May 2 advocating for reliance on private enterprise instead of the federal government During this speech Kennedy argued that the national economy would be restored by the Vietnam War s conclusion 74 The Indiana primary was held on May 7 Kennedy won with 42 percent of the vote Governor Roger D Branigin a favorite son candidate and stand in for Johnson 75 was second with 31 percent of the vote and McCarthy earning 27 percent came in third 76 77 May 7 Washington D C edit On May 7 Kennedy won the Washington D C primary with 62 5 percent of the vote Humphrey received 37 5 percent 78 79 Two thirds of Washington s 810 000 residents were African American and Kennedy s campaign staff successfully geared its efforts to win their support But here a light turnout and Mr Humphrey s inaction reported the Washington Post makes this only mildly interesting as a test for popularity 80 May 14 Nebraska edit Campaigning vigorously in Nebraska Kennedy hoped for a big win to give him momentum going into the California primary in which McCarthy held a strong presence While McCarthy made only one visit to Nebraska Kennedy made numerous appearances 81 Kennedy s advisors had been worried about his chances in Nebraska given RFK s lack of experience with the issues of ranching and agriculture subjects of high importance to Nebraskans and the short amount of time to campaign in the state after the Indiana primary 82 Kennedy won the Nebraska primary on May 14 with 51 4 percent of the vote to McCarthy s 31 percent 81 83 Kennedy won 24 of the 25 counties that he visited ahead of the vote of those Mills noted that the sole county he lost harbored the University of Nebraska where a plurality of students favored McCarthy and that Kennedy had been defeated by precisely two votes 84 After the results Kennedy declared that he and McCarthy both anti war candidates had collectively managed to earn over 80 percent of the vote He described this as a smashing repudiation of the Johnson Humphrey administration 85 May 28 Oregon edit nbsp Kennedy speaks from the platform of a railway business car on his whistle stop tour through Oregon s Willamette ValleyIn contrast to Nebraska the Oregon primary posed several challenges to Kennedy s campaign His campaign organization run by U S Congresswoman Edith Green was not strong and his platform emphasizing poverty hunger and minority issues did not resonate with Oregon voters 86 87 Mills wrote the following about Kennedy s calls for unity amongst Americans As far as Oregonians were concerned America had not fallen apart 88 The Kennedy campaign circulated material on McCarthy s record McCarthy had voted against a minimum wage law and repeal of the poll tax in the Voting Rights Act of 1965 The McCarthy campaign responded with charges that Kennedy illegally taped Martin Luther King Jr as U S attorney general Kennedy admitted these mentions of McCarthy s record did not bother his supporters 89 Ten days ahead of the primary Kennedy recognized the uphill battle he faced in winning the primary This state is like one giant suburb I appeal best to people who have problems 48 During a speech he gave in California Kennedy said I think that if I get beaten in any primary I am not a very viable candidate The comment further intensified the importance of the Oregon primary 89 Kennedy realized that losing the Oregon primary would pose a risk to his credibility and began what Dary G Richardson dubbed an Olympian like pace He campaigned for sixteen hours a day in the weeks before the election his campaign canvased 50 000 homes 90 During a May 27 campaign stop in Roseburg Oregon Kennedy made an impassioned appeal for federal gun control legislation At the present moment a person who is insane a man with a long criminal record of killing a dozen people can go in and buy a rifle Kennedy remarked 91 On May 28 McCarthy won the Oregon primary with 44 7 percent Kennedy received 38 8 percent of votes 92 After Kennedy s loss was confirmed Kennedy sent a congratulatory message to McCarthy in which he asserted that he would remain in the race 93 June 4 California and South Dakota edit Kennedy began campaigning in California before the Oregon primary after his loss in Oregon California s winner take all primary became crucial to both his and McCarthy s campaigns 94 In South Dakota he also hoped to simultaneously pull off an upset victory over McCarthy and Humphrey both from neighboring Minnesota 95 For Kennedy a defeat could have ended his hopes of securing the nomination 96 On June 1 Kennedy and McCarthy met in a televised debate on ABC s Issues and Answers 97 which observers generally considered a draw 98 It was a conversation rather than a debate said The New York Times and it demonstrated that the two rivals are in substantial agreement on every major issue 99 Though Kennedy considered the debate indecisive and disappointing subsequent polling showed that undecided voters favored his performance by a margin of two to