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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02,462 --> 00:00:03,502 narrator: Previously on "Kennedy"... 2 00:00:15,517 --> 00:00:17,147 - He’d climb one rung of the ladder. 3 00:00:17,185 --> 00:00:19,315 Then he’d start looking to the next one. 4 00:00:19,396 --> 00:00:22,316 narrator: The presidential election of 1956 5 00:00:22,399 --> 00:00:24,269 would be an important opportunity 6 00:00:24,359 --> 00:00:27,609 for Kennedy to gain momentum on his political journey. 7 00:00:27,696 --> 00:00:31,706 - He spotted a potential opening for himself, 8 00:00:31,783 --> 00:00:35,583 so Kennedy thought he could butter up Adlai Stevenson 9 00:00:35,662 --> 00:00:39,412 and be chosen as an ideal running mate. 10 00:00:39,499 --> 00:00:42,829 - He campaigns vigorously for Adlai Stevenson. 11 00:00:42,919 --> 00:00:46,249 narrator: He would soon know if his efforts had been enough 12 00:00:46,339 --> 00:00:49,379 to claim the vice presidential nomination. 13 00:00:49,467 --> 00:00:51,387 [dramatic music] 14 00:00:51,469 --> 00:00:53,179 - To lead us to a fruitful America, 15 00:00:53,263 --> 00:00:55,183 from the state of Massachusetts, 16 00:00:55,265 --> 00:00:58,775 John F. Kennedy. 17 00:00:58,852 --> 00:01:00,852 narrator: John F. Kennedy lived a life that would help 18 00:01:00,937 --> 00:01:03,357 define an entire generation. 19 00:01:03,440 --> 00:01:05,020 ♪ ♪ 20 00:01:05,066 --> 00:01:07,326 - Together we shall save our planet, 21 00:01:07,402 --> 00:01:10,612 or together we shall perish in its flames. 22 00:01:10,697 --> 00:01:12,247 - What was it about that guy? 23 00:01:12,365 --> 00:01:16,165 - Looks, style, empathy. 24 00:01:16,286 --> 00:01:18,086 He was incredibly charming. 25 00:01:18,163 --> 00:01:20,623 - Intellectual and progressive. 26 00:01:20,707 --> 00:01:22,467 - He was the future. He was next. 27 00:01:22,542 --> 00:01:24,462 ♪ ♪ 28 00:01:24,544 --> 00:01:27,134 narrator: President for just over a thousand days, 29 00:01:27,213 --> 00:01:29,753 Kennedy navigated events and crises 30 00:01:29,841 --> 00:01:31,921 that changed the world. 31 00:01:32,010 --> 00:01:33,380 - Kennedy is feeling the pressure 32 00:01:33,470 --> 00:01:34,930 from the civil rights activists. 33 00:01:35,013 --> 00:01:37,393 - This was a country on nuclear war footing. 34 00:01:37,474 --> 00:01:39,514 ♪ ♪ 35 00:01:39,601 --> 00:01:40,851 - This could be the last mistake 36 00:01:40,935 --> 00:01:42,315 that anybody makes politically. 37 00:01:42,395 --> 00:01:44,985 ♪ ♪ 38 00:01:45,065 --> 00:01:47,905 - He changed us in the process of his own growth. 39 00:01:47,984 --> 00:01:50,694 - We choose to go to the moon in this decade 40 00:01:50,779 --> 00:01:54,149 and do the other things, not because they are easy 41 00:01:54,240 --> 00:01:55,700 but because they are hard. 42 00:01:55,784 --> 00:01:57,534 ♪ ♪ 43 00:01:57,619 --> 00:02:00,159 narrator: 60 years after his assassination, 44 00:02:00,288 --> 00:02:03,958 we are still fascinated by the triumphs and flaws 45 00:02:04,042 --> 00:02:07,632 of the youngest president ever elected. 46 00:02:07,712 --> 00:02:11,632 - I ask you to join us in all the tomorrows yet to come 47 00:02:11,716 --> 00:02:15,016 in building America, moving America, 48 00:02:15,095 --> 00:02:17,095 picking this country of ours up, 49 00:02:17,180 --> 00:02:18,890 and sending it into the ’60s. 50 00:02:18,973 --> 00:02:25,893 ♪ ♪ 51 00:02:30,902 --> 00:02:33,572 ♪ ♪ 52 00:02:33,655 --> 00:02:37,115 narrator: August 1956. 53 00:02:37,200 --> 00:02:38,870 ♪ ♪ 54 00:02:38,952 --> 00:02:40,582 It was off to Chicago 55 00:02:40,662 --> 00:02:44,662 for the 1956 Democratic National Convention. 56 00:02:44,749 --> 00:02:46,999 - These are taking place in the televised age 57 00:02:47,127 --> 00:02:49,007 by the 1950s and ’60s. 58 00:02:49,129 --> 00:02:52,339 And part of what parties are trying to do 59 00:02:52,424 --> 00:02:53,964 is tell Americans 60 00:02:54,050 --> 00:02:56,220 what kinds of issues do they stand for, 61 00:02:56,302 --> 00:02:58,642 who are some of our most exciting figures, 62 00:02:58,722 --> 00:03:00,602 who are the voices of the future. 63 00:03:00,682 --> 00:03:04,142 That’s where Kennedy fits in in 1956. 64 00:03:04,185 --> 00:03:07,065 narrator: When Kennedy arrived, he denied allegations 65 00:03:07,105 --> 00:03:10,065 that he sought the vice presidential nomination. 66 00:03:10,150 --> 00:03:12,110 - Playing games, clearly, 67 00:03:12,193 --> 00:03:15,113 he was better prepared than anybody. 68 00:03:15,196 --> 00:03:17,906 That was really his first gambit 69 00:03:17,991 --> 00:03:21,121 was to seize control of the state 70 00:03:21,202 --> 00:03:24,332 Democratic apparatus, which he did. 71 00:03:24,414 --> 00:03:27,584 narrator: Secretly, his team had prepared for months, 72 00:03:27,667 --> 00:03:31,177 working to support Stevenson and boost Kennedy’s chance 73 00:03:31,254 --> 00:03:34,424 to be chosen as his running mate. 74 00:03:34,466 --> 00:03:38,226 However, Stevenson decided not to choose at all. 75 00:03:48,438 --> 00:03:50,198 narrator: Stevenson decided he would allow 76 00:03:50,273 --> 00:03:53,233 state delegates to choose the nominee, 77 00:03:53,318 --> 00:03:55,908 meaning each vice presidential candidate would have 78 00:03:55,987 --> 00:03:58,407 to scramble for the next 24 hours, 79 00:03:58,490 --> 00:04:00,740 trying to collect the most votes. 80 00:04:00,784 --> 00:04:02,914 ♪ ♪ 81 00:04:02,994 --> 00:04:05,664 Kennedy decided to chase the nomination. 82 00:04:05,705 --> 00:04:08,335 Rushing to pull a team together, 83 00:04:08,416 --> 00:04:11,466 Kennedy, his family members, Sorensen, 84 00:04:11,544 --> 00:04:14,634 and the larger Kennedy machine went into motion. 85 00:04:14,714 --> 00:04:16,714 It was a frenzied, messy, 86 00:04:16,800 --> 00:04:19,760 nonstop political free-for-all. 87 00:04:19,886 --> 00:04:21,306 - It’s fascinating. 88 00:04:21,387 --> 00:04:24,187 We’re still in the era of backroom politics 89 00:04:24,224 --> 00:04:26,314 with smoky back rooms, you know? 90 00:04:26,392 --> 00:04:28,892 This is not an era as we live in now 91 00:04:28,978 --> 00:04:32,228 where it’s all decided before that convention starts. 92 00:04:32,315 --> 00:04:34,775 I mean, was Keith Arthur gonna be named, 93 00:04:34,859 --> 00:04:38,529 or was Kennedy gonna be named? 94 00:04:38,613 --> 00:04:40,823 narrator: Kennedy’s team raced around the convention, 95 00:04:40,865 --> 00:04:43,785 trying to secure as many delegates as possible 96 00:04:43,868 --> 00:04:46,778 to win the vice presidential nomination. 97 00:04:46,871 --> 00:04:49,701 The hotel room- turned-campaign headquarters 98 00:04:49,791 --> 00:04:52,211 was suddenly bursting with activity. 99 00:04:52,293 --> 00:04:54,503 ♪ ♪ 100 00:04:54,587 --> 00:04:57,137 Bobby Kennedy took on a key campaign role, 101 00:04:57,215 --> 00:04:59,715 attempting to personally persuade delegates 102 00:04:59,801 --> 00:05:01,471 to vote for his brother 103 00:05:01,553 --> 00:05:05,473 and scolding them if they didn’t. 104 00:05:05,557 --> 00:05:08,977 During that frantic 24 hours, Kennedy’s father, Joe, 105 00:05:09,060 --> 00:05:11,100 called campaign headquarters. 106 00:05:11,187 --> 00:05:13,487 Bobby answered the phone. 107 00:05:13,606 --> 00:05:16,316 The room froze and stared at Bobby, 108 00:05:16,401 --> 00:05:18,731 observing his alarmed reaction to what he heard 109 00:05:18,820 --> 00:05:20,490 on the other end of the line. 110 00:05:20,572 --> 00:05:22,532 ♪ ♪ 111 00:05:22,615 --> 00:05:25,665 Joe was incensed that his son had decided 112 00:05:25,743 --> 00:05:28,583 to run for the vice presidential nomination, 113 00:05:28,663 --> 00:05:30,663 certain that a defeat would destroy 114 00:05:30,748 --> 00:05:33,118 Jack’s political future. 