page_6
To the disappointment of liberal Democrats, Kennedy soft-pedaled the demagogic
excesses of Senator Joseph R. McCarthy of Wisconsin, who in the early 1950s
conducted witch-hunting campaigns against government workers accused of being
communists. Kennedy's father liked McCarthy, contributed to his campaign,
and even entertained him in the family's compound at Hyannis Port on Cape
Cod in Massachusetts. Kennedy himself disapproved of McCarthy, but as he
once observed, "Half my people in Massachusetts look on McCarthy as a hero."
Yet on the Senate vote over condemnation of McCarthy's conduct (1954), Kennedy
expected to vote against him. He prepared a speech explaining why, but he
was absent on the day of the vote. Later, at a National Press Club Gridiron
dinner, costumed reporters sang, "Where were you, John, where were you, John,
when the Senate censured Joe?" Actually, John had been in a hospital, in
critical condition after back surgery. For six months afterward he lay strapped
to a board in his father's house in Palm Beach, Florida. It was during this
period that he worked on Profiles in Courage (1956), an account of eight
great American political leaders who had defied popular opinion in matters
of conscience, which was awarded a Pulitzer Prize in 1957. Although Kennedy
was credited as the book's author, it was later revealed that his assistant
Theodore Sorensen had done much of the research and writing.
Page created by
Sharani Robins