one 100 On June 3 Kennedy made a final dash through the state s major urban centers San Francisco Los Angeles and San Diego along with suburban Long Beach in a single day 101 As his motorcade moved slowly through cheering crowds in San Francisco s Chinatown gun shots appeared to ring out However it was just the sound of celebratory firecrackers 102 The campaign entourage and traveling press were all scared to death recalled Bill Eppridge a Life magazine photographer in the car just ahead of the Kennedys 103 Polls by CBS showed Kennedy leading McCarthy by 7 percent 104 On June 4 Kennedy won the California primary with 46 percent of the vote to McCarthy s 42 percent 105 Author Joseph Palermo referred to the victory as Kennedy s greatest 106 Kennedy also won the South Dakota primary winning approximately 50 percent of the vote 107 He was now in second place with 393 total delegates against Humphrey s 561 delegates 108 Around midnight on June 5 Kennedy addressed supporters at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles confidently promising to heal the many divisions within the country 109 At approximately 12 10 a m concluding his victory speech Kennedy said So my thanks to all of you and on to Chicago and let s win there 110 nbsp Kennedy with supporters in San Francisco photo by Evan Freed nbsp Kennedy addresses a crowd in Los Angeles nbsp A crowd gathers awaiting Kennedy s arrival to give a speech at San Fernando Valley State College Assassination edit Main article Assassination of Robert F Kennedy After addressing his supporters during the early morning hours of June 5 Kennedy left the Ambassador Hotel s ballroom through a service area to greet kitchen workers In a crowded kitchen passageway Sirhan Sirhan a 24 year old Palestinian born Jordanian 111 opened fire with a 22 caliber revolver and mortally wounded Kennedy Following the shooting Kennedy was rushed to Central Receiving Hospital and then transferred to The Good Samaritan Hospital where he died early in the morning on June 6 112 113 nbsp Robert Kennedy s grave in Arlington National CemeteryKennedy s body was returned to New York City where he lay in repose at St Patrick s Cathedral for several days before the Requiem Mass was held there on June 8 His younger brother U S Senator Edward Ted Kennedy eulogized him with the words My brother need not be idealized or enlarged in death beyond what he was in life to be remembered simply as a good and decent man who saw wrong and tried to right it saw suffering and tried to heal it saw war and tried to stop it 114 Kennedy concluded the eulogy by paraphrasing George Bernard Shaw As he said many times in many parts of this nation to those he touched and who sought to touch him Some men see things as they are and say why I dream things that never were and say why not 114 Later that day a funeral train carried Kennedy s body from New York s Penn Station to Washington D C s Union Station where he was laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery 115 Kennedy s death continues to be the subject of much historical analysis in addition to multiple conspiracy theories 116 Relationships with groups and people editBlack communities edit Kennedy had been a supporter of the civil rights movement 117 During the campaign there were signs in black neighborhoods that read Kennedy white but alright The one before he opened the door 118 In the Indiana primary Kennedy secured 86 of the black vote 119 His performance was strongest in cities with the largest black populations 120 Richardson noted that Kennedy was appealing to low earning black voters Kennedy had received support from black people by an overwhelming margin 54 Support amongst black voters was one of the key factors in Kennedy s victory in Indiana where he gave a notable speech on the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr in Indianapolis days before the primary took place 121 Samuel Lubell argued that the victory was partially inspired by Kennedy s support for corporate attempts to hire blacks he wrote that Kennedy had largely won the Negro wards 122 123 However Indianapolis Star journalist Will Higgins noted that Kennedy got a boost from the King assassination speech which unlike many other American cities aided Indianapolis in being spared of riots 121 Higgins also noted that the crowd which Kennedy spoke with that evening was estimated to be only 2 500 people 121 nbsp Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr c June 22 1963In the Nebraska primary Kennedy ended his campaigning in the state with a speech in a black neighborhood in Omaha 56 While a late May poll showed that only 40 of overall respondents believed Kennedy embodied many of the same outstanding qualities of the late President Kennedy 94 of black respondents agreed with the comparison 120 When McCarthy revealed that Kennedy had agreed to limited surveillance of Martin Luther King Jr back in 1963 blacks in California considered switching