115 00:05:33,209 --> 00:05:34,999 - You can imagine, you know, 116 00:05:35,128 --> 00:05:37,848 probably a good bit of profanity, 117 00:05:37,922 --> 00:05:41,052 telling him how dumb they were to do it. 118 00:05:41,134 --> 00:05:44,184 narrator: Joe insisted that Kennedy back down. 119 00:05:44,262 --> 00:05:46,892 Jack refused. 120 00:05:46,973 --> 00:05:48,683 As the results were tallied, 121 00:05:48,808 --> 00:05:51,178 Kennedy seemed to be in the lead. 122 00:05:51,269 --> 00:05:53,059 - So yeah, I watched it, 123 00:05:53,104 --> 00:05:57,064 and I’m begging them to pick John F. Kennedy. 124 00:05:57,150 --> 00:05:58,900 ♪ ♪ 125 00:05:58,985 --> 00:06:00,575 narrator: Campaign headquarters waited 126 00:06:00,653 --> 00:06:02,443 in joyful anticipation, 127 00:06:02,530 --> 00:06:05,820 but suddenly there was a roadblock. 128 00:06:05,867 --> 00:06:08,127 The votes began to swing in favor 129 00:06:08,202 --> 00:06:10,832 of Tennessee senator Estes Kefauver. 130 00:06:10,914 --> 00:06:12,954 Before long, two candidates, 131 00:06:13,041 --> 00:06:15,461 Senator Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota 132 00:06:15,543 --> 00:06:17,463 and Albert Gore of Tennessee, 133 00:06:17,545 --> 00:06:19,715 receded from the race. 134 00:06:19,797 --> 00:06:22,927 As the final votes came in, the Kennedy camp knew 135 00:06:23,009 --> 00:06:25,509 it was not in his favor. 136 00:06:25,595 --> 00:06:29,145 ♪ ♪ 137 00:06:29,223 --> 00:06:33,353 In the end, Kefauver won the nomination for vice president. 138 00:06:33,436 --> 00:06:36,106 - The Democratic Party will go from this convention 139 00:06:36,189 --> 00:06:38,979 far stronger for what we have done here today. 140 00:06:39,025 --> 00:06:40,865 ♪ ♪ 141 00:06:40,944 --> 00:06:43,614 narrator: Kennedy returned home empty-handed after losing 142 00:06:43,696 --> 00:06:45,906 the vice presidential nomination, 143 00:06:45,990 --> 00:06:48,870 but he had won a major victory. 144 00:06:48,952 --> 00:06:51,742 After appearing on TV numerous times 145 00:06:51,829 --> 00:06:54,079 and proving himself a charming, youthful, 146 00:06:54,207 --> 00:06:57,007 and hardworking presence at the convention, 147 00:06:57,126 --> 00:06:59,716 Kennedy had a surge in popularity. 148 00:06:59,796 --> 00:07:01,716 - I want to take this opportunity 149 00:07:01,798 --> 00:07:05,308 first to express my appreciation. 150 00:07:05,385 --> 00:07:07,055 ♪ ♪ 151 00:07:07,136 --> 00:07:08,976 - He has used this to get his name out there. 152 00:07:09,055 --> 00:07:11,935 He’s used this to make deals, to make friends, 153 00:07:12,016 --> 00:07:14,436 to try to add to his organization. 154 00:07:14,519 --> 00:07:16,559 ♪ ♪ 155 00:07:16,688 --> 00:07:18,148 narrator: Following Stevenson’s defeat 156 00:07:18,231 --> 00:07:20,061 and Eisenhower’s reelection, 157 00:07:20,149 --> 00:07:22,439 the Kennedy family gathered at Hyannis Port 158 00:07:22,568 --> 00:07:26,568 for Thanksgiving in 1956. 159 00:07:26,656 --> 00:07:29,996 Kennedy and his father, Joe, are huddled in a small study, 160 00:07:30,076 --> 00:07:32,376 discussing the future. 161 00:07:32,453 --> 00:07:34,743 After Kennedy’s surge in popularity 162 00:07:34,831 --> 00:07:37,161 at the Democratic National Convention, 163 00:07:37,250 --> 00:07:41,330 questions arose about a presidential run. 164 00:07:41,421 --> 00:07:44,001 Kennedy listed every reason why he believed 165 00:07:44,090 --> 00:07:46,800 running for president was a bad idea. 166 00:07:46,926 --> 00:07:50,136 His father countered each point one by one. 167 00:07:50,221 --> 00:07:52,221 ♪ ♪ 168 00:07:52,265 --> 00:07:54,435 The two went back and forth 169 00:07:54,517 --> 00:07:58,647 until the conversation reached a stalemate. 170 00:07:58,730 --> 00:08:01,350 Finally, Kennedy uttered four words 171 00:08:01,441 --> 00:08:05,151 that would unwittingly change the course of his life: 172 00:08:05,236 --> 00:08:07,826 where do we begin? 173 00:08:07,864 --> 00:08:12,204 ♪ ♪ 174 00:08:12,326 --> 00:08:14,086 - Somebody once asked him, 175 00:08:14,162 --> 00:08:15,542 why do you want to run for president? 176 00:08:15,621 --> 00:08:17,291 And his answer: 177 00:08:17,373 --> 00:08:19,503 that’s where the action is. 178 00:08:19,584 --> 00:08:22,004 He wanted to be where the action was. 179 00:08:22,128 --> 00:08:24,098 ♪ ♪ 180 00:08:24,172 --> 00:08:25,752 narrator: The Kennedy presidential campaign 181 00:08:25,840 --> 00:08:27,420 started very early, 182 00:08:27,508 --> 00:08:29,878 before any other candidate. 183 00:08:29,969 --> 00:08:32,049 Money could buy advertisements, 184 00:08:32,138 --> 00:08:35,898 but time was a luxury that could not be purchased. 185 00:08:35,975 --> 00:08:40,355 Ted Sorensen said one hour of work in 1957 186 00:08:40,438 --> 00:08:45,408 was the equivalent to two hours of work in 1958. 187 00:08:45,526 --> 00:08:47,286 - And in those days, Kennedy was not traveling 188 00:08:47,361 --> 00:08:49,191 with a great entourage. 189 00:08:49,280 --> 00:08:50,820 It was basically Ted, 190 00:08:50,865 --> 00:08:53,415 who would keep track of the speeches. 191 00:08:53,493 --> 00:08:55,203 He would attend and listen carefully 192 00:08:55,328 --> 00:08:58,418 to every speech, what worked, what didn’t, 193 00:08:58,498 --> 00:09:01,298 what could be more clear. 194 00:09:01,375 --> 00:09:03,425 They analyzed the political situation. 195 00:09:03,503 --> 00:09:05,423 What were the key states? 196 00:09:05,505 --> 00:09:07,215 And that’s where they started. 197 00:09:07,298 --> 00:09:09,048 ♪ ♪ 198 00:09:09,133 --> 00:09:11,803 narrator: In 1957, Kennedy participated 199 00:09:11,928 --> 00:09:14,938 in more than 140 campaign events, 200 00:09:15,014 --> 00:09:17,934 building momentum for his presidential run 201 00:09:18,017 --> 00:09:23,397 as well as his upcoming Senate reelection race in 1958. 202 00:09:23,481 --> 00:09:25,271 - The number of days on the road 203 00:09:25,358 --> 00:09:28,578 in ’57, ’58, ’59, 204 00:09:28,653 --> 00:09:31,533 there’s a famous story about Lyndon Johnson looking up 205 00:09:31,614 --> 00:09:34,994 one day in the Senate in ’57 or ’58 206 00:09:35,076 --> 00:09:37,166 and saying something like, where’s Kennedy? 207 00:09:37,286 --> 00:09:38,956 I never see him around. 208 00:09:39,038 --> 00:09:40,698 ♪ ♪ 209 00:09:40,790 --> 00:09:42,080 narrator: He spent a great deal of time 210 00:09:42,208 --> 00:09:44,048 drumming up support from 211 00:09:44,168 --> 00:09:47,338 and forming relationships with journalists, 212 00:09:47,421 --> 00:09:51,381 taking advantage of each press inquiry. 213 00:09:51,467 --> 00:09:54,137 - There was a tremendous amount of exposure 214 00:09:54,220 --> 00:09:57,970 in the national mass circulation press, 215 00:09:58,057 --> 00:10:00,517 "Time" magazine, "Life." 216 00:10:00,601 --> 00:10:03,431 narrator: Kennedy created a campaign division 217 00:10:03,521 --> 00:10:07,611 solely to monitor public opinion and collect data. 218 00:10:07,692 --> 00:10:10,482 - They’re writing down the name and the address 219 00:10:10,570 --> 00:10:13,150 of every single person that he’s met, 220 00:10:13,239 --> 00:10:15,279 putting it on an index card. 221 00:10:15,408 --> 00:10:21,668 By 1960, they have maybe 10,000 index cards. 222 00:10:21,706 --> 00:10:23,956 - It gave a personal touch to it 223 00:10:24,041 --> 00:10:26,041 so that the audience felt 224 00:10:26,169 --> 00:10:29,379 recognized and appreciated. 225 00:10:29,463 --> 00:10:33,463 Eventually, they built a deep file of political contacts, 226 00:10:33,551 --> 00:10:35,551 friends and supporters. 227 00:10:35,636 --> 00:10:38,976 - Nobody had ever campaigned like that before. 228 00:10:41,058 --> 00:10:41,848 c] 229 00:10:42,727 --> 00:10:45,237 narrator: With the 1958 Senate election swiftly approaching, 230 00:10:45,271 --> 00:10:48,231 Kennedy’s months of effort on the campaign trail 231 00:10:48,274 --> 00:10:50,234 were paying off. 232 00:10:50,276 --> 00:10:52,906 - The impression that stays with me is that what started 233 00:10:53,029 --> 00:10:56,029 as a rather small effort began to grow 234 00:10:56,073 --> 00:10:58,573 and to grow and to grow. 235 00:10:58,701 --> 00:11:02,791 And at first, the audience might be 100 people. 236 00:11:02,914 --> 00:11:06,914 Then it was 500. Then it was 1,000. 237 00:11:07,043 --> 00:11:10,213 Then it was a full auditorium and people outside. 238 00:11:10,254 --> 00:11:14,804 They just got this positive response 239 00:11:14,926 --> 00:11:17,976 that encouraged them to carry on. 240 00:11:18,095 --> 00:11:23,935 ♪ ♪ 241 00:11:24,060 --> 00:11:27,600 narrator: In 1958, Kennedy won Senate reelection 242 00:11:27,772 --> 00:11:31,402 by the largest margin in Massachusetts history. 243 00:11:31,442 --> 00:11:35,742 After the victory, Kennedy knew his sole focus 244 00:11:35,780 --> 00:11:38,110 had to be the presidential race. 245 00:11:38,157 --> 00:11:41,787 Although he had not yet announced his candidacy, 246 00:11:41,827 --> 00:11:44,167 Kennedy secretly campaigned with an eye 247 00:11:44,288 --> 00:11:46,078 towards a national audience, 248 00:11:46,123 --> 00:11:48,913 building towards the 1960 election. 249 00:11:48,960 --> 00:11:50,460 ♪ ♪ 250 00:12:04,934 --> 00:12:07,854 narrator: To enhance his image as a serious politician, 251 00:12:07,979 --> 00:12:10,309 Kennedy and Sorensen made it a goal 252 00:12:10,439 --> 00:12:13,019 to release an assortment of scholarly articles 253 00:12:13,109 --> 00:12:16,189 and pamphlets expressing Kennedy’s politics, 254 00:12:16,320 --> 00:12:18,940 ideas, and observations. 255 00:12:18,990 --> 00:12:21,320 In public, Kennedy spoke about topics 256 00:12:21,492 --> 00:12:24,032 like health care, public school funding, 257 00:12:24,161 --> 00:12:26,871 and foreign policy concerns. 258 00:12:26,998 --> 00:12:32,298 - He was a mainstream Democrat who believed in the Cold War. 259 00:12:32,336 --> 00:12:35,676 He believed in the welfare state at home. 260 00:12:35,715 --> 00:12:39,135 So he was anti-communist in his foreign policy. 261 00:12:39,176 --> 00:12:44,016 In a very firm way, he was sort of a Roosevelt disciple 262 00:12:44,140 --> 00:12:47,350 in terms of domestic policy in this country. 263 00:12:47,476 --> 00:12:50,486 - He’s talking about, get America moving again 264 00:12:50,521 --> 00:12:54,481 so we can compete against the Soviet Union. 265 00:12:54,525 --> 00:12:58,695 The Cold War is what dominates 266 00:12:58,821 --> 00:13:03,321 the 1960 election almost completely. 267 00:13:03,409 --> 00:13:06,159 - Kennedy developed a way of looking at America 268 00:13:06,203 --> 00:13:07,743 that was fresh, 269 00:13:07,830 --> 00:13:11,580 that the country was a little bit stuck, 270 00:13:11,709 --> 00:13:14,419 that it needed a new push, 271 00:13:14,545 --> 00:13:16,675 that it needed some goals 272 00:13:16,714 --> 00:13:20,884 that might excite people and stimulate effort. 273 00:13:21,010 --> 00:13:22,880 narrator: To win the presidency, 274 00:13:23,012 --> 00:13:24,892 Kennedy would have to be nominated 275 00:13:25,014 --> 00:13:28,724 at the Democratic National Convention in 1960. 276 00:13:28,851 --> 00:13:31,231 To get the nomination, he would need to persuade 277 00:13:31,270 --> 00:13:35,400 at least 761 delegates from around the country 278 00:13:35,441 --> 00:13:37,191 to support him. 279 00:13:37,234 --> 00:13:39,694 In the months leading up to the convention, 280 00:13:39,737 --> 00:13:42,247 Kennedy trekked across the country, 281 00:13:42,365 --> 00:13:45,915 meeting with state leaders and influential politicians. 282 00:13:46,035 --> 00:13:47,455 - He was everywhere. 283 00:13:47,578 --> 00:13:50,948 The more people saw of him, 284 00:13:51,082 --> 00:13:53,122 the better he did. 285 00:13:53,250 --> 00:13:56,960 Nobody had ever worked like that 286 00:13:57,088 --> 00:13:59,098 as a presidential candidate. 287 00:13:59,215 --> 00:14:01,425 ♪ ♪ 288 00:14:01,467 --> 00:14:04,307 narrator: In 1959, Joe Kennedy purchased 289 00:14:04,428 --> 00:14:07,048 an American Airlines aircraft, 290 00:14:07,098 --> 00:14:09,148 fitted it with a new interior, 291 00:14:09,266 --> 00:14:13,276 and donated it to his son’s presidential campaign. 292 00:14:13,396 --> 00:14:15,606 That plane, called "Caroline," 293 00:14:15,731 --> 00:14:17,941 was the first private aircraft ever used 294 00:14:18,067 --> 00:14:19,947 by a presidential candidate. 295 00:14:20,069 --> 00:14:22,069 It was a sizable tribute 296 00:14:22,113 --> 00:14:25,153 to the newest Kennedy family member. 297 00:14:25,282 --> 00:14:28,952 - I think, of all the things his father did for him, 298 00:14:28,994 --> 00:14:31,294 having that plane was a big deal, 299 00:14:31,414 --> 00:14:34,664 because I think it increased his mobility, 300 00:14:34,750 --> 00:14:36,960 particularly in ’59. 301 00:14:37,002 --> 00:14:39,962 narrator: During the campaign, the airplane logged 302 00:14:40,005 --> 00:14:42,925 more than 100,000 miles. 303 00:14:43,008 --> 00:14:45,588 Ted Sorensen called the Kennedy campaign 304 00:14:45,636 --> 00:14:49,766 a highly organized army ready for battle. 305 00:14:49,849 --> 00:14:52,679 ♪ ♪ 306 00:14:52,810 --> 00:14:55,940 - I am today announcing my candidacy 307 00:14:55,980 --> 00:14:58,480 for the presidency of the United States. 308 00:14:58,607 --> 00:15:00,027 - Senator Kennedy, if you don’t win 309 00:15:00,109 --> 00:15:01,319 the presidential nomination, 310 00:15:01,444 --> 00:15:03,614 will you accept the vice presidency? 311 00:15:03,654 --> 00:15:05,114 - I shall not, under any conditions, 312 00:15:05,156 --> 00:15:06,996 be a candidate for vice president. 313 00:15:07,032 --> 00:15:11,032 If I fail in this endeavor, I shall return and serve 314 00:15:11,162 --> 00:15:13,662 in the United States Senate. 315 00:15:13,789 --> 00:15:15,959 narrator: To win the presidential nomination, 316 00:15:16,000 --> 00:15:17,870 Kennedy needed delegates. 317 00:15:18,002 --> 00:15:20,832 He set his eyes on state primaries, 318 00:15:20,880 --> 00:15:24,960 a series of daunting obstacles he would have to overcome. 319 00:15:25,050 --> 00:15:28,180 His major Democratic rival, Lyndon Johnson, 320 00:15:28,304 --> 00:15:30,474 opted to sit them all out, 321 00:15:30,514 --> 00:15:34,064 feeling that his influence and years spent in Congress 322 00:15:34,185 --> 00:15:37,695 would be enough to earn the nomination at the convention. 323 00:15:37,813 --> 00:15:40,563 However, Kennedy believed winning at the primaries 324 00:15:40,691 --> 00:15:45,071 would carry him into the convention with momentum. 325 00:15:45,196 --> 00:15:49,366 In March of 1960, Kennedy dove into his first primary 326 00:15:49,492 --> 00:15:52,872 in New Hampshire and won handily. 327 00:15:52,995 --> 00:15:55,875 - You know, because it’s neighboring to Massachusetts, 328 00:15:55,915 --> 00:15:58,545 it wasn’t considered a breakthrough on his part. 329 00:15:58,584 --> 00:16:00,044 Next comes Wisconsin. 330 00:16:00,085 --> 00:16:01,885 ♪ ♪ 331 00:16:01,921 --> 00:16:04,091 narrator: Kennedy gave unprecedented access 332 00:16:04,215 --> 00:16:07,675 to documentarian Robert Drew and his crew 333 00:16:07,718 --> 00:16:12,048 to follow him as he campaigned in the Wisconsin primary. 