Lesley Stahl | 09/21/2009 8:00 am
Lesley Stahl: 'I Was Left With the Impression Ted Jr. Would Run for Public Office Someday' (Video)

By now you’ve probably seen Ted Jr., Sen. Kennedy’s son, a lot. He’s been on TV talking about his dad’s memoir. But when I met him for a "60 Minutes" interview a week or so ago, all I knew about him was that he’d lost his leg to bone cancer when he was 12 and that he’d given one hell of a powerful speech at his father’s funeral. So when I went to Hyannis Port to meet him for the first time, I didn’t know what to expect.
There are no fences.
In the past, when I thought of the Kennedy compound at Hyannis Port, I always imagined a fortress, castle walls, a real Cape Cod Camelot, maybe even a moat. And yet here sat those famous Kennedy houses looking exposed and vulnerable. They even had next-door neighbors. I liked this famous family all the more for not living behind barbed wire.
As Robert Frost – who spoke at John Kennedy’s inaugural – wrote in one of his most famous poems:
Before I built a wall I’d ask to know
What I was walling in or walling out,
And to whom I was like to give offence.
Something there is that doesn’t love a wall,
That wants it down.
The walls of prejudice are what brought the Kennedys to Hyannis Port in the first place: Way back at the beginning, it had the only nice golf course that allowed Catholics to play.
The Kennedy houses are huddled together like players huddling up in long-ago touch football games on the lawn. Teddy Kennedy’s house, which is on the water, almost rubs shoulders with JFK’s house, which isn’t. None of them are estate-sized mansions, just comfortably large.
When Ted Jr. learned his father had brain cancer, he bought JFK’s house so he could live next door to his father during the last months of his life. Ted Jr. tells us this house is where Jack learned that he had been elected president. Bobby Kennedy’s house was next door.
As I sat opposite this young man (well, not that young: he’s
47), he would look nothing like a Kennedy one minute, and then he would! I’d be wondering: Who does he look like, sound like? And then, suddenly, he’d be the image of his father, with a voice right out of old Irish Boston.
In one of those almost eerie moments — there in the Kennedy compound — I heard myself ask the inevitable question: "What about you?"
"What about me?" he asked back.
"Politics? Family business? Ever?"
"You know, I’d be lying to you if I told you that I never thought about going into politics," he said. "I think everybody in my family at one point or another thinks about politics. And it’s something that I’ve thought about."
Clearly alluding to his own childhood, he said his daughter, 15, and son, 11, were too young for him to spend the time away from them that a life in politics would inevitably require. "I’m told there will be a day where they won’t want to hang out with me anymore. And maybe after then I’ll choose to do something."
Sitting there in what felt like an active compound – Ethel was next door playing in her yard with a slew of her grandchildren – I thought it was a place with more history to make. I was left with the impression Ted Jr. would run for public office someday.
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65 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
Great article. I hope he runs…….
Lesley, wonderful piece on Ted Kennedy Jr.
I too hope he does run. He seems to be such a down to Earth, real and honest man, exactly what is needed in politics. And because of his moral compass, he doesn’t seem like the type of man that would allow politics to change him. He is such a beautiful man.
Sitting there in what felt like an active compound – Ethel was next door playing in her yard with a slew of her grandchildren – I thought it was a place with more history to make.
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The Kennedys as family is something no one has ever really been able to criticize. Through thick and thin they have remained a family. Particularly there at Hyannis Port.
Just maybe through our own generations knowing that Hyannis Port was "home" to the Kennedy’s, a respect of home gave us images of castle and moat and security for them. With that respect they were granted the peace of a personal existence.
Great interview, will be interesting to see his future in our country!
Thank you.
DOESN
T IT MAKE US FEEL PROUD TO HAVE HAD THE KENNEDYS AS A POLITICAL FAMILY HEL[ING US OUT OF ALL OF THE ROUGH SPOTS……….I SAY THANK YOU FOR WRITTING THIS PIECE. I SAY THANK GOD FOR THE WONDERFUL FAMILY WE’/’VE WATCHED GROW OVER THESE YEARS. I SAY WHY CAN ‘T THESE NEW FAMILIES OF THESE NEW KIDS NOT CATCH ON TO THE FACT THAT THE KENNEDYS ARE WHAT WE NEED MORE OF . WHY IS IT THE PARENTS FO TODAY THINK ONLY IF THEIR CHILDREN DO DRUGS DRINK TOO MUCH ETC. IS WHAT A CLASSY FAMIOLY REALLY IS? WHAT THE HELL HAPPENED TO THE FAMILIES OF AMERICA TODAY? ANYONE GOT ANY ANSWERS TO THIS REMARK? ANY CLUES WHY PARENTS DO NOT TELL THE KIDS HEY KID I AM YOUR PARENT AND YOU WILL LEARN CLASS AND HOW SOCIETY GOES. ?????????????????? WE NEED MORE KENNEDY’S!!!!!!!!
newzie snoozie - Many of us have lived, loved and cried with the Kennedys. They truly are a most remarkable family and I hope they always remain.
What you say about some of to-day’s children is so true and I too have contemplated the very question you ask. Could it be that the people who should be teaching our youngsters the “right way” are the very ones who were not taught the “right way” by their parents. Maybe a generation was missed there somewhere? It is not an easy problem to solve.
Newzie,
I beg to differ.
Yes, there are those, who are living productive and stable lives, but one can most certainly not talk about them as one uniform unit. The Kennedy family, as a whole, is a very complex and complicated family that has not consistently depicted class. Loyal to each other they are, many committed to public service for sure, but one should take a look at each individual.
Ted Jr. gives every impression of being a low key grounded man, who is committed to his marriage, children, and the road he chose over politics. His father, Ted Sr., however, despite being an effective senator, he spent his later years, while married to Vicky Reggie, making amends for a far from exemplary life. We can’t discount the fact he was, by many accounts, desrespectful and sacrificed his first marriage and the life of a young woman.
Robert Kennedy’s children have also battled their demons, misbehaved, abused drugs and alcohol, treated their spouses disrespectfully, and at least 5 of them have had very messy lives indeed.
Jean Kennedy Smith’s son was acquitted of rape, but what he was accused of was rooted in his own bad behavior one night in Palm Beach, while in the company of Uncle Ted and his cousins.
Their own cousin, John Kennedy, jr., desccribed his cousins as "poster boys for bad behavior"
I am often amazed by how many women fawn over the Kennedy family, when they have a history (from old Joe Kennedy right through to his grandsons) of treating women so poorly.
Thanks, Lesley! This was a terrific interview: insightful, informatine and classy. (And believe me, nowadays that last word can be applied only with great judiciousness, if at all!) I thought it revealed something really fundamental about why the Kennedy family is so fascinating. They stick together through everything. The fact that this man, Ted, Jr., thought immediately after his dad’s diagnosis, that he’d better buy the house next door to be there for his father spoke volumes. We all know Senator Kennedy was a sometimes flawed man. But obviously there were values imbued in him that he passed to his children. And the biggest of those values was about the strength and importance of a family staying close no matter what happens in life.
At the end of the interview, I understood why Ted, Jr. would decline the idea of politics, but I regret it. He has so much of what I think it takes to make it in the fickle game of political life: empathy, true concern for others, the ideal of a life of service, and - maybe most of all - loyalty. These were the qualities I believe his father had in abundance, no matter what other flaws he had. And in the end, these were the qualities that survived and made him the lion he was.