their support to McCarthy 90 In Oakland Kennedy met with Black Panthers amid other minority activists in a midnight session days before the California primary concluded When he was shouted at Kennedy prevented a black aide from intervening They need to tell people off They need to tell me off 124 Kennedy won 90 of the black vote in the California primary 58 Author Larry Tye later said By the time of his death in June 1968 Bobby was the most trusted white man in black America 125 On the other hand Michael A Cohen noted that Kennedy s popularity with blacks had a negative effect on his appeal to the remainder of the electorate Rather than create an espirit de corps between the races his close relationship to the black community turned many whites off 126 Working class whites edit Kennedy had broad support among blue collar white voters during the campaign 55 Schmitt observed that It was the allure of Kennedy as a bare knuckles advocate for their interests that led some of these same white voters to support the insurgent candidacy of George Wallace in the fall of 1968 55 An internal memo released during the Indiana primary showed that Kennedy backing voters had favorable opinions of Wallace 55 Samuel Lubell though noting Kennedy s support among blacks stated that he had also carried the racially sensitive low income white workers who come in from rural areas to settle in east Omaha 122 Farmworkers edit Kennedy endeared himself to farmworkers through his support of the Delano grape strike and subsequent communications with Cesar Chavez who told students in California that Kennedy was the candidate for farmworkers 127 Tye wrote that Kennedy became a hero to farmworkers by questioning local law enforcement methods 128 Kennedy visited Delano during the campaign to display an endorsement for the grape strike prompting Chavez to convince the United Farm Workers UFW to begin voter turnout and registration campaigns Marshall Ganz had arranged for Kennedy to speak to farmworkers after his victory speech in the California primary 129 Roger A Bruns wrote the following about Kennedy s assassination For the country and especially for the farm workers community the killing of Robert Kennedy was a profoundly tragic loss 130 Hispanics edit Cesar Chavez claimed there were fifty Hispanics supporting the Kennedy campaign for every one that had backed his brother s campaign eight years prior 129 In the California primary 95 of voting Hispanics supported Kennedy and he won 100 in several precincts 58 By the time of the primary he had become the leading candidate among Latinos in California 131 Hispanic input heavily impacted Kennedy s victory 132 Lyndon B Johnson edit nbsp President Lyndon B Johnson and Robert F Kennedy meeting at the White House on October 14 1964Even before Kennedy announced his candidacy President Lyndon B Johnson was convinced that Kennedy wanted to challenge him 133 Johnson was convinced that his presidency would be trapped forever between the two Kennedys administrations 119 Jeff Shesol wrote that Johnson took the prospect of a contentious primary seriously after having underestimated the political skillfulness of John F Kennedy in 1960 134 During a December 19 1967 press conference Johnson said the following about what he called the Kennedy McCarthy movement I don t know what the effect of the Kennedy McCarthy movement is having in the country I am not privileged to all of the conversations that have taken place I do know of the interest of both of them in the Presidency and the ambition of both of them 135 Prior to Kennedy s announcement of his intentions to run close friend Arthur Schlesinger Jr wrote in a journal that he d never seen Kennedy so torn about anything I think that he cannot bear the thought of consigning the country to four more years of LBJ without having done something to avert this 136 Kennedy announced his candidacy after Johnson almost lost the New Hampshire primary The day after announcing his candidacy Kennedy predicted that Johnson would lose the general election if he was the party s nominee if he continued to follow the same policies we are following at the moment 137 Kennedy told reporters during a flight to Kansas City I didn t want to run for President But when Johnson made it clear the war would go on and that nothing was going to change I had no choice Clarke wrote that Kennedy was conveying he had a moral obligation to do everything in his power to prevent a prolonging of the policies he opposed 138 In mid March during an appearance at Vanderbilt University in Nashville Kennedy charged Johnson s leadership with leading to the divisiveness of the U S They are the ones the President of the United States President Johnson they are the ones who divide us 139 In late March three days before Johnson announced that he would not be seeking the Democratic Party s nomination James H Rowe sent Johnson a memorandum charging that Kennedy s backers had said the president