334 00:16:12,181 --> 00:16:14,261 - You’re essentially running against Hubert Humphrey, 335 00:16:14,391 --> 00:16:17,521 who’s, you know, trying to do a low-funded campaign 336 00:16:17,561 --> 00:16:19,231 but high-energy. 337 00:16:19,271 --> 00:16:22,101 And Wisconsin, of course, is neighboring 338 00:16:22,191 --> 00:16:25,111 to his own Minnesota, so he’s putting his all 339 00:16:25,236 --> 00:16:27,076 into that campaign. 340 00:16:27,112 --> 00:16:31,242 - He wasn’t nearly as good on the campaign trail as Kennedy. 341 00:16:31,367 --> 00:16:34,247 [people clamoring] 342 00:16:36,247 --> 00:16:39,797 [indistinct chatter] 343 00:16:39,917 --> 00:16:41,297 - Listen, now, anybody I didn’t get? 344 00:16:41,418 --> 00:16:42,458 ’Cause I guess we’re late. 345 00:16:42,586 --> 00:16:43,926 Yeah, whose is this? - Mine. 346 00:16:43,963 --> 00:16:45,423 - Whose is this? - Mine. 347 00:16:45,464 --> 00:16:47,634 - If you would write me at the Senate, 348 00:16:47,758 --> 00:16:49,588 I’ll send you a picture and an autograph 349 00:16:49,718 --> 00:16:50,878 and something about the Capitol. 350 00:16:50,970 --> 00:16:52,429 - Where should we write? 351 00:16:52,429 --> 00:16:54,049 [indistinct chatter] 352 00:16:54,098 --> 00:16:55,768 - Just write me, Senator Kennedy, 353 00:16:55,891 --> 00:16:58,931 the Senate, Washington, D.C. 354 00:16:59,061 --> 00:17:01,891 - There. That’s it. 355 00:17:01,939 --> 00:17:03,399 And the eyes just above the camera. 356 00:17:03,440 --> 00:17:05,810 That’s just fine. 357 00:17:05,943 --> 00:17:08,613 - He was really good-looking. 358 00:17:08,737 --> 00:17:10,117 That helps. 359 00:17:10,155 --> 00:17:13,285 - Kennedy’s physical attractiveness was huge. 360 00:17:13,325 --> 00:17:15,915 He looked great, particularly when he was feeling well, 361 00:17:15,953 --> 00:17:18,083 and he always seemed to have a suntan. 362 00:17:18,122 --> 00:17:24,292 - You know, he had that kind of bon vivant quality. 363 00:17:24,420 --> 00:17:26,790 Men want to be him. Women want to have him. 364 00:17:26,922 --> 00:17:28,462 There’s something to that. 365 00:17:28,507 --> 00:17:30,467 - It became a kind of running joke 366 00:17:30,467 --> 00:17:34,437 among many of the reporters covering him 367 00:17:34,471 --> 00:17:37,601 about the women who would flock to see him 368 00:17:37,641 --> 00:17:39,641 like they would flock to see Elvis Presley 369 00:17:39,685 --> 00:17:43,815 or some kind of movie star celebrity. 370 00:17:43,856 --> 00:17:47,316 And he made his youth into an attractive quality 371 00:17:47,359 --> 00:17:51,859 by associating it with sort of the dawning of a new age. 372 00:17:51,989 --> 00:17:55,109 It was time to get the country moving again. 373 00:17:55,159 --> 00:18:00,829 ♪ ♪ 374 00:18:00,831 --> 00:18:01,411 c] 375 00:18:02,041 --> 00:18:04,041 narrator: As Kennedy campaigned in 1960, 376 00:18:04,168 --> 00:18:07,008 he honed the power of his words. 377 00:18:07,087 --> 00:18:10,347 - Well, John F. Kennedy knew how to deliver a speech. 378 00:18:10,382 --> 00:18:13,552 - He was funny, and he gave short speeches. 379 00:18:13,677 --> 00:18:14,847 They’re witty. 380 00:18:14,887 --> 00:18:16,517 They’re to the point. 381 00:18:16,597 --> 00:18:20,397 They were all at most 6 paragraphs, maybe 12. 382 00:18:20,517 --> 00:18:23,397 Make them want more. 383 00:18:23,520 --> 00:18:27,100 - I run for the presidency because, like you, 384 00:18:27,191 --> 00:18:31,071 I have strong ideas about what this country must do. 385 00:18:31,111 --> 00:18:34,031 I have strong ideas about the United States 386 00:18:34,031 --> 00:18:37,071 playing a great role in a historic moment. 387 00:18:37,201 --> 00:18:39,621 When the cause of freedom is endangered 388 00:18:39,703 --> 00:18:41,373 all over the world... 389 00:18:41,455 --> 00:18:43,875 - These are rhetorical devices 390 00:18:43,916 --> 00:18:47,126 to make your words more powerful. 391 00:18:47,252 --> 00:18:51,712 - But that particular accent and the particular pacing 392 00:18:51,799 --> 00:18:54,129 and all of that, I don’t think anybody’s come 393 00:18:54,218 --> 00:18:56,478 anywhere close to it. 394 00:18:56,553 --> 00:18:59,223 - This is somebody who gives speeches that make people want 395 00:18:59,264 --> 00:19:01,564 to get up and march somewhere. 396 00:19:01,642 --> 00:19:03,222 ♪ ♪ 397 00:19:03,310 --> 00:19:06,770 - Well, ladies and gentlemen, I ask your help. 398 00:19:06,897 --> 00:19:09,947 I ask your help in building the United States. 399 00:19:10,067 --> 00:19:13,287 I ask your help in reestablishing the prestige 400 00:19:13,404 --> 00:19:14,904 and strength of our country. 401 00:19:14,947 --> 00:19:16,617 I ask your help. 402 00:19:16,740 --> 00:19:22,910 ♪ ♪ 403 00:19:22,955 --> 00:19:27,505 narrator: April 1960, Wisconsin. 404 00:19:27,584 --> 00:19:31,344 The campaign lasted four weeks. 405 00:19:31,422 --> 00:19:35,012 While Kennedy did well in large cities like Milwaukee, 406 00:19:35,134 --> 00:19:36,924 Humphrey spent much of his time 407 00:19:37,094 --> 00:19:39,804 with farmers in rural areas. 408 00:19:39,930 --> 00:19:42,680 Humphrey was far more familiar with that territory 409 00:19:42,766 --> 00:19:45,186 than his upper-class opponent from Boston. 410 00:19:45,269 --> 00:19:52,109 ♪ ♪ 411 00:19:52,151 --> 00:19:55,031 - This is the heart of Senator Kennedy’s strength, 412 00:19:55,112 --> 00:19:57,822 the heavily populated city areas, 413 00:19:57,948 --> 00:19:59,778 particularly the Polish Catholic fourth district 414 00:19:59,825 --> 00:20:01,325 in Milwaukee. 415 00:20:01,452 --> 00:20:08,122 ♪ ♪ 416 00:20:08,167 --> 00:20:10,967 - We would have passed that bill two years ago, 417 00:20:11,044 --> 00:20:13,964 but it failed by one vote in the Senate 418 00:20:14,006 --> 00:20:16,136 when the president withdrew his support 419 00:20:16,175 --> 00:20:18,635 on the day the bill was coming up to vote. 420 00:20:18,677 --> 00:20:21,557 That’s how important the office of the presidency is. 421 00:20:21,638 --> 00:20:24,888 He shall determine what shall be our policy on Berlin. 422 00:20:24,975 --> 00:20:28,395 He shall determine whether we shall be at war or peace. 423 00:20:28,479 --> 00:20:30,229 ♪ ♪ 424 00:20:30,314 --> 00:20:32,854 narrator: When the Wisconsin numbers came in, 425 00:20:32,983 --> 00:20:35,653 Kennedy and his team were shaken. 426 00:20:35,694 --> 00:20:39,990 He had won by only 13%, a dramatic contrast 427 00:20:39,990 --> 00:20:42,860 to his landslide victory in New Hampshire. 428 00:20:42,910 --> 00:20:45,030 ♪ ♪ 429 00:20:45,162 --> 00:20:48,412 - It punctured the Kennedy momentum 430 00:20:48,499 --> 00:20:51,249 for a brief, brief period, that they really realized 431 00:20:51,335 --> 00:20:55,505 they had to regroup. 432 00:20:55,589 --> 00:20:57,209 crowd: ♪ Back Jack ♪ 433 00:20:57,341 --> 00:20:59,381 ♪ Jack is on the right track ♪ 434 00:20:59,510 --> 00:21:02,680 ♪ ’Cause he’s got high hopes ♪ 435 00:21:02,763 --> 00:21:05,553 narrator: After Wisconsin, Kennedy won in Illinois, 436 00:21:05,682 --> 00:21:07,682 his home state of Massachusetts, 437 00:21:07,726 --> 00:21:11,896 Pennsylvania, Indiana, and Nebraska. 438 00:21:12,022 --> 00:21:15,562 But the next destination, West Virginia, 439 00:21:15,692 --> 00:21:20,030 would prove to be a challenge unlike any state so far. 440 00:21:20,030 --> 00:21:27,080 ♪ ♪ 441 00:21:27,204 --> 00:21:29,874 - As different from Massachusetts 442 00:21:29,915 --> 00:21:33,375 or anything John Kennedy had ever known, 443 00:21:33,460 --> 00:21:37,040 very Protestant, very few Catholics, 444 00:21:37,089 --> 00:21:41,129 people who didn’t know wealth. 