Thursday, May 22, 2008 7:38 PM CDT
COLUMN: Ted Kennedy: Giants are becoming shadows, one by one
By HARRY REYNOLDS, Editorial page editor editorial@jg-tc.com
“Laura and I are concerned to learn of our friend Senator Kennedy’s diagnosis. Ted Kennedy is a man of tremendous courage, remarkable strength and powerful spirit. Our thoughts are with Senator Kennedy and his family during this difficult period. We join our fellow Americans in praying for his full recovery.”
— President Bush
The last of the Camelot warriors, the sole surviving son of a family on the cusp of legend, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy confronts mortality with the revelation he has inoperable brain cancer.
Kennedy, 76, has been in the Senate 46 years, his only senior in that body being Robert Byrd of West Virginia. During the course of over four decades Kennedy earned the respect of his peers in both parties.
Senator and soon-to-be the Republic nominee for the presidency John McCain, said of Kennedy Wednesday:
“Obviously, our thoughts and prayers go out to his family and to him. We hope and pray that they will be able to treat it and that he will experience a full recovery. I have said on numerous occasions, I have described Ted Kennedy as the last lion in the Senate, and I have held that view because he remains the single most effective member of the Senate if you want to get results.”
Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois, in the midst of a thundering, hard-fought battle with Sen. Hillary Clinton, said of Kennedy:
“He fights for what he thinks is right. And we want to make sure that he’s fighting this illness. And it’s our job now to support him in the way that he has supported us for so many years. He’s not just a great senator, he is a great friend. He is beloved by me, and beloved by my colleagues.”
Kennedy endorsed Obama prior to the California and Massachusetts primaries, both of which Obama lost. Within Democratic circles, Kennedy declaration of support had tremendous impact.
There is a certain kinship between liberals Kennedy and Obama, much of it born of strikingly similar views of the world.
I think what Kennedy sees in Obama is youth, hope and the sort of charisma that propelled his brother, Sen. John F. Kennedy, to the presidency in 1960. As pragmatic as visionary, Kennedy also views the Illinois senator as the most electable candidate in the fall.
Kennedy forged friendship with Hillary and former President Bill Clinton many years ago. They remain friends even as they part ways over politics.
Hillary Clinton, who bulldozed Obama in the Kentucky primary Tuesday but lost to Obama in Oregon later that evening, said of Kennedy:
“Ted Kennedy’s courage and resolve are unmatched, and they have made him one of the greatest legislators in Senate history. Our thoughts are with him and Vicki and we are praying for a quick and full recovery.”
The high esteem in which Kennedy is held in the Senate, is shared by Republicans
John Warner, R-Virginia, said Tuesday: “I am so deeply saddened I have lost the words.”
Republican Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, as much a conservative as Kennedy a liberal:
“Senator Kennedy has been a passionate advocate for the causes he believes in for many years. ... The one thing all of us know about Senator Kennedy is that he’s a fighter, and I wish him the best for a full and speedy recovery.”
The news Kennedy has the most deadly form of brain cancer stunned colleagues as much as his family. Kennedy has become an icon of American politics, accurately described by McCain as “the last lion in the Senate.”
When President Kennedy of Camelot was killed in Texas Ted’s older brother Robert took up the sword. He was followed in death by Ted.
At the time of his death, Robert had moved from the more conservative tradition of the Kennedys to the liberalism Ted champions.
The odds are against Ted Kennedy in this latest tragic chapter of the Kennedy family. His roots are in his family. After his brothers’ death, he became the surrogate father for John and Robert.
He will not go from the Senate while he is well enough to enter its chambers. The Senate he loves. Through that great chamber, he has been successful in passing legislation he would have advocated if he had been elected presidency.
Of Kennedy, Illinois Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin said Wednesday:
“Ted Kennedy has spent his life caring for those in need. Now it’s time for those who love Ted and his family to care for them and join in prayer to give them strength.”
Like most Americans, the news of Kennedy’s diagnosis came as a shock. It drags me back to the sadness in the wake of the death of John and Robert Kennedy.
It stirs fond memories of he days when the optimism and energy generated JFK stirred the nation.
It drags me back to the years following the deaths of Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Kennedy brothers, when the nation’s optimism seemed but a dream.
In 1980 came another charismatic leader, Ronald Reagan, a man with the charm, wit, humor and sunny belief in America. He served two terms as president and worked with Kennedy and the Democrats in Congress.
The giants are becoming shadows, one by one.
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just wondering wrote on May 23, 2008 9:26 AM: