The Rest Is History - 510. America in '68: The Killing of Robert Kennedy (Part 3)
Episode Date: November 4, 2024“What we need in the United States is not division; what we need in the United States is not hatred; what we need in the United States is not violence and lawlessness, but is love, and wisdom, and c...ompassion toward one another” As Attorney General during JFK’s presidency, Bobby had often played second fiddle to his older brother. But by 1968, Robert F. Kennedy had become a distinct political leader dedicated to social justice. In March he declared he would run in the primaries to become the Democratic presidential candidate. He galvanised support amongst marginalised communities, young people, and anti-war voters, and in the immediate aftermath of Martin Luther King’s assassination, he gave an emotional impromptu speech to a predominantly Black crowd, mentioning his own brother’s assassination for the first time in public. On the evening of June 4th, it was announced that Bobby had won the California primary. With bleeding palms from shaking so many hands along the campaign trail, he gave a victory speech to a crowded room of supporters in the Ambassador Hotel. But the joy was to come crashing down as tragedy struck the Kennedy family once more… Listen as Dominic and Tom discuss another of 1968’s American assassinations, and the build up to the moment when Bobby Kennedy died in the arms of a seventeen-year-old kitchen busboy. _______ *The Rest Is History LIVE in the U.S.A.* If you live in the States, we've got some great news: Tom and Dominic will be performing throughout America in November, with shows in San Francisco, L.A., Chicago, Philadelphia, Washington D.C., Boston and New York. Tickets on sale now at TheRestIsHistory.com _______ Twitter: @TheRestHistory @holland_tom @dcsandbrook Producer: Theo Young-Smith Assistant Producer: Anouska Lewis Executive Producers: Jack Davenport + Tony Pastor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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For those of you who are black and attempted to be filled with hatred and distrust at the injustice of such an act against all white people, I can only say that I feel in my own
heart the same kind of feeling.
I had a member of my family killed,
but he was killed by a white man.
But we have to make an effort in the United States, we have to make an effort to understand,
to go beyond these rather difficult times.
My favorite poet was Aeschylus.
He once wrote,
Even in our sleep, pain which cannot forget falls drop by drop upon the
heart until in our own despair, against our will, comes wisdom through the awful grace
of God.
What we need in the United States is not hatred.
What we need in the United States is not violence and lawlessness, but love and wisdom and compassion
toward one another, a feeling of justice toward those who still suffer within our country,
whether they be white or whether they be black.
Let us dedicate ourselves to what the Greeks wrote so many years ago, to tame the
savageness of man and make gentle the life of this world. I mean, we've had a lot of
great oratory and rhetoric so far on this series. I mean, that's not bad, is it? That's
Robert F. Kennedy again. It's the same speech with which we began our previous episode on the assassination
of Martin Luther King.
And there he is talking about the death of his brother, JFK.
And today's episode, Dominic, is about another assassination.
It's about the assassination of Robert Kennedy.
Yes.
So that was, as you said, the 4th of April.
That's the end of that speech he gives in Indianapolis.
So he's in this very mixed neighborhood, it's kind of sketchy neighborhood.
He's on campaign.
He's speaking to this audience.
And he is not dumbing down, is he?
No.
Oh my God.
There are not many people talking now in the current presidential election.
Can't imagine either Donald Trump or Kamala Harris bringing in Escalus.
Not at all. Not at all.
Not at all.
Extraordinary that he does two things there.
So he hears that Martin Luther King has been shot.
He stands up and he talks to the first time in public about his brother's death.
I had a member of my family killed, but he was killed by a white man.
He bears his soul.
And then the fact that he thinks to reach for Greek tragedy and to end the speech by
saying to this largely black audience in Indianapolis, let us delegate ourselves to what the Greeks
wrote so many years ago, to tame the savageness of man and make gentle the life of this world.
Incredible.
And for anybody who says, you know, people have always moaned the politicians are getting
worse.
It's a myth that they're getting worse. Just look at that speech, which was given as you said,
extempore. Yeah, amazing. Extraordinary moments.
And that is the quality of this year, that terrible as it is, I mean, there are loads
of impressive people and the powers of rhetoric and everything about it is so vivid. It's
painted in such rich colours.
