USA TODAY US Edition

‘Road to Camelot’ paved by JFK

Authors debunk popular reasons for his ascension

- RAY LOCKER JI HOON HEO Locker is the Washington enterprise editor of USA TODAY and author of Nixon’s Gamble: How a President’s Own Secret Government Destroyed His Administra­tion.

Followers of American political history are no doubt familiar with how John Kennedy got elected president in 1960, particular­ly the influence of his rich father, Joseph, and the favorable comparison­s between the handsome senator from Massachuse­tts and his opponent, Republican Vice President Richard Nixon.

Kennedy looked cool on television; Nixon looked haggard. A national desire for vigor in the Oval Office after eight years of Dwight Eisenhower pushed Kennedy into the White House in a razorthin election victory.

The accepted wisdom, however, underestim­ates Kennedy’s role in engineerin­g his election, authors Thomas Oliphant and Curtis Wilkie write in their new book, The Road to Camelot: Inside JFK’s Five-Year Campaign (Simon & Schuster, 448 pp., ★★★★ out of four). The future president, they show, was not just a political in- genue known for his beautiful young wife and record as a World War II naval hero.

Instead, the Jack Kennedy described here started his move to the White House by turning a loss into a win. He sought the Democratic nomination for vice president in 1956 with Adlai Stevenson, but lost in an open convention vote.

“His campaign was not a scripted operation but a long, continuous pursuit,” Oliphant and Wilkie write. “At first it was tentative, with Kennedy appearing detached, even doubtful. But by the end of the summer of 1956 Kennedy felt the presidency was staring him in the face. On Thanksgivi­ng that year he made the commitment to start running.” Longtime reporters for The Boston Globe, Oliphant and Wilkie excel here in taking the accepted knowledge of Kennedy’s rise, debunking some of the convention­al wisdom (such as Joe Kennedy’s role as his son’s Svengali) and adding new details that provide a richer history of our 35th president.

They also rap Kennedy for his accommodat­ions to southern Democrats who were notoriousl­y against civil rights, showing how the Massachuse­tts Democrat was willing to tolerate their racism in order to get elected, “an extraordin­ary exercise, a tightrope walk between the southern forces and a civil rights movement beginning to gather momentum.”

Oliphant and Wilkie also trash the myth that Nixon had magnanimou­sly acknowledg­ed the close election by instead noting how Nixon went along with Republican attempts to challenge the results.

“But Nixon’s narrative is false,” they write. “When (Republican chairman Thruston) Morton outlined his plans, Nixon could have stopped him on the spot with a simple, forceful request. He didn’t, making him tacitly complicit in what followed.”

The authors’ knowledge of politics, campaigns and the presidency crackles off each page. They touch all the Kennedy bases here, detailing the roles played by Robert Kennedy, the candidate’s brother, as well as aides Theodore Sorenson, Lawrence O’Brien and others.

Oliphant and Wilkie also give life to long-forgotten players in Massachuse­tts politics, such as former state Democratic Party chairman William “Onions” Burke, a western Massachuse­tts onion farmer whom Kennedy ousted during a contentiou­s 1956 party convention.

They take Kennedy from his time as a relative lightweigh­t with a thin Senate résumé to an iconic president, which makes The Road

to Camelot a must-read for fans of presidenti­al history.

 ?? AP ?? John F. Kennedy delivers his inaugural address Jan. 20, 1961. The authors give the president far more credit for his rise to the office than others have in the past.
AP John F. Kennedy delivers his inaugural address Jan. 20, 1961. The authors give the president far more credit for his rise to the office than others have in the past.
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 ??  ?? Curtis Wilkie
Curtis Wilkie
 ?? SUSAN SPENCER ?? Thomas Oliphant
SUSAN SPENCER Thomas Oliphant

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