445 00:21:41,218 --> 00:21:43,438 narrator: West Virginia was rural, 446 00:21:43,470 --> 00:21:46,090 at the heart of America’s coal country. 447 00:21:46,223 --> 00:21:49,973 - Coal mines were running at 100% capacity. 448 00:21:50,060 --> 00:21:52,560 Everybody was busy, but it still had the reputation 449 00:21:52,604 --> 00:21:55,234 of having pockets of poverty. 450 00:21:55,315 --> 00:21:57,735 And I think that’s how Kennedy was briefed, 451 00:21:57,776 --> 00:22:01,156 that he was going to be coming into a poverty-stricken place. 452 00:22:01,238 --> 00:22:03,458 Instead he found a lot of working coal miners. 453 00:22:03,574 --> 00:22:05,074 ♪ ♪ 454 00:22:05,158 --> 00:22:07,448 narrator: The campaign increased its intensity 455 00:22:07,578 --> 00:22:10,498 beyond what it had displayed in Wisconsin. 456 00:22:10,581 --> 00:22:12,081 The Humphrey camp followed suit. 457 00:22:12,165 --> 00:22:14,795 ♪ ♪ 458 00:22:14,918 --> 00:22:17,078 One of the biggest gripes the general public had 459 00:22:17,129 --> 00:22:20,299 with Kennedy was his Catholic faith. 460 00:22:20,424 --> 00:22:23,844 This was especially true in West Virginia. 461 00:22:23,927 --> 00:22:26,137 - You would be divided between two loyalties, 462 00:22:26,263 --> 00:22:27,973 to your church and to your state, 463 00:22:28,098 --> 00:22:29,928 if you were to be elected president. 464 00:22:29,975 --> 00:22:32,935 - Yeah, the question is whether I think that-- 465 00:22:32,978 --> 00:22:34,608 if I were elected president, 466 00:22:34,688 --> 00:22:36,488 I would be divided between two loyalties, 467 00:22:36,607 --> 00:22:38,817 my church and my state. 468 00:22:38,942 --> 00:22:41,272 Let me just say that I would not. 469 00:22:41,320 --> 00:22:43,650 I have sworn to uphold the Constitution. 470 00:22:43,780 --> 00:22:45,820 In the 14 years I’ve been in Congress, 471 00:22:45,949 --> 00:22:47,859 in the years I was in the service, 472 00:22:47,951 --> 00:22:49,781 the Constitution provides in the First Amendment 473 00:22:49,870 --> 00:22:51,870 that Congress shall make no laws 474 00:22:51,955 --> 00:22:53,790 abridging the freedom of religion. 475 00:22:53,790 --> 00:22:55,620 I must say I believe in it. 476 00:22:55,667 --> 00:22:58,467 I think it’s the only way that this country can go ahead. 477 00:22:58,503 --> 00:23:00,633 I am sure that no one believes that I’d be 478 00:23:00,672 --> 00:23:02,302 a candidate for the presidency 479 00:23:02,341 --> 00:23:04,171 if I didn’t think I could meet my oath of office. 480 00:23:04,301 --> 00:23:06,011 ♪ ♪ 481 00:23:06,136 --> 00:23:07,976 narrator: This clear, strong oath 482 00:23:08,055 --> 00:23:10,355 seemed to quiet the local critics. 483 00:23:10,390 --> 00:23:12,220 ♪ ♪ 484 00:23:12,309 --> 00:23:15,479 On May 10th, Kennedy won 60% of the popular vote 485 00:23:15,520 --> 00:23:17,640 in West Virginia. 486 00:23:17,731 --> 00:23:20,151 That afternoon, overcome with emotion 487 00:23:20,233 --> 00:23:22,523 from the hard-fought campaign, 488 00:23:22,653 --> 00:23:25,493 Humphrey tearfully announced he would no longer seek 489 00:23:25,656 --> 00:23:27,536 the Democratic nomination. 490 00:23:27,658 --> 00:23:29,328 ♪ ♪ 491 00:23:29,493 --> 00:23:31,833 Kennedy won more votes than any other candidate 492 00:23:31,870 --> 00:23:34,040 in the Democratic primaries, 493 00:23:34,164 --> 00:23:38,504 walking away with 32.5% of the total vote. 494 00:23:38,585 --> 00:23:40,755 It was a significant accomplishment, 495 00:23:40,837 --> 00:23:44,757 but it wasn’t enough to lock in the nomination. 496 00:23:44,841 --> 00:23:46,671 ♪ ♪ 497 00:23:46,718 --> 00:23:49,258 With the nomination up for grabs, 498 00:23:49,346 --> 00:23:52,516 Kennedy took off for the Democratic National Convention 499 00:23:52,599 --> 00:23:54,099 in Los Angeles. 500 00:23:54,184 --> 00:24:01,024 ♪ ♪ 501 00:24:01,066 --> 00:24:04,526 - I want to assure you that today we begin here 502 00:24:04,695 --> 00:24:08,245 in this city an effort to win this nomination, 503 00:24:08,365 --> 00:24:10,615 which I believe will be successful. 504 00:24:10,701 --> 00:24:14,621 ♪ ♪ 505 00:24:14,621 --> 00:24:16,581 c] 506 00:24:16,665 --> 00:24:19,295 narrator: At the 1960 Democratic National Convention 507 00:24:19,418 --> 00:24:21,798 in Los Angeles, Kennedy was vying 508 00:24:21,878 --> 00:24:23,748 for the presidential nomination 509 00:24:23,839 --> 00:24:26,249 against Lyndon Johnson of Texas, 510 00:24:26,341 --> 00:24:28,801 Stuart Symington of Missouri, 511 00:24:28,885 --> 00:24:31,935 and Adlai Stevenson of Illinois. 512 00:24:32,055 --> 00:24:33,475 - If we’re going to successfully move 513 00:24:33,515 --> 00:24:35,265 through the ’60s, 514 00:24:35,350 --> 00:24:37,640 if we’re going to be true to our destiny of being 515 00:24:37,728 --> 00:24:40,858 the great defender of freedom in these dangerous times, 516 00:24:40,939 --> 00:24:43,309 then the United States must build its strength. 517 00:24:43,400 --> 00:24:45,020 ♪ ♪ 518 00:24:45,110 --> 00:24:46,820 narrator: Civil rights were this convention’s 519 00:24:46,903 --> 00:24:48,653 hot-button topic. 520 00:24:48,739 --> 00:24:50,239 - You know, the experiences of African Americans 521 00:24:50,323 --> 00:24:51,953 vary greatly. 522 00:24:52,034 --> 00:24:54,284 The common thread is segregation, discrimination, 523 00:24:54,369 --> 00:24:56,539 denial of opportunity. 524 00:24:56,621 --> 00:25:01,961 - It was a movement that could not be contained in the South 525 00:25:02,044 --> 00:25:04,134 or even in the United States. 526 00:25:04,212 --> 00:25:06,552 It was a powerful human statement 527 00:25:06,631 --> 00:25:09,261 for the desire for human freedom, 528 00:25:09,342 --> 00:25:12,932 and that is what gave it so much power. 529 00:25:13,013 --> 00:25:14,763 narrator: Despite his lackluster record 530 00:25:14,848 --> 00:25:16,438 on the issue, 531 00:25:16,475 --> 00:25:19,185 Kennedy took a decisive step by supporting 532 00:25:19,269 --> 00:25:22,889 a progressive civil rights plank at the convention. 533 00:25:22,981 --> 00:25:25,651 This plank called for the complete elimination 534 00:25:25,776 --> 00:25:28,286 of discrimination based on race, 535 00:25:28,361 --> 00:25:31,901 religion, and national origin. 536 00:25:31,990 --> 00:25:34,950 It also demanded fair employment practices 537 00:25:35,035 --> 00:25:37,955 and openly advocated the sit-in demonstrations 538 00:25:37,996 --> 00:25:39,916 occurring all over the Deep South. 539 00:25:39,956 --> 00:25:41,876 ♪ ♪ 540 00:25:41,917 --> 00:25:43,587 - So at that convention, what’s notable 541 00:25:43,668 --> 00:25:47,248 is the lead that the Kennedy group takes 542 00:25:47,339 --> 00:25:50,259 in insisting on a strong civil rights plank, 543 00:25:50,342 --> 00:25:53,592 responding to the demands that are rising, 544 00:25:53,637 --> 00:25:55,557 the pressures that are accelerating, 545 00:25:55,639 --> 00:25:59,469 and, most significantly, the importance of Black voting 546 00:25:59,559 --> 00:26:01,729 in Northern industrial states. 547 00:26:01,812 --> 00:26:04,192 ♪ ♪ 548 00:26:04,272 --> 00:26:05,982 Narrator: After this unflinching stance 549 00:26:06,066 --> 00:26:07,776 was announced, 550 00:26:07,859 --> 00:26:10,729 nine Southern states promptly signed a document 551 00:26:10,821 --> 00:26:14,401 denouncing Kennedy as a candidate. 552 00:26:14,491 --> 00:26:17,621 - It wasn’t like everybody was for John Kennedy in 1960. 553 00:26:17,702 --> 00:26:18,952 That was clear. 554 00:26:18,995 --> 00:26:22,125 People were counting, 555 00:26:22,207 --> 00:26:24,837 are we gonna get the number of votes on the first ballot? 556 00:26:24,918 --> 00:26:28,178 So there was a tension as to whether it was gonna work, 557 00:26:28,296 --> 00:26:30,756 absolutely, total tension. 558 00:26:30,841 --> 00:26:36,301 ♪ ♪ 559 00:26:36,388 --> 00:26:38,058 narrator: The legwork done by the Kennedy camp 560 00:26:38,140 --> 00:26:39,930 over the past four years 561 00:26:40,058 --> 00:26:44,388 finally paid off on July 13, 1960. 562 00:26:56,908 --> 00:27:00,908 ♪ ♪ 563 00:27:00,954 --> 00:27:03,164 narrator: Amidst tens of thousands of people, 564 00:27:03,248 --> 00:27:05,838 Kennedy accepted the Democratic nomination 565 00:27:05,917 --> 00:27:08,047 at the Los Angeles Coliseum 566 00:27:08,128 --> 00:27:11,298 and chose his former opponent, Lyndon Johnson, 567 00:27:11,381 --> 00:27:13,921 as his vice presidential running mate, 568 00:27:14,009 --> 00:27:17,129 believing the Texas senator would help secure 569 00:27:17,220 --> 00:27:21,260 the Southern political support he needed to win the election. 570 00:27:21,349 --> 00:27:25,599 - And we stand today on the edge of a new frontier, 571 00:27:25,687 --> 00:27:28,447 the frontier of the 1960s, 572 00:27:28,523 --> 00:27:32,363 the frontier of unknown opportunities and perils, 573 00:27:32,444 --> 00:27:37,864 the frontier of unfilled hope and unfilled threats. 574 00:27:37,949 --> 00:27:41,569 The new frontier is here, whether we seek it or not. 575 00:27:41,661 --> 00:27:45,331 Beyond that frontier are uncharted areas 576 00:27:45,457 --> 00:27:47,467 of science and space, 577 00:27:47,542 --> 00:27:50,002 unsolved problems of peace and war. 578 00:27:50,086 --> 00:27:56,976 ♪ ♪ 579 00:27:58,511 --> 00:28:00,511 narrator: The 1960 presidential race 580 00:28:00,555 --> 00:28:02,395 between Kennedy and Nixon 581 00:28:02,474 --> 00:28:06,224 would be the first widely televised election in history. 582 00:28:06,311 --> 00:28:08,891 ♪ ♪ 583 00:28:08,980 --> 00:28:10,600 If the American people couldn’t see 584 00:28:10,690 --> 00:28:12,480 their candidate in person, 585 00:28:12,567 --> 00:28:15,787 they could watch him from the comfort of their own home. 586 00:28:15,862 --> 00:28:18,572 The candidates would debate four times, 587 00:28:18,698 --> 00:28:21,278 arguing their case to the nation. 588 00:28:21,368 --> 00:28:23,248 - The candidates need no introduction, 589 00:28:23,328 --> 00:28:24,588 the Republican candidate, 590 00:28:24,663 --> 00:28:26,663 Vice President Richard M. Nixon, 591 00:28:26,748 --> 00:28:29,828 and the Democratic candidate, Senator John F. Kennedy. 592 00:28:29,918 --> 00:28:32,758 - The president gained, America gained 593 00:28:32,796 --> 00:28:35,176 by continuing the dignity, the decency 594 00:28:35,298 --> 00:28:36,918 that has characterized us, 595 00:28:37,008 --> 00:28:39,798 and it’s that that keeps the prestige of America up, 596 00:28:39,886 --> 00:28:41,686 not running down America the way Senator Kennedy 597 00:28:41,763 --> 00:28:43,303 has been running her down. 598 00:28:43,390 --> 00:28:47,520 - Much as Richard Nixon is criticized, 599 00:28:47,602 --> 00:28:49,142 he mounted the stage of the Republican Party 600 00:28:49,229 --> 00:28:51,439 on five separate occasions 601 00:28:51,523 --> 00:28:54,273 to accept the nomination for national office, 602 00:28:54,359 --> 00:28:57,149 three times for president and twice for vice president. 603 00:28:57,195 --> 00:28:58,945 He was formidable. 604 00:28:59,030 --> 00:29:01,070 - I really don’t need Mr. Nixon to tell me 605 00:29:01,157 --> 00:29:03,707 about what my responsibilities are as a citizen. 606 00:29:03,785 --> 00:29:05,915 I’ve served this country for 14 years in the Congress 607 00:29:05,954 --> 00:29:07,664 and before that in the service. 608 00:29:07,747 --> 00:29:10,547 I have just as high a devotion, just as high an opinion. 609 00:29:10,625 --> 00:29:12,545 - You look at the Kennedy-Nixon debate, 610 00:29:12,627 --> 00:29:14,297 a Republican running at the center 611 00:29:14,379 --> 00:29:16,799 and a Democrat running at the center in 1960 612 00:29:16,881 --> 00:29:19,381 don’t disagree on much. 613 00:29:19,467 --> 00:29:24,187 And so when people were trying to decide who do they want, 614 00:29:24,264 --> 00:29:27,894 you have two people who want the job 615 00:29:28,018 --> 00:29:29,228 who are saying they’re pretty much 616 00:29:29,311 --> 00:29:30,931 gonna do similar things. 617 00:29:31,021 --> 00:29:32,891 So then TV becomes that much more important 618 00:29:32,981 --> 00:29:35,061 because you’re making your decisions based on, 619 00:29:35,150 --> 00:29:37,650 what does your gut tell you? 620 00:29:37,777 --> 00:29:40,157 Kennedy presents very differently than Nixon. 621 00:29:40,196 --> 00:29:43,826 ♪ ♪ 622 00:29:43,908 --> 00:29:45,568 - And the difference between the crowds 623 00:29:45,660 --> 00:29:48,120 the day before that debate 624 00:29:48,204 --> 00:29:50,334 and the crowds after that debate, 625 00:29:50,457 --> 00:29:55,387 the crowds the next morning heading into Iowa 626 00:29:55,462 --> 00:29:57,542 were enormous. 627 00:29:57,630 --> 00:30:01,090 We called them the dancers. 628 00:30:01,217 --> 00:30:04,437 The crowds, if you look down the street half a mile away, 629 00:30:04,512 --> 00:30:06,642 you started to see-- as soon as they saw him, 630 00:30:06,723 --> 00:30:08,683 you could see the crowd start to jump. 631 00:30:08,767 --> 00:30:10,567 ♪ ♪ 632 00:30:10,643 --> 00:30:13,353 - I don’t think I looked at him as some sort of a sex idol. 633 00:30:13,396 --> 00:30:17,316 I looked at him as an energizer. 634 00:30:17,400 --> 00:30:19,360 He was the future. 635 00:30:19,444 --> 00:30:20,864 He was next. 636 00:30:20,945 --> 00:30:25,033 ♪ ♪ 637 00:30:25,033 --> 00:30:26,493 c] 638 00:30:26,576 --> 00:30:30,086 ♪ ♪ 639 00:30:30,163 --> 00:30:31,913 - I think one of the most important things 640 00:30:32,040 --> 00:30:33,910 was when he called Coretta Scott King 641 00:30:33,917 --> 00:30:35,337 in the election 642 00:30:35,418 --> 00:30:38,248 when Martin Luther King was arrested. 643 00:30:38,380 --> 00:30:40,550 - Martin Luther King is busted in Georgia 644 00:30:40,590 --> 00:30:43,170 on a phony parole violation charge. 645 00:30:43,259 --> 00:30:45,719 He’s sent off to a rural Georgia prison, 646 00:30:45,762 --> 00:30:47,262 where there’s great fear that he will never 647 00:30:47,389 --> 00:30:49,219 get out of there alive. 648 00:30:49,265 --> 00:30:52,435 - He was arrested after participating in a sit-in, 649 00:30:52,435 --> 00:30:55,945 but he had an outstanding traffic violation, 650 00:30:56,064 --> 00:30:58,064 so he wasn’t given bail. 651 00:30:58,108 --> 00:30:59,528 He’s put in the jail. 652 00:30:59,609 --> 00:31:00,939 And this was the end of October. 653 00:31:01,069 --> 00:31:03,229 The election’s beginning in November. 654 00:31:03,279 --> 00:31:05,449 - Nixon-- who, I think, frankly, 655 00:31:05,573 --> 00:31:07,953 had a better civil rights record 656 00:31:08,034 --> 00:31:09,954 during the last eight years than Kennedy-- 657 00:31:10,036 --> 00:31:11,956 froze, and he didn’t know what to do. 658 00:31:12,038 --> 00:31:14,408 He was trying to compete in the South, 659 00:31:14,541 --> 00:31:16,291 and so he didn’t want to inflame-- 660 00:31:16,459 --> 00:31:19,079 he thought he might win over some Southern Democrats. 661 00:31:19,129 --> 00:31:21,459 So Nixon tried to just kind of put his head in the sand 662 00:31:21,589 --> 00:31:24,299 and just hope that this King incarceration 663 00:31:24,384 --> 00:31:27,474 would be resolved quickly by local officials. 664 00:31:27,554 --> 00:31:29,974 Kennedy makes a phone call-- it lasted maybe a minute 665 00:31:30,140 --> 00:31:32,600 or two--to Coretta Scott King and just said, 666 00:31:32,642 --> 00:31:33,812 I’m worried about your husband, 667 00:31:33,893 --> 00:31:35,393 and we’ll be thinking of you, 668 00:31:35,437 --> 00:31:37,987 and we’ll do everything we can do. 669 00:31:38,106 --> 00:31:41,656 - That sent a huge message to the Black community 670 00:31:41,818 --> 00:31:44,658 that John F. Kennedy, that he was helpful. 671 00:31:44,821 --> 00:31:46,991 And they got Martin Luther King out of jail. 672 00:31:47,115 --> 00:31:48,665 ♪ ♪ 673 00:31:48,783 --> 00:31:52,333 - Kennedy’s action redounded in his favor. 674 00:31:52,412 --> 00:31:56,002 King’s father, Martin Luther King Sr., 675 00:31:56,124 --> 00:31:59,504 was actually intending to vote for Nixon. 676 00:31:59,627 --> 00:32:03,007 - And when they got Dr. King out of jail, 677 00:32:03,089 --> 00:32:06,509 Daddy King said, I got a whole suitcase full of votes, 678 00:32:06,593 --> 00:32:08,423 and now they’re going to Kennedy. 679 00:32:08,511 --> 00:32:10,761 And so that was a signal where Black people 680 00:32:10,847 --> 00:32:13,767 then lined up behind John F. Kennedy. 681 00:32:13,850 --> 00:32:19,940 ♪ ♪ 682 00:32:20,023 --> 00:32:22,193 narrator: With time running out before the election, 683 00:32:22,275 --> 00:32:25,785 Kennedy and Nixon were still in a tight race. 684 00:32:25,862 --> 00:32:28,822 Kennedy knew that to win, he needed to address 685 00:32:28,865 --> 00:32:31,995 any last concerns the public still had. 686 00:32:32,035 --> 00:32:33,375 ♪ ♪ 687 00:32:33,495 --> 00:32:35,875 - This program this evening 688 00:32:35,997 --> 00:32:38,667 does not constitute an endorsement 689 00:32:38,708 --> 00:32:40,538 of either the speaker 690 00:32:40,668 --> 00:32:43,458 or the party which he represents. 691 00:32:43,546 --> 00:32:46,136 The program has been motivated by the religious issues 692 00:32:46,216 --> 00:32:47,676 in this campaign. 693 00:32:47,717 --> 00:32:49,057 ♪ ♪ 694 00:32:49,219 --> 00:32:51,629 - He’s looking at the polling data. 695 00:32:51,679 --> 00:32:53,179 They decide, look, we’ve got to take 696 00:32:53,223 --> 00:32:56,893 the Catholicism issue head-on. 697 00:32:57,018 --> 00:33:01,888 - The talk on the street was, he’ll kiss the pope’s ring. 698 00:33:01,981 --> 00:33:03,731 The pope calls him every morning 699 00:33:03,900 --> 00:33:05,570 and tells him what to do. 700 00:33:05,652 --> 00:33:07,072 I mean, I remember this. 701 00:33:07,153 --> 00:33:09,153 I was a Catholic schoolkid at the time. 702 00:33:09,197 --> 00:33:11,577 narrator: Kennedy knew he had to address the subject 703 00:33:11,741 --> 00:33:16,411 in a public arena one last time before the election. 704 00:33:16,496 --> 00:33:19,046 He chose Houston as the location, 705 00:33:19,082 --> 00:33:21,662 where the Greater Houston Ministerial Conference 706 00:33:21,751 --> 00:33:23,251 was taking place. 707 00:33:23,336 --> 00:33:24,926 ♪ ♪ 708 00:33:25,046 --> 00:33:27,556 - I believe in an America 709 00:33:27,590 --> 00:33:30,550 where the separation of church and state is absolute, 710 00:33:30,593 --> 00:33:33,053 for while this year, it may be a Catholic 711 00:33:33,179 --> 00:33:36,509 against whom the finger of suspicion is pointed, 712 00:33:36,558 --> 00:33:38,688 in other years, it has been 713 00:33:38,768 --> 00:33:42,438 and may someday be again a Jew or a Quaker 714 00:33:42,564 --> 00:33:45,234 or a Unitarian or a Baptist. 715 00:33:45,275 --> 00:33:48,945 - He made his points forcefully but not-- 716 00:33:49,070 --> 00:33:53,110 he was very good in not being overly combative. 717 00:33:53,199 --> 00:33:55,029 But he was assertive. 718 00:33:55,118 --> 00:33:57,628 - And we raised the question because we would like to know, 719 00:33:57,704 --> 00:34:01,914 if you are elected president and your church elects to use 720 00:34:01,958 --> 00:34:04,758 that privilege and obligation, 721 00:34:04,794 --> 00:34:07,794 what your response will be under those circumstances. 722 00:34:07,797 --> 00:34:11,637 - If my church attempted to influence me in a way 723 00:34:11,718 --> 00:34:14,768 which was improper or which affected adversely 724 00:34:14,804 --> 00:34:17,224 my responsibilities as a public servant 725 00:34:17,307 --> 00:34:19,067 sworn to uphold the Constitution, 726 00:34:19,142 --> 00:34:21,812 then I would reply to them 727 00:34:21,978 --> 00:34:25,148 that this was an improper action on their part. 728 00:34:25,273 --> 00:34:27,403 It would be an unfortunate breach 729 00:34:27,483 --> 00:34:30,983 of an interference with the American political system. 730 00:34:31,070 --> 00:34:32,990 ♪ ♪ 731 00:34:33,072 --> 00:34:35,742 narrator: After the speech, Kennedy spoke off the cuff, 732 00:34:35,825 --> 00:34:37,915 answering a series of questions 733 00:34:37,994 --> 00:34:42,254 from the ministers that had not been screened in advance. 734 00:34:42,332 --> 00:34:45,162 - I’m sure that I have made no converts to my church, 735 00:34:45,251 --> 00:34:46,831 but I do hope-- [laughter] 736 00:34:46,961 --> 00:34:51,131 I do hope that at least my view, which I believe 737 00:34:51,174 --> 00:34:55,974 to be the view of my fellow Catholics who hold office, 738 00:34:56,012 --> 00:34:57,802 I hope that it may be of some value 739 00:34:57,847 --> 00:35:01,687 in at least assisting you to make a careful judgment. 740 00:35:01,768 --> 00:35:04,688 [applause] 741 00:35:04,771 --> 00:35:11,861 ♪ ♪ 742 00:35:11,986 --> 00:35:13,446 narrator: Racing across the country 743 00:35:13,529 --> 00:35:15,439 and fueled by adrenaline, 744 00:35:15,531 --> 00:35:18,821 Kennedy often had dark circles around his eyes. 745 00:35:18,868 --> 00:35:21,448 Without much time to rest or eat, 746 00:35:21,537 --> 00:35:25,007 just days before the election, Kennedy claimed, 747 00:35:25,041 --> 00:35:27,791 I’m going to last about five more days, 748 00:35:27,877 --> 00:35:30,217 but that’s time enough. 749 00:35:30,338 --> 00:35:33,178 - It’s the day before the election in 1960, 750 00:35:33,299 --> 00:35:36,799 and Kennedy finishes in Waterbury, 751 00:35:36,886 --> 00:35:40,556 Springfield, and Boston Garden that night. 752 00:35:40,556 --> 00:35:42,396 My grandmother marched us down to city hall 753 00:35:42,475 --> 00:35:46,895 to see this remarkable presentation. 754 00:35:47,021 --> 00:35:48,691 I remember one sign that was hung 755 00:35:48,731 --> 00:35:51,231 on the Grand Army Hall of the Republic that said, 756 00:35:51,317 --> 00:35:53,867 welcome home, Jack. 757 00:35:53,903 --> 00:35:56,073 I mean, I’m 11 years old and looking up and saying, 758 00:35:56,155 --> 00:35:59,495 you know, tomorrow this guy could be the president. 759 00:35:59,575 --> 00:36:00,825 And nobody knows how the election 760 00:36:00,910 --> 00:36:02,410 is still gonna turn out. 761 00:36:02,578 --> 00:36:04,908 - His last speech was at Boston Garden. 762 00:36:04,997 --> 00:36:06,257 And it was brilliant. 763 00:36:06,332 --> 00:36:09,172 It was absolutely brilliant. 764 00:36:09,252 --> 00:36:14,422 ♪ ♪ 765 00:36:14,549 --> 00:36:16,709 - So I come here tonight. 766 00:36:16,759 --> 00:36:19,589 I thank you for your past support. 767 00:36:19,679 --> 00:36:22,219 I ask you to join us tomorrow. 768 00:36:22,265 --> 00:36:25,855 And most of all, I ask you to join us-- 769 00:36:25,935 --> 00:36:27,685 if we are successful, 770 00:36:27,770 --> 00:36:30,770 I ask you to join us in all the tomorrows 771 00:36:30,940 --> 00:36:33,610 yet to come in building America, 772 00:36:33,735 --> 00:36:37,115 moving America, picking this country of ours up, 773 00:36:37,196 --> 00:36:39,116 and sending it into the ’60s. 774 00:36:39,198 --> 00:36:47,658 ♪ ♪ 775 00:36:47,665 --> 00:36:49,125 c] 776 00:36:49,167 --> 00:36:52,967 ♪ ♪ 777 00:36:53,004 --> 00:36:56,804 narrator: Finally, Election Day had arrived. 