It is. I mean, that book that we began the very first episode with, the book by the Sunday
Times Journalist, An American Melodrama. I mean, the title is well chosen because it
does feel unbelievably melodramatic. The characters are so bold, so striking in their different
ways and we'll come onto some very different characters, George Wallace and Richard Nixon and indeed Ronald Reagan later on.
But yeah, of them all, Robert Kennedy is the one who perhaps stands out as the
one that's the most technicolor.
And a fascinating, I mean, complicated, conflicted figure.
Yes.
There's a sense in Robert Kennedy's story that he is the great, for Democrats,
he's the great loss leader, the great martyr, the great what might have been. And it's actually really interesting to
dig into that to see, could he become president and what would that have meant?
So let's just get straight into his story. Give a very quick sketch of who he is.
So he was born in 1925, he's the seventh of the Kennedy children. He, like his brother Jack,
boarding school, Harvard, but he's sort of
second fiddle or indeed seventh fiddle. So he's not a boy from whom great things are
expected. His father fixes him up a job working for, of all people, Joe McCarthy, the great
red baiter.
A lot of McCarthys.
Yeah, too many McCarthys, I think, Tom. I think two is too many. He only worked for
McCarthy for six months, but he
always got grief about it for the rest of his life. He then went on to work for a big
Senate committee that was investigating rackets. So Union corruption.
Oh, not the sport.
No, no. So he's investigating Union corruption. So Jimmy Hoffa and the Teamsters. And that's
where he really makes his name in the late fifties.
And so that's also part of the background to the JFK assassination conspiracy stuff,
isn't it?
Organized crime.
Organized crime and everything.
Because he's very tough on organized crime. Then he becomes his brother's campaign manager.
So he's basically all his life, he's his brother's number two, really. And Jack is charming,
as we've talked about before, charismatic, a ladies man, a guy you'd like to go for a
drink with. That's his thing. Bobby, actually his friends always called him Bob rather than
Bobby, but we'll call him Bobby because people always do. He's shy, he's unfriendly, he's
brooding, he's perceived as being sort of puritanical, I actually think he is, he's
very judgmental. He's difficult, he's spiky and that's great for Jack because basically Bobby is the bad cop. So he makes
Robert Kennedy his attorney general, youthful attorney general. I mean, as people say, God,
this is nepotism, your own brother, attorney general. But actually he's good at it. He
handles civil rights. He tries to crack down on organized crime and he's always at his
brother's hand.
So for example, in the Cuban Missile Crisis, Robert Kennedy is Jack's chief sounding board
because he is unflaggingly, unswervingly loyal.
He has no ambitions to have a career of his own, he just wants to be his brother's Chamberlain.
Can I also just ask about his wife?
Yeah, Ethel.
Ethel, which is a great name.
And she's a kind of, there's a little bit of Jackie Kennedy.
Yeah, a little bit.
I mean, she's from a kind of very, very wealthy background, socialite, all that.
Rich, socialite, Ethel Skakel.
People say, gosh, this is basically a union of Catholic new money and Protestant old money.
The marriage of Bobby and Ethel.
They had 10 children, which I think, controversially, is too many.
I don't think you can properly devote yourself to all of your 10 children.
And it contributes further to Kennedy's, who, you know, one of them has been running in this
year's campaign, hasn't it?
He has.
Before dropping out.
A very different kind of campaign, I think it's fair to say. So he's tied himself completely to
his brother. That's all he really wants for himself. Then in November 1963, he gets this call from J. Edgar Hoover, who he hates.
Your brother has been shot and his world completely falls apart.
Now, of course, anyone would mourn their brother.
That's completely understandable.
But people who know them are astounded, shocked, worried by the extent of his grief. He wears mourning clothes for much
longer than he needs to. He effectively builds a shrine to his brother in his office. He stops
eating. He becomes very thin, very silent, aggressive, withdrawn. Lots of people say of
him he's basically having an enormous nervous breakdown. But he solves that breakdown in a
completely commendable way by going and climbing a mountain
in Canada, which actually is called Kennedy brilliantly.
Yeah.
So it was named after his brother by the Canadians, highest unscaled peak in North America.
And he did it with a team of mountaineers who were incredibly impressed by him.
Said, you know, this is a scrawny little guy of tremendous resilience and courage to climb this mountain
in this sort of brooding grim faced way.
It's basically the thing he needs to do to get closure.
Do you know who would approve of that?
The Greeks.
No, Dr Johnson.
Who, whenever he got depressed, he'd go on a walk to Birmingham.
I mean, it's not quite the same as climbing a mountain in Canada, but it's the same idea. Now talk of Dr. Johnson brings us to a very different Johnson, which is Lyndon Johnson.
Very good.
Robert Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson despise, absolutely despise one another.
So Lyndon Johnson always knew that Robert Kennedy didn't want Jack to pick him as Vice
President and he once said to him at a party, he did the Johnson treatment.
He went up to him and he said, Bobby, you don't like me, but your brother likes me.
Your sister-in-law likes me.
Your daddy likes me, but you don't like me.
Why don't you like me?
They're not doing this in the orinol though.
You're probably waving his Johnson around.
Probably.
Robert Kennedy hates this kind of talk.
He's embarrassed and he slinks away.
And he sometimes would have to have these dinner parties and he would feel
he had to invite Johnson, but unbelievably he would always put
Johnson on the loser's table.
Oh goodness.
They like the Habsburgs.
Yeah.
Like Sophie, the fans of Erdanan's wife.
Exactly.
John is sitting at the end with Sophie.
And in fact, in one party where Johnson doesn't go, the big present that Robert
Kennedy's friends have got for him is a Lyndon Johnson voodoo doll because they know he hates Johnson so much.
Johnson knows this by the way, Johnson knows all this kind of stuff.
So Johnson feels tremendous resentment.
So when JFK is shot, they're immediately, you know, a daggers drawn.
RFK, Robert is livid that Johnson has moved into his brother's office.
He then makes a point of turning up late to Johnson's first cabinet meeting.
He never calls Johnson the president.
He always calls him either Johnson or that man.
Of course, Johnson always calls him that boy.
So there's a total sort of breakdown of trust between them.
On the one hand, Robert Kennedy says, he says, Johnson is a born liar.
I hate him. He's so vulgar. He's so coarse and he lies even when
he doesn't have to lie. On the other hand, Johnson says to his kind of a manuensis Doris
Kearns, I was the president. I had served his brother loyally. I'd done nothing wrong.
I didn't kill him. You know, basically on the record. Yes. It didn't seem fair. Quote, I had waited for
my turn. Bobby should have waited for his. So they have a terrible relationship and Robert
Kennedy finally decides he's going to strike out on his own run for the Senate from New
York, which he does. And at first he is a terrible, terrible campaigner. He is not a
good speaker. I mean, he has a very kind of reedy voice.
So I don't know.
I think I conveyed that.
Did you try to convey that Tom?
Yes, I did.
Right.
That's nice.
He basically copies everything from his brother.
So he copies his brother's hand gestures, his way of speaking, his Pinterest pauses,
all of that kind of stuff.
But his hands are shaking when he's out there on campaign, but he's a phenomenon.
He's a celebrity in a way that no other politician can possibly match.
So this is Kennedy mania.
It's Kennedy mania.
It's all that.
Yeah, of course it is.
And the press love him.
They give him incredibly syrupy sycophantic coverage.
They buy into the romance and they do that throughout the rest of his life.
So he becomes Senator from January, 1965.
And he is now, even though he's not the
president, he is by far the biggest political star in America. He gets thousands of letters every day,
dozens of speaking invitations every day. He lives an extraordinary life, I have to say.
So he has four times as many members of staff as the leader of the Democrats in Congress.
He lives on this country estate and when people sometimes
ask us in our bonus club episodes, we talk about class, history of class and does America
have a class system? He lives in a Virginia country estate with 10 children, seven dogs
and a sea lion called Sandy who lives in the swimming pool.
And then his children, each Kennedy child has a horse or pony. They also have iguanas,
raccoons, possums, cockatoos, ducks, rabbits,
parakeets, hamsters, geese, chickens, guinea pigs, lizards, a calf and a leopard tortoise.