would not run and that the best course for the Democrats was to Stay loose and stay committed 140 A late March Gallup poll showed Kennedy defeating President Johnson in a national election 141 Kennedy was at his apartment in the United Nations Plaza the night President Johnson announced his withdrawal from the primary though unlike his supporters he was not optimistic about the news He reportedly said The joy is premature 142 Smith observed that Johnson s withdrawal meant Kennedy would have to shift the focus of his critiques from the administration s policies on the Vietnam War 143 Shesol wrote that Kennedy moved to a praising tone of Johnson crediting Johnson with fulfillment of the policies of thirty years during an April 1 appearance in New Jersey While in Philadelphia he called Johnson s withdrawal an act of leadership and sacrifice 144 On April 3 1968 three days after President Johnson announced that he would not seek the nomination Kennedy and the president met at the White House When asked about his intentions for the primary Johnson replied Stay out of it Although Johnson s withdrawal from the race meant Vice President Humphrey would enter Kennedy had gained the president s declaration of neutrality 145 In comments to Henry Ford II and Gregory Peck Johnson concluded that Kennedy won his June debate with McCarthy 58 Eugene McCarthy edit See also Eugene McCarthy 1968 presidential campaign After the primaries Senator Eugene McCarthy claimed that Kennedy had promised in November 1967 that he would not run 146 Prior to entering the race Kennedy worried McCarthy lacked a platform as the latter had rarely spoken about domestic issues In mid March Ted Kennedy attempted to broker a political deal where his brother would remain out of the race if McCarthy spoke out on domestic problems McCarthy declined and the refusal propelled Schlesinger s unsuccessful suggestion that Kennedy endorse McCarthy 147 The day before Kennedy announced his entry into the primary he told reporters Hayne Johnson and Jack Newfield I can t be a hypocrite anymore I just don t believe Gene McCarthy would be a good president If it had been George McGovern who had run in New Hampshire I wouldn t have gotten into it But what has McCarthy ever done for the ghettos or for the poor 53 The day Kennedy announced his entry into the primary McCarthy reversed his decision to not enter the Indiana primary he didn t want to help Kennedy s chances of winning any primaries 148 According to Dominic Sandbrook Kennedy s entry into the primary caused a shift in McCarthy s campaign McCarthy was forced to further develop his own platform instead of merely being antagonistic to the Johnson administration s policies 149 Walter LaFeber believed that animosity between the Kennedy and McCarthy campaigns had grown by the end of March 119 Following President Johnson s withdrawal from the primary McCarthy said Up to now Bobby was Jack running against Lyndon Now Bobby has to run against Jack 150 Mills wrote that Kennedy s focus on providing assistance for the poor and powerless during the Indiana primary was meant to highlight an issue that the McCarthy campaign had neglected 151 After his Nebraska victory Kennedy said that McCarthy supporters should support him to prevent the nomination of Humphrey at the Democratic National Convention 56 McCarthy rebuked Kennedy s proposals about fixing cities during a late May speech at University of California Davis 152 The McCarthy campaign believed that if Kennedy did well enough to survive the California primary it would lead to a fractured Democratic National Convention where McCarthy would be the alternative for those opposed to both Kennedy and Humphrey 153 After Kennedy s assassination some Kennedy advisors joined the McCarthy campaign with plans for supporting it toward gaining the nomination 154 Hubert Humphrey edit See also Hubert Humphrey 1968 presidential campaign Two days after Kennedy announced his candidacy Vice President Hubert Humphrey said that RFK had supported the JFK administration s policies on the Vietnam conflict Humphrey s office produced a statement from Kennedy written six years prior saying the U S would win in Vietnam 155 Kennedy was in Nebraska when Humphrey entered the race on April 27 Kennedy welcomed Humphrey into the race saying Humphrey s candidacy offered clear alternatives between the Johnson administration s policies and those of the primary candidates 156 LaFeber wrote that Humphrey s entry seemed to be hinged entirely on President Johnson s distaste at the idea of Kennedy being the party s nominee in the general election 157 Kennedy took direct aim at Humphrey s politics of joy line during his announcement speech while campaigning in Indiana It is easy to say this is the politics of happiness but if you see children starving in the Delta of Mississippi and despair on the Indian reservations then you know that everybody in America is not satisfied 158 The morning