778 00:36:56,924 --> 00:36:59,014 Kennedy, his wife, Jackie, 779 00:36:59,135 --> 00:37:01,345 and their two-year-old daughter, Caroline, 780 00:37:01,471 --> 00:37:04,011 were camped out at Hyannis Port. 781 00:37:04,140 --> 00:37:06,470 - Joe Kennedy, the father, 782 00:37:06,517 --> 00:37:08,607 had a big place in Hyannis Port, 783 00:37:08,644 --> 00:37:11,314 and we were invited to be there on election night 784 00:37:11,439 --> 00:37:14,149 as the returns were coming in. 785 00:37:14,192 --> 00:37:18,112 And the cohesion among the family, 786 00:37:18,154 --> 00:37:19,994 it was a beautiful sight. 787 00:37:20,031 --> 00:37:22,451 - Photographers and reporters are all around them, 788 00:37:22,492 --> 00:37:25,122 for this is the man who, in the next 24 hours, 789 00:37:25,161 --> 00:37:27,701 may become president of the United States 790 00:37:27,830 --> 00:37:30,960 and she first lady of the land. 791 00:37:31,000 --> 00:37:33,000 ♪ ♪ 792 00:37:33,044 --> 00:37:35,174 narrator: Jackie was pregnant with John Jr., 793 00:37:35,296 --> 00:37:38,846 due at the end of the month. 794 00:37:38,966 --> 00:37:43,226 Jackie described the scene as a cold, clear autumn day. 795 00:37:43,346 --> 00:37:47,186 She would later remember her husband as restless but quiet, 796 00:37:47,225 --> 00:37:52,315 spending some time in the sun and then trying to nap. 797 00:37:52,355 --> 00:37:54,315 - From the very beginning, it becomes obvious 798 00:37:54,357 --> 00:37:56,657 that this is going to be a close election. 799 00:37:56,692 --> 00:38:01,032 ♪ ♪ 800 00:38:01,072 --> 00:38:03,652 The television networks have made elaborate preparations 801 00:38:03,741 --> 00:38:05,361 to broadcast the election returns 802 00:38:05,493 --> 00:38:07,373 as they come in from the different parts 803 00:38:07,411 --> 00:38:10,081 of the country. 804 00:38:10,206 --> 00:38:12,666 Huge tally boards post the returns 805 00:38:12,708 --> 00:38:16,918 as they come in minute by minute, hour by hour. 806 00:38:17,046 --> 00:38:18,426 ♪ ♪ 807 00:38:18,548 --> 00:38:20,058 - The excitement of being there, 808 00:38:20,174 --> 00:38:22,014 watching the returns coming in, 809 00:38:22,051 --> 00:38:23,511 it was neck and neck all night. 810 00:38:23,553 --> 00:38:28,553 ♪ ♪ 811 00:38:28,558 --> 00:38:31,858 - I guess the thing I really remember trying to stay up. 812 00:38:31,894 --> 00:38:33,734 Come on, I’m not gonna stay up till-- 813 00:38:33,771 --> 00:38:36,401 stay up till 6:00 tomorrow morning and find out 814 00:38:36,440 --> 00:38:39,230 we still got 10 hours to go, you know. 815 00:38:39,277 --> 00:38:41,867 But we stayed up awful late, and we had no idea. 816 00:38:41,904 --> 00:38:44,744 ♪ ♪ 817 00:38:44,866 --> 00:38:47,076 - In Illinois, the voting will be so close 818 00:38:47,118 --> 00:38:48,788 that the lead will go back and forth 819 00:38:48,911 --> 00:38:51,041 from one candidate to the other, 820 00:38:51,080 --> 00:38:53,950 but then this turns into a seesaw battle 821 00:38:54,041 --> 00:38:57,291 in quite a few of the states all night long. 822 00:38:57,420 --> 00:39:02,880 ♪ ♪ 823 00:39:02,925 --> 00:39:05,475 narrator: As darkness set over Cape Cod, 824 00:39:05,595 --> 00:39:08,435 Kennedy hung up the phone with his brother Bobby 825 00:39:08,556 --> 00:39:12,726 after learning the numbers would not be in for hours. 826 00:39:12,768 --> 00:39:14,768 He retired to his bedroom. 827 00:39:21,944 --> 00:39:25,114 In the morning, Kennedy’s closest aide, Ted Sorensen, 828 00:39:25,156 --> 00:39:27,246 set out for Kennedy’s house, 829 00:39:27,283 --> 00:39:29,493 just like any other day in Hyannis Port. 830 00:39:31,829 --> 00:39:34,289 As he approached, he noticed something was different. 831 00:39:34,415 --> 00:39:38,125 Secret Service agents were stationed around the home. 832 00:39:40,755 --> 00:39:43,635 John F. Kennedy was the next president 833 00:39:43,758 --> 00:39:45,018 of the United States. 834 00:39:45,134 --> 00:39:48,974 ♪ ♪ 835 00:39:49,013 --> 00:39:50,643 Kennedy won the election 836 00:39:50,681 --> 00:39:56,141 with 303 electoral votes to Nixon’s 219. 837 00:39:56,270 --> 00:39:58,640 The popular vote was much closer, 838 00:39:58,689 --> 00:40:05,149 with Kennedy receiving only 118,000 more votes than Nixon. 839 00:40:05,279 --> 00:40:08,819 - To all Americans, I say that the next four years 840 00:40:08,866 --> 00:40:11,666 are going to be difficult and challenging years 841 00:40:11,702 --> 00:40:13,832 for us all. 842 00:40:13,955 --> 00:40:15,875 The election may have been a close one, 843 00:40:15,998 --> 00:40:18,998 but I think that there is general agreement 844 00:40:19,043 --> 00:40:20,883 by all of our citizens 845 00:40:21,003 --> 00:40:24,003 that a supreme national effort will be needed 846 00:40:24,048 --> 00:40:26,218 in the years ahead 847 00:40:26,342 --> 00:40:30,012 to move this country safely through the 1960s. 848 00:40:30,137 --> 00:40:33,687 I ask your help in this effort, 849 00:40:33,724 --> 00:40:37,734 and I can assure you that every degree 850 00:40:37,853 --> 00:40:39,733 of mind and spirit that I possess 851 00:40:39,855 --> 00:40:41,985 will be devoted to the long-range interest 852 00:40:42,024 --> 00:40:44,064 of the United States 853 00:40:44,193 --> 00:40:48,193 and to the cause of freedom around the world. 854 00:40:48,197 --> 00:40:52,037 So now my wife and I prepare for a new administration 855 00:40:52,159 --> 00:40:53,369 and for a new baby. 856 00:40:53,494 --> 00:40:55,034 Thank you. 857 00:40:55,037 --> 00:40:58,047 ♪ ♪ 858 00:40:58,165 --> 00:40:59,915 - He ends up writing 859 00:41:00,001 --> 00:41:02,081 his farewell speech to Massachusetts, 860 00:41:02,211 --> 00:41:05,671 which is astonishingly eloquent and powerful. 861 00:41:05,715 --> 00:41:08,015 ♪ ♪ 862 00:41:08,050 --> 00:41:11,680 - For 14 years, I have placed my confidence 863 00:41:11,721 --> 00:41:14,431 in the citizens of Massachusetts, 864 00:41:14,557 --> 00:41:17,227 and they have generously responded 865 00:41:17,268 --> 00:41:20,568 by placing their confidence in me. 866 00:41:20,604 --> 00:41:23,524 Now on the Friday after next, 867 00:41:23,566 --> 00:41:28,286 I am to assume new and broader responsibilities. 868 00:41:28,404 --> 00:41:31,074 We must always consider, he said, 869 00:41:31,198 --> 00:41:35,368 that we shall be as a city upon a hill. 870 00:41:35,411 --> 00:41:39,291 The eyes of all people are upon us. 871 00:41:39,415 --> 00:41:43,375 I ask for your help and your prayers 872 00:41:43,461 --> 00:41:46,291 as I embark on this new and solemn journey. 873 00:41:46,422 --> 00:41:51,922 ♪ ♪ 874 00:41:51,969 --> 00:41:54,259 narrator: Next on "Kennedy"... 875 00:41:54,388 --> 00:41:56,758 - I, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, do solemnly swear 876 00:41:56,891 --> 00:41:58,641 that I will faithfully execute 877 00:41:58,768 --> 00:42:02,068 the office of president of the United States. 878 00:42:02,104 --> 00:42:04,440 - He’s very young, and he doesn’t fit the mold. 879 00:42:04,440 --> 00:42:06,770 - How would he do on the world stage, 880 00:42:06,901 --> 00:42:09,441 given he was so young and inexperienced? 881 00:42:09,570 --> 00:42:11,940 - He was instantly overwhelmed by it. 882 00:42:12,073 --> 00:42:13,613 The sheer number of concerns 883 00:42:13,783 --> 00:42:15,823 that were piled onto his plate, 884 00:42:15,951 --> 00:42:18,661 and they were urgent issues. 66988

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