I think we can safely say it's a menagerie. Yeah. Or a zoo. It's more than a menagerie,
isn't it? It's like Montezuma's zoo. And they've also got a huge team of, now in the Kennedy
books, they call them staff. In Britain, to be frank, we would call them servants.
Nannies, governesses, maids, cooks, secretaries.
I mean, he wants for nothing.
So he has this kind of gilded life, but I think it's fair to say he's not a happy man.
He doesn't really fit in on Capitol Hill.
He's not a hail fellow, well-met kind of character.
He's also been having this gigantic midlife crisis since his brother died.
And is this when he discovers Greek tragedy?
It does.
So to Jackie, Jackie Kennedy gave him, you know, she fancies herself as a reader and
as a woman of letters.
Well, she loves the Greeks.
She likes the Greek.
She does.
And she gives him this book, The Greek Way by Edith Hamilton.
And she also says, oh, you could try reading a bit of Camus, or read a bit of Tennyson
or this.
And he's basically having a delayed adolescence because he absolutely loves kind of existentialism.
He's always giving people quotes from Camus and stuff in a way that from a 16 year old
would be very endearing.
From a man in his
kind of, you know, late thirties, early forties, you're going to raise an eyebrow.
Gamu, really?
You find this very profound?
Escalus is classic.
Yeah, it is.
And when I say Escalus, I actually mean Escalus.
Of course you do.
But actually, I don't mean to sound sniffy because there's something quite admirable
about the way he makes himself the champion of the underdog.
Now that's something that John F. Kennedy really never was.
John F. Kennedy was a bit too, maybe a bit too cool, a bit too polished, you know?
But Robert Kennedy, he loves nothing better than going off to California and meeting kind
of Mexican migrant workers and squatting in the dust with them and talking about their
lives.
You know, he absolutely loves all this.
He goes to the Mississippi Delta, some of the poorest parts of the United States, and he's visibly shocked and moved by the poverty.
You know, he's photographed with all these sort of starving children, and he says to the cameras,
you could, if you were being cynical, say a slightly teenage way, or you could just say
a very admirable way. He says, what kind of country are we that we spend $75 billion a
year on guns and we don't do anything for children like these who literally have flies
crawling over their face.
Well, and $3 billion a year on dogs.
That's rich coming from him with his zoo.
Yeah, with his menagerie and his cockatoos and things. But that is essentially the Martin
Luther King lines about space rockets and submarines and things.
Yeah, absolutely. Absolutely. It is the Same idea. It is the same idea.
He has a scheme to pour money into a very depressed part
of New York, Bedford Stuyvesant.
He wants to basically get all his rich friends
to set up projects and things,
to have a housing and jobs and stuff.
He goes off to South Africa, apartheid South Africa,
to give a speech at the University of Cape Town.
And has any leading historian of 1960s America written about this?
Do you know what?
So this point in their career.
Thank you, Tom.
Thank you.
Very nice.
Very nicely done.
This was the subject of my master's thesis.
And the tragedy now is that I don't know where I've lost it.
Have the Kennedys not suffered enough tragedies?
I know.
It was kind of pre slightly pre internet. I wrote it on like a word
processor, you know, one of those kinds of machines. And I think it may be in the attic in some way,
in some form, but I don't know how it would be possible to retrieve it. Anyway, I did my master's
thesis on this. Well, when they set up the Dominic Sandbrook Library. That's exactly what will happen.
Where's the rest? It's history. Hopefully they'll find it. It's a library. Visitor Center, I think.
Hopefully they'll find it. It's a Reshister's History Visitor Centre, I think.
Interactive.
In Orlando, Florida.
Yeah, I look forward to it.
The general Custer experience.
It goes on and on and on.
Yeah, never ends.
How long has that Custer experience been in?
Over a month.
Oh my God.
And yet the French Revolution, I was in and out in seconds.
When he's in South Africa, he gave, I thought, a brilliant, brilliant speech.
Each time a man stands up for an ideal or acts to improve the lot of others or strikes
out against injustice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope.
And crossing each other from a million different centres of energy and daring, those ripples
build a current which can sweep down the mightiest walls of
oppression and resistance. That's very inspiring stuff if you're a kind of black South African
or if you're a liberal white South African student in 1966.