after his Oregon loss Kennedy hosted a Los Angeles airport press conference in which he critiqued Humphrey for what he called an inability to present his views to the voters of a single state 159 Kennedy also emphasized that there would be no anti war presidential candidate if Humphrey were the Democratic nominee in the general election against Republican Richard Nixon 160 After winning the California primary Kennedy said that he intended to follow Humphrey all over the country in pursuit of the nomination 154 161 Reflecting on Kennedy s assassination Humphrey said I was doing everything I could to get the nomination but God knows I didn t want it that way 162 Humphrey went on to become the Democratic Party s nominee in the general election Richard J Daley edit Shortly before entering the race on February 8 1968 Kennedy met with Chicago Mayor Richard J Daley about the chances of usurping the nomination from the incumbent President Lyndon Johnson Kennedy wanted Daley to use his influence to sway delegates and the Democratic National Convention in his favor toward nomination Daley stated that he would remain committed to Johnson Savage wrote that Daley was worried about a Kennedy presidency because he had as U S attorney general prosecuted Democratic machine politicians in several states 163 Richard Nixon edit See also Richard Nixon 1968 presidential campaign After President Johnson withdrew from the primary Nixon commented that Kennedy seemed favored for the nomination 164 When Richard Nixon heard that Kennedy had announced his candidacy Nixon reportedly said We ve just seen some very terrible forces unleashed Something bad is going to come out of this 165 However Nixon was relieved by Kennedy s entry into the Democratic primary he believed the divisions created by Kennedy s candidacy would be an advantage for Republicans In April Nixon proposed a debate between Kennedy and himself 166 Nixon who during his own campaign for the presidency spoke about federal power to the states and economic empowerment for blacks in a late May speech said Bobby and I have been sounding pretty much alike 152 Kennedy tied with Nixon in polls conducted in the latter part of 1967 167 When Kennedy was announced the winner of the California primary Nixon told his family It sure looks like we ll be going against Bobby 168 Kennedy family edit Kennedy s wife Ethel regularly joined Kennedy when he was campaigning His brother Ted and brother in law Steve Smith were involved in the campaign as informal advisors 169 His sisters Jean Kennedy Smith and Patricia Kennedy Lawford were in the entourage of the Kennedy campaign at the Ambassador Hotel after Kennedy won the California primary 170 Kennedy met with his father Joseph P Kennedy Sr ahead of making the announcement the elder Kennedy dropped his head to his chest in regret Bzdek wrote He no longer wished to see three sons as president he only wished to see the last two alive 171 Endorsements editList of political endorsementsOrganizationsUnited Farm Workers Mexican American Political Association 172 U S CongressRalph Yarborough Senator from Texas 1957 1971 173 State officialsPhilip H Hoff 73rd Governor of Vermont 174 Notable individualsLauren Bacall actress 175 176 Warren Beatty actor 177 Milton Berle actor 175 178 Joey Bishop comedian 179 Bill Cosby actor and comedian 180 Tony Curtis actor 181 Bobby Darin singer 182 Sammy Davis Jr singer and actor 183 Marlene Dietrich actress and singer 175 184 Henry Fonda actor 185 Lesley Gore singer 186 Michael Harrington author of The Other America 173 187 Rita Hayworth actress 175 188 Mahalia Jackson singer 175 189 Peter Lawford actor 190 Janet Leigh actress 175 191 Jack Lemmon actor 192 Trini Lopez singer 175 193 Shirley MacLaine actress 194 Henry Mancini composer 173 Melina Mercouri actress and singer 195 Elizabeth Montgomery actress 175 196 Kim Novak actress 175 197 Jack Paar talk show host 198 Sidney Poitier actor 175 199 Otto Preminger film director 173 200 Rod Steiger actor 201 Connie Stevens actress and singer 175 John Fell Stevenson son of Adlai Stevenson II Democratic presidential candidate in 1952 and 1956 173 202 David Susskind film producer 203 Marlo Thomas actress 175 204 Shelley Winters actress 175 205 Notes edit Damore Leo 1988 Senatorial Privilege The Chappaquiddick Cover up New York Dell Publishing p 64 Donaldson Gary 2003 Liberalism s Last Hurrah The Presidential Campaign of 1964 Armonk NY M E Sharpe p 103 ISBN 0 7656 1119 8 Bohrer John R May 24 2017 Robert Kennedy s Secret Campaign to Become Lyndon Johnson s Vice President Daily Beast Retrieved December 26 2022 Donaldson Gary 2003 Liberalism s Last Hurrah The Presidential Campaign of 1964 Armonk NY M E Sharpe ISBN 0 7656 1119 8 Sabato Larry J 2014 The Kennedy Half Century The Presidency Assassination and Lasting Legacy of John F Kennedy Bloomsbury USA pp 269 271 ISBN 978 1620402825 Shesol Jeff 1998 Mutual Contempt Lyndon Johnson Robert Kennedy and the Feud that Defined a Decade W W Norton p 179 Shesol Jeff 1998 Mutual Contempt Lyndon Johnson Robert Kennedy and the Feud that Defined a Decade W W Norton p 180 Shesol Jeff 1998 Mutual Contempt Lyndon Johnson Robert Kennedy and the Feud that Defined a Decade W W Norton p 180 Levy Daniel S June 5 2018 Robert F Kennedy Was Killed While Campaigning for President Here s What Drove Him to Run TIME McNearney Allison Watch RFK s Speech from his 1964 Senate Campaign History com Another Senator Kennedy The New York Times May 16 1964 Retrieved April 16 2023 Tye Larry 2017 Bobby Kennedy The Making of a Liberal Icon Random House Publishing Group pp 319 320 The Kennedys PBS American Experience Thomas Evan 2000 Robert F Kennedy His Life New York Simon and Schuster p 351 ISBN 978 0684834801 a b c Boomhower Ray E 2008 Robert F Kennedy and the 1968 Indiana Primary Bloomington Indiana University Press p 13 ISBN 978 0253350893 Bzdek Vincent 2009 The Kennedy Legacy Jack Bobby and Ted and a Family Dream Fulfilled St Martin s Press p 130 ISBN 978 0230613676 a b c d e f g h i j k Clark Thurston June 2008 The Last Good Campaign Vanity Fair Archived from the original on 2014 12 20 Retrieved 2012 05 18 Excerpt from The Last Campaign Robert F Kennedy and the 82 Days that Inspired America New York Henry Holt 2008 by Thurston Clark Thomas p 356 a b Thomas p 357 Thomas pp 357 358 PBS American Experience 2004 07 01 RFK People and Events Cesar Chavez PBS Archived from the original on 2016 08 23 Retrieved 2012 05 24 Schlesinger Arthur M 1978 Robert Kennedy and His Times Vol 2 book club ed Boston Houghton Mifflin p 884 Thomas p 359 Kennedy Robert F Robert F Kennedy s Announcement of his candidacy for president Archived 2012 02 05 at the Wayback Machine speech Washington DC 1968 03 16 Retrieved 2012 05 17 Thomas p 360 On September 14 2009 the U S Senate passed a resolution to rename the Senate Caucus Room in the Russell Senate Office Building RSOB to the Kennedy Senate Caucus Room in honor of the three Kennedy brothers who served in the Senate chamber John F Kennedy and Robert F Kennedy announced their presidential campaigns in the room and their younger brother the late Senator Edward M Kennedy of Massachusetts who died of cancer in August 2009 chaired hearings in the room on a health care bill that bore his name CNN Political Tracker blog 2009 09 14 Senate Caucus Room renamed to honor Kennedy brothers CNN Political Tracker Retrieved 2012 05 18 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help Schlesinger p 860 Tye p 405 1968 A Seismic Year PDF John F Kennedy Presidential Library amp Museum 2018 Retrieved 19 January 2024 Robert F Kennedy campaigns for the presidency in South Boston Massachusetts March 17 1968 Kennedy Robert F Remarks at the University of Kansas speech Lawrence KS 1968 03 18 John F Kennedy Library Retrieved May 18 2012 Thomas p 365 Solberg Carl 1984 Hubert Humphrey A Biography New York W W Norton p 332 ISBN 9780393018066 Schlesinger p 923 Solberg pp 327 328 Cook Rhodes 2000 United States Presidential Primary Elections 1968 1996 A Handbook of Election Statistics Washington DC CQ Press pp 202 487 340 ISBN 9781568024516 Robert F Kennedy 1968 for President Campaign Brochure Retrieved 15 January 2024 Newfield Jack 1969 RFK A Memoir pp 36 37 73 74 Schlesinger 2002 1978 p xii xv Robert F Kennedy and the 1968 Campaign John F Kennedy Presidential Library amp Museum Sullivan Patricia 2021 Justice Rising Robert Kennedy s America in Black and White Harvard University Press p 393 Cite error The named reference Schlesinger 2002 1978 p xvi was invoked but never defined see the help page Clarke p 26 166 255 Newfield Jack 1969 RFK A Memoir p 230 Zeitz Joshua June 5 2018 The Bobby Kennedy Myth Politico Thomas p 371 a b c d e Robert F Kennedy 1968 for President Campaign Brochure Accessed May 20 2018 Parise Theresa 2006 01 17 Robert F Kennedy Miscellaneous Information John F Kennedy Presidential Library Archived from the original on 2009 03 03 Retrieved 2009 05 03 a b New Robert F Kennedy biography examines historic loss in Oregon presidential primary oregonlive com July 5 2016 Archived from the original on September 14 2016 In 1968 Robert F Kennedy called for gun control in Roseburg video oregonlive com October 4 2015 Archived from the original on August 23 2016 Levenson Eric October 6 2015 Video Robert F Kennedy once spoke about gun control in Roseburg Oregon Boston com Archived from the original on June 17 2016 Shesol p 305 Shesol p 344 a b Richardson Dary G 2002 A Nation Divided The 1968 Presidential Campaign iUniverse pp 52 55 ISBN 978 0595236992 a b Richardson pp 87 89 a b c d Schmitt pp 210 211 a b c Savage Sean J 2004 JFK LBJ and the Democratic Party State University of New York Press p 301 ISBN 978 0791461693 Hubert Tops Pennsylvania Delegate Poll Chicago Tribune May 27 1968 a b c d Savage Sean J 2004 JFK LBJ and the Democratic Party State University of New York Press p 305 ISBN 978 0791461693 Clarke p 262 McCarthy Wins