It's oratory that meets the challenge of the circumstances.
Yes.
That isn't inadequate to the horror of the state of play in South Africa. And it's oratory that meets the mood of the moment, the mood of the mid-60s. So by 1967 or so,
he feels like the ultimate kind of late-60s man. He's grown his hair, he's got younger speech
writers, he is sort of emblematic of the spirit of the age, I guess. So when you read what the
newspapers and what columnists said about him at this point,
so those Sunday Times guys who wrote an American melodrama,
he was gay but also fatalistic, cynical but idealistic,
impulsive by nature and calculating by habit.
The village voice, part of him was a soldier, a priest,
a radical and a football coach, but he was none of these.
He was a politician.
You know, this kind of coverage that he is a man apart, that he's an undefinable figure,
that there is something dark about him, but also something very romantic.
This is repeated everywhere.
To go back to something we discussed in the previous episode, this is an era that prizes
cool, particularly if you are young. Is he cool? I mean, is he the only politician who
counts as cool?
Yes, he is cool. Absolutely. He is cool. People say he's the, I know this sounds a silly thing
to say about a politician, but people say at the time he's the ultimate existential
man.
Oh, he'd love that wouldn't he with his camo and everything.
Exactly. Of course he loves that. He's defining himself every day through action. People say
that kind of thing. He's actually quite ideologically ambiguous.
Right. I was going to ask what all this kind of cool existential stuff means in terms of
actual policy. Or is he just about the vibe?
This is a question I think that it's fair to say you were not really expected to ask
in America in 1967. Because some people would say, what does all this mean?
You can sort of say, oh, I want to create a world in which fewer children are tortured.
We all agree, no one disagrees with that unless they're Pol Potts or somebody.
But what do you mean in terms of policy?
And actually he's very ambiguous, partly because he's got so many policy assistants and speech
writers that they're
on kind of different wings of the party and whatnot.
Yeah. So they have the hope that's rippling out. I mean, what does that mean? What does
it mean, for instance, with regard to Vietnam, which is the big policy question?
So originally he had been anti-communist hawk. He had been a cold war, you know, he was all
for it. But he starts to shift in the mid-60s. He says, I have changed my
mind about the bombing of North Vietnam. He gets a lot of grief from this. The Chicago
Tribune called him the senior senator from North Vietnam, Ho Chi Minh's Trojan horse
in the United States.
Okay. But is this also personal resentment of LBJ? Is that mixed in with it?
That's there. There's no denying it. And because people say that, he then falls quiet. He doesn't
want basically people to think that. So then he's quiet, but then he waits a couple of
years and then by the spring of 1967, he's back on the case and he says, look, we've
got to stop this bombing. We've got to have negotiations. We've got to have a coalition
government in Saigon and withdraw our troops. This is what other Senate doves say. So it's
nothing unusual.
It's basically exactly the same as what somebody like Eugene
McCarthy is saying.
So the thing about, is he just another politician?
The fact that he doesn't challenge Johnson suggests that he is because
he's all for month after month.
He's weighing up his options.
Should I run?
Should I not run?
And eventually he decides against running.
And then of course, Eugene McCarthy runs and he doesn't beat Johnson, but he cripples him
in New Hampshire.
And immediately Kennedy says, oh, well, I'm now reassessing my position.
And so lots of people are like, oh, he's just another politician.
And so this is like McCarthy is now the cool one.
Of course.
Yeah.
So it's like the Beatles and the Beach Boys kind of trying to outdo each other, that kind
of thing.
I guess so. If you want to, yeah. If you want to go with that a little bit. Yeah.
You know, who's the cool one on the block? I mean, this is kind of important in this
period of American life, isn't it?
It is.
If that's the constituency you're appealing to and they are both appealing to the kind
of people who are following the Beach Boys or whatever.
This is exactly the conversation that people have are following the Beach Boys or whatever.
This is exactly the conversation that people have.
So on the 16th of March, so that's what, four days after New Hampshire, he goes to the same
caucus room in the Senate.
It's very Camelot revival, the same room that his brother had declared his campaign for
the presidency in.
He uses the same opening line that his brother used.
And he says, you know, I'm running against Johnson to propose new policies,
deal with the poverty in America, the terrible poverty, end the war, reassert,
and I quote, our right to the moral leadership of this planet, which is very
JFK actually, but right from the start, people say what you said, he's doing it
because he feels aggrieved that McCarthy has run off with all his supporters.
The Washington Post.
Seeing the romance flower between his people, idealistic young people, and McCarthy, he
moved to break it up with the ruthlessness of a Victorian father whose daughter has fallen
in love with a dustman.
And a lot of people say he's just being unbelievably opportunistic here.
You know, he didn't have the courage to take on Johnson himself.
He let McCarthy do it and now he's moving in.
And Kennedy undoubtedly feels this himself because he's incredibly sensitive
and sore about it, and he is somebody who's spent years basically priding
himself on his courage, the existential man,
what would Camus do? What would the Greeks do? And actually what they wouldn't have done
is sit at home with their monatomy and let this guy...
Well they might actually, actually they might have done.
Maybe they would.
So his plan, I guess, was to sit out LBJ's term of office, which he's assuming would
end in 1972, and then run. And this is still the point at which LBJ hasn't announced he's standing down.
So that presumably is also to be fair to him, part of the context that he's not
really running against McCarthy.
He wants to have a crack at LBJ.
Yes, exactly.
And that, that is a kind of rivalry that he's been nurturing for many years.
Yeah.
So he might feel, you know, who's McCarthy to run against LBJ.
Yeah.
If anyone's going to take him down, it's going to be me.
Yeah, which is fair, but then he's got a massive problem.
Yeah, of course.
Cause LBJ says he's not running.
Two weeks after he's declared, LBJ says, I'm out, I'm gone.
Now he's got a very different prospect.
Now he's facing a very different opponent because he's still got McCarthy.
And we'll come back to Kennedy versus McCarthy, which you can argue is one of the most bitter
struggles in modern American political history.
But he's also got Johnson's vice president, Hubert Humphrey.
Now that Johnson is out, Hubert Humphrey is going to basically inherit the Johnson machine.
Now Humphrey is a very different character.
Of all of these men, Humphrey is the most liberal.
Humphrey's from Minnesota, he had an impeccable liberal record, mayor
of Minneapolis, champion of civil rights, he'd been one of the key authors of a lot
of the civil rights legislation. Unfortunately for him, he's been, I mean, I can't, there's
no other way of putting it, Tom, a very Tom Holland friendly description. He's been LBJ's
eunuch since 1964 as vice president. LBJ has tamed him and humiliates him constantly. Huber-Hunfer
is not a man who would expose himself in a public toilet.
Yeah, he wouldn't swing his dick in the urinal.
He would not.
He seems a nice man. He seems a very nice man.
Yeah, he's a nice man. I think he is a nice man. People said afterwards he's sort of,
apparently wasn't terribly nice to his family because he was always off campaigning and
never had any time for them. But I mean, that's the nature of being a politician, I suppose.
And his middle name is Horatio, isn't it?
Yeah.
Hubert, he will subsequently be introduced by Jimmy Carter as, what is it?
Hubert Horatio Hornblower.
Which is essentially not introduced.
It's Jimmy Carter's eulogy at the democratic convention.
He says what a tremendous man he was.
Hubert Horatio Hornblower.
Yeah.
The hero of the, um, the Palaeonic war Nelsonian.
Yeah.
If you ever want to date, I mean, there's a lot, there's a lot of nice things to be
said about Jimmy Carter, but he's not, I think it's fair to say a man of enormous
political, oratorical.
Yeah.
Yes.
Yeah.
Right.
Hubert Humphrey or Hubert Horatio Hornblower, if you prefer.
Let's call him Hornblower. It's much more fun. He's massively popular with like the party machine, with
the trade unions, the labour unions, the city bosses, all of those kinds of people. Basically,
if you're in the Democratic party and you've been there for more than about five years,
you love Hubert Humphrey. He's like, you know, the ultimate party man. And the way that the
system works, you don't need to run in the primaries.
And so he's not going to, in fact, he's too late to run a lot of them.
He can hoover up the delegates and become the party nominee and nobody really hates him.
He's kind of everybody's second choice.
And that's fine.
Can I just ask you about him?
Yeah.
What is his take on Vietnam?
Because am I right that basically he's pretty against it, but because he's LBJ's vice president,
he's been holding his tongue the whole way through.
Exactly.
That's exactly it.
And LBJ mistrusts him, thinks he's unsound on Vietnam.
He does.
That's exactly, exactly right.
So poor old Hubert Humphrey, who would undoubtedly have been one of the doves, one of the critics
of the war, if he'd not been vice president, because he's vice president and he's really loyal,
he will never break with Johnson.
And he's been quiet, biting his tongue all this time.
And even now as the candidate, he won't break with Johnson because he's
Johnson's vice president and he doesn't want to alienate him.
So he's in a very difficult position.
McCarthy is also still hanging around, of course.
Now McCarthy is behaving absolutely splendidly. He says, having thought I would run just to
basically cause a bit of a stir, I now think actually I will be president. I do quite like
the job. He says publicly, I think it would take me two hours a day of work to be president
and I think it would be best for the country if I spent
the rest of the time reading poetry. Do you know, I'd vote for him. He's now the darling of the
press because of this campaign against LBJ, he's the darling of liberal opinion, he's got loads of
celebs turning out for him, Paul Newman, Dustin Hoffman. Stravinsky I read. Is he still around?
Stravinsky at the age of a thousand.
The other thing is you cannot put into words how much he hates Robert Kennedy.
He absolutely despises him.
He says, first of all, he says, Robert Kennedy is a coward.
He says, the Kennedy people were, and I quote, this is a very good line, they were willing
to stay up on the mountain and light signal fires and bonfires and dance in the light
of the moon, but none of them came down. I tell you, I was a little lonely in New Hampshire.
I walked alone." Now, when Robert Kennedy hears this, he's steamed coming out of rage
coming out of his ears, he also says Kennedy is a wimp. Quote, he plays touch football.
I play football. He plays softball. I play baseball. He skates in Rockefeller Center. I play hockey.
And then my favorite line, which leads me to believe that he would actually have been
a very good presenter on the rest is history. This is very rest is history vibe. He says
Kennedy is thick. I got an A in economics and Bobby only got a C. Imagine saying that.
Imagine going around saying that. That's exactly what I would do actually if I ran for president. I'd go in with my GCSE results.
So it's a shame that McCarthy ended up disliking you so much when you had so much in common.
I think we had so much in common. I think there was only room really for one of us.
I think that was the thing.
Well, like McCarthy and Kennedy.
And Kennedy. The interesting thing, so do you want to hear about my discovery?
Yes. So this is your archival discovery.
Yeah, my discovery. And what the tragic thing thing is I made this discovery and I wrote about it
and nobody cared or has ever acknowledged it.
This is your chance to make amends for that.
I discovered in Hubert Humphrey's papers that Hubert Humphrey was secretly funding McCarthy's
campaign.
That is a bombshell. Bombshell.
Was channeling money to McCarthy's campaign because there's all these...
I mean, that's a properly genuine revelation.
There's messages from Go Between saying McCarthy will need more money in Oregon. McCarthy says
hold off on the money. He can deal with Bobby for us. Because McCarthy and Humphrey had
been pals in Minnesota. And I also found a letter in George McGovern's papers from McCarthy's
campaign manager. And he says, I was literally handed envelopes of cash by one of Humphrey's
backers.
So there you go.
Isn't that interesting?
That is interesting.
Robert Kennedy faces this real uphill struggle.
He's got Hubert Humphrey, who's doing all these backroom deals to get delegates.
And he's got McCarthy saying he's going to go to see an economics.
He's a wimp and a coward.
Doesn't play ice hockey.
Basically the only way he can get the nomination is he's going to have to
overwhelm the convention and the delegates with his own celebrity, with his popularity. Kennedy mania.
He will have to wage a kind of psychological campaign as much as a political one,
loads of rallies, loads of emotion, revivalism, college campuses, people crying, shaking his hand.
He'll campaign in the primaries, win as many primaries as he can and go to the
convention and say to the delegates, come on, look how popular I am, you've got to
pick me, but there's a huge risk and it's a physical risk because for everybody who
loves Robert Kennedy, there is somebody who loathes him.
No politician in America, I think it's fair to say, is as hated.
And who are the haters? On the right? On the right.
Or fellow liberals or what?
I would say mainly on the right and people who are more conservative or more square by
temperament. So people who say, who don't like, who resent his wealth, they resent his
celebrity and his charisma. People who are not young or poor or black or marginalised.
People to whom he is not the answer to disorder, but the embodiment of it.
There have always been a lot of people who didn't like the Kennedy faction, who regard
them as arrogant and overbearing and all of that.
They loathe Robert Kennedy with a white-hot passion.
He's getting a lot of death threats.
Ethel, who you mentioned, his wife, is terrified that he will be shot.
And it is clear that there are a lot of people who would welcome him being shot.
When he announces his candidacy, a veteran columnist with the very American name of Westbrook
Pegler, who's a columnist, it's fair to say on the very far right, writes, with luck,
some white patriot of the Southern Tier will spatter his spoonful of brains in
public premises before the snow flies.
Wow.
Yeah.
Goodness, that's printed.
Yeah, that's what he thinks.
And there are people who absolutely think that.
People say that political discourse today is toxic, but I mean, can't imagine that being
run in the newspaper today.
Do you know what J. Edgar Hoover's partner, Clyde Tolson, said?
He says it much
more pithily. He says, I hope someone shoots and kills that son of a bitch. Well, I think
probably we should take a break at that point. And when we come back, we'll find out whether
Clyde Tolson's wish comes true. RFK! RFK! RFK! And then Kennedy was there. His teeth gleamed startlingly white in the
television lights and his tanned skin glowed. He looked as he sometimes did, more vital,
more handsome than any film star, the personification of brilliance and success. This last political
moment went beyond politics. Kennedy was at once broker of power, magic leader, desired
sexual object, protagonist of aspirations, liberator and hero. So that's the book by
the three Sunday Times journalists, an American melodrama that we've
been referring to quite a lot over the course of this series.
And the book is describing the scene in the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, just moments
before the murder of Bobby Kennedy.
And so Dominic, we will be building up to that dramatic night in California through
the second half of the episode. But before we get there, there's some twists, aren't there? Some turns?
We love a twist and a turn. We do indeed. So we've got to get to the 4th of June, really
to mid-April, because that's when King has been shot. There's the funeral, everything
stops a little bit because there's been the riots, there's been all the kind of hullabaloo
about the death of Martin Luther King.
And then the campaign kind of restarts in earnest.
And don't forget what Robert Kennedy needs to do.
Somehow he needs to see off McCarthy, he needs to sweep the primaries,
and he needs to build up this head of steam that will take him to the convention
and persuade people to switch from Hubert Humphrey to him.
So the first primary is in Indiana and that's why
he's in Indianapolis, of course, when Martin Luther King is shot. So Indiana is a tough
state for Kennedy. It's a Midwestern state, but it's quite industrial. It's got a lot
of steelworks, got lots of blue collar workers who are what were called in the jargon of
the time, white ethnics, meaning they are German or Polish or Irish or Italian or whatever.
So these are not people who would instinctively be sympathetic to someone who's 10 children
all have a cockatoo.
No, exactly. It's traditionally been seen in Indiana as quite a conservative state.
So Nixon had won it in 1960. It had once had the largest clan membership in America. And
at the very bottom of Indiana, you're almost in the South. So it's tough for Kennedy and he's facing McCarthy.
He's also facing, confusingly, the local governor who is standing as a stand-in
effectively for Hubert Humphrey, Governor Branigan.
At first, Kennedy goes to the college campuses and he's mobbed by crowds and
he's got, his hair is quite long and he's talking
about poverty and all this stuff.
And as his biographer Larry Ty says, actually this was a bad look because Indiana worried
more about crime than poverty.
He wanted a father figure, not a fifth beetle.
So he's persuaded by his aides to change his look.
He cuts his hair, he puts on cheaper suits.
He starts to brand himself the former attorney general. It's basically say tough on law and order. Yeah. I'm the