Easily in Wisconsin Primary St Petersburg Times April 3 1968 Retrieved 26 November 2023 Solberg Carl 1984 Hubert Humphrey A Biography New York W W Norton p 332 ISBN 9780393018066 Richardson Darcy G 2002 A Nation Divided The 1968 Presidential Campaign p 81 Rosen Adele M May 1 1968 Rocky Shines in Primary Kennedy Edges Humphrey The Harvard Crimson Herbers John March 28 1968 Kennedy to Enter Indiana s PrimaryE The New York Times Retrieved 2010 05 22 Boomhower p 43 a b Kennedy Robert F Speech at Ball State University speech Ball State University Muncie IN 1968 04 04 Retrieved 2012 05 24 Boomhower pp 62 63 Boomhower pp 67 68 Thomas p 368 On The Mindless Menace of Violence The City Club of Cleveland Retrieved February 18 2017 a b Thomas p 369 Boomhower p 76 Boomhower p 78 Manly Chesely May 3 1968 Kennedy Tells Housing Plan Chicago Tribune Thomas p 369 Thomas p 375 PBS American Experience Shock Year 1968 May 7 Indiana Primary PBS Archived from the original on 2016 08 23 Retrieved 2012 05 24 Fast Facts about Robert F Kennedy John F Kennedy Presidential Library amp Museum KENNEDY CAPTURES CAPITAL S DELEGATES The New York Times New York New York May 8 1972 Retrieved October 5 2023 Wainstock Dennis 2012 Election Year 1968 The Turning Point Enigma Books p 78 a b Thomas p 377 Clarke pp 194 195 Dooley Brian 1996 Robert Kennedy The Final Years New York St Martin s Press p 128 ISBN 9780312161309 Mills p 428 Schlesinger p 929 Dooley p 129 Schlesinger p 906 Mills Judie 1998 Robert Kennedy Millbrook Press pp 430 432 ISBN 978 1562942502 a b Gould p 73 a b Richardson Darcy 2002 A Nation Divided The 1968 Presidential Campaign iUniverse p 100 ISBN 978 0595236992 Watch RFK talks gun control in Roseburg Oregon in 1968 CBS News Thomas p 382 Korman Seymour May 29 1968 McCarthy Defeats Bobby Chicago Tribune Remembering Robert F Kennedy California Secretary of State Clarke p 156 Thomas p 24 Wainstock Dennis 2012 Election Year 1968 The Turning Point Enigma Books p 86 Schlesinger pp 910 912 Wainstock Dennis 2012 Election Year 1968 The Turning Point Enigma Books p 89 Mills 1998 p 443 Schlesinger p 912 Schlesinger p 912 Thomas pp 24 25 Clarke p 265 Clarke p 268 Palermo Joseph A 2001 In His Own Right The Political Odyssey of Senator Robert F Kennedy Columbia University Press p 245 Clarke p 266 Smith Jeffrey K 2010 Bad Blood Lyndon B Johnson Robert F Kennedy and the Tumultuous 1960s p 266 Thomas p 387 Remembering Robert Kennedy 50 Years After His Assassination CBS News Martinez Michael 2011 03 01 Sirhan Sirhan convicted RFK assassin to face parole board CNN Archived from the original on 2012 11 10 Retrieved 2012 05 24 Issenberg Sasha 2008 06 05 Slaying gave US a first taste of Mideast terror Boston com The Boston Globe Archived from the original on 2012 01 11 Retrieved 2012 05 17 Dooley p 140 a b Edward M Kennedy Address at the Public Memorial Service for Robert F Kennedy American Rhetoric Top 100 Speeches Archived from the original on 2008 05 09 Retrieved 2009 08 29 Thomas p 393 Arango Tim 2018 06 05 A Campaign a Murder a Legacy Robert F Kennedy s California Story The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 04 28 Isaacson Walter 2011 Profiles in Leadership Historians on the Elusive Quality of Greatness W W Norton amp Company p 287 ISBN 978 0393340761 Clarke Thurston 2008 The Last Campaign Robert F Kennedy and 82 Days That Inspired America Henry Holt and Co pp 62 63 ISBN 978 0805077926 a b c LaFeber Walter 2005 The Deadly Bet LBJ Vietnam and the 1968 Election Vietnam America in the War Years Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers pp 89 94 ISBN 978 0742543928 a b Cohen p 129 a b c Higgins Will April 2 2015 April 4 1968 How RFK saved Indianapolis The Indianapolis Star Retrieved August 30 2020 a b Stricherz Mark February 21 2008 The Death of the Bobby Kennedy Coalition Crisis Magazine Why the Democrats are Blue How Secular Liberals Hijacked the People s Party Encounter Books 2007 p 126 ISBN 978 1594032059 Tye p 430 Tye Larry July 7 2016 The Most Trusted White Man in Black America Politico Archived from the original on November 16 2016 Cohen p 82 Pawel Miriam The Crusades of Cesar Chavez A Biography Bloomsbury Press p 170 Tye p 359 a b Pedersen Carl 2009 Obama s America Edinburgh University Press pp 78 79 ISBN 978 0748638949 Bruns Roger A 2013 Encyclopedia of Cesar Chavez The Farm Workers Fight for Rights and Justice Movements of the American Mosaic Greenwood p 139 ISBN 978 1440803802 Capps Steven A May 31 1998 30 YEARS AGO Remembering Robert F Kennedy s California campaign Kitsapsun com Caldwell Christopher January 26 2000 The Electorate Bobby Built Archived from the original on January 24 2015 Smith Jeffery K 2010 Bad Blood Lyndon B Johnson Robert F Kennedy and the Tumultuous 1960s AuthorHouse p 230 ISBN 978 1452084435 Shesol p 309 Savage Sean J 2004 JFK LBJ and the Democratic Party State University of New York Press p 289 ISBN 978 0791461693 Smith p 235 King William March 18 1968 Bobby Has Grave Reservations About Backing LBJ in 68 Race Chicago Tribune Clarke p 29 Cohen Michael A 2016 American Maelstrom The 1968 Election and the Politics of Division Oxford University Press p 104 ISBN 978 0199777563 Gould Lewis L 1993 1968 The Election That Changed America Ivan R Dee p 45 ISBN 978 1566630092 Bzdek p 136 Shesol p 439 Smith p 244 Shesol pp 446 447 Thomas Evan 2002 Robert Kennedy His Life Simon amp Schuster p 365 ISBN 978 0743203296 Sandbrook Dominic 2004 Eugene McCarthy The Rise and Fall of Postwar American Liberalism Knopf p 191 ISBN 978 1400041053 Smith p 237 Wainstock Dennis 2012 Election Year 1968 The Turning Point Enigma Books p 76 ISBN 978 1936274413 Sandbrook pp 187 188 Cohen p 115 Mills p 401 a b Cohen p 123 Cohen p 136 a b Mills p 446 RFK Reverses Self On Viet Hubert Says Chicago Tribune March 19 1968 Bobby Welcomes Hubert to Vote Race Chicago Tribune April 28 1968 LaFeber p 122 Solberg p 333 Schlesinger p 907 Mills p 438 Thomas p 388 Solberg Carl 2005 Hubert Humphrey A Biography Borealis Books p 340 ISBN 978 0873514736 Savage pp 308 309 Gould p 48 Clarke pp 22 24 Black Conrad 2007 Richard M Nixon A Life in Full Public Affairs p 523 ISBN 978 1586485191 Shesol Jeff 1998 Mutual Contempt Lyndon Johnson Robert Kennedy and the Feud that Defined a Decade W W Norton amp Company p 379 ISBN 978 0393318555 Nixon Richard 1978 RN The Memoirs of Richard Nixon Grosset amp Dunlap ISBN 978 0333230213 I believed that Hubert Humphrey had waited too long before declaring his candidacy and I saw no way a Kennedy juggernaut could be stopped once it had acquired the momentum of a California victory Bzdek p 133 Oppenheimer Jerry 2015 RFK Jr Robert F Kennedy Jr and the Dark Side of the Dream St Martin s Press p 26 ISBN 978 1250032959 Bzdek Vincent 2009 The Kennedy Legacy Jack Bobby and Ted and a Family Dream Fulfilled St Martin s Press p 130 ISBN 978 0230613676 Here s What RFK Did in California in 1968 a b c d e Cite error The named reference multiple endorsements was invoked but never defined see the help page Cite error The named reference obit was invoked but never defined see the help page a b c d e f g h i j k l m Cite error The named reference celebrity endorsements was invoked but never defined see the help page Celebrities Endorse Candidates Daily Collegian State College PA May 5 1968 Celebrities Endorse Candidates Daily Collegian State College PA May 5 1968 In His Own Right The Political Odyssey of Senator Robert F Kennedy Joseph Palermo 2001 Celebrities Endorse Candidates Daily Collegian State College PA May 5 1968 Celebrities Endorse Candidates Daily Collegian State College PA May 5 1968 Celebrities Endorse Candidates Daily Collegian State College PA May 5 1968 LIFE May 10 1968 LIFE May 10 1968 In His Own Right The Political Odyssey of Senator Robert F Kennedy Joseph Palermo 2001 Celebrities Endorse Candidates Daily Collegian State College PA May 5 1968 LIFE May 10 1968 In His Own Right The Political Odyssey of Senator Robert F Kennedy Joseph Palermo 2001 In His Own Right The Political Odyssey of Senator Robert F Kennedy Joseph Palermo 2001 In His Own Right The Political Odyssey of Senator Robert F Kennedy Joseph Palermo 2001 LIFE May 10 1968 In His Own Right The Political Odyssey of Senator Robert F Kennedy Joseph Palermo 2001 Celebrities Endorse Candidates Daily Collegian State College PA May 5 1968 In His Own Right The Political Odyssey of Senator Robert F Kennedy Joseph Palermo 2001 Celebrities Endorse Candidates Daily Collegian State College PA May 5 1968 Celebrities Endorse Candidates Daily Collegian State College PA May 5 1968 In His Own Right The Political Odyssey of Senator Robert F Kennedy Joseph Palermo 2001 In His Own Right The Political Odyssey of Senator Robert F Kennedy Joseph Palermo 2001 Celebrities Endorse Candidates Daily Collegian State College PA May 5 1968 In His Own Right The Political Odyssey of Senator Robert F Kennedy Joseph Palermo 2001 In His Own Right The Political Odyssey of Senator Robert F Kennedy Joseph Palermo 2001 LIFE May 10 1968 In His Own Right The Political Odyssey of Senator Robert F Kennedy Joseph Palermo 2001 Celebrities Endorse Candidates Daily Collegian State College PA May 5 1968 In His Own Right The Political Odyssey of Senator Robert F Kennedy Joseph Palermo 2001 In His Own Right The Political Odyssey of Senator Robert F Kennedy Joseph Palermo 2001Bibliography editClarke Thurston June 2008 The Last Good Campaign Vanity Fair Archived from the original on 2014 12 20 Damore Leo 1988 Senatorial Privilege The Chappaquiddick Cover up New York Dell Publishing ISBN 0 440 20416 X Hersh Burton 2007 Bobby and J Edgar The Historic Face Off Between the Kennedys and J Edgar Hoover That Transformed America Basic Books ISBN 978 0786719822 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert F Kennedy 1968 presidential campaign amp oldid 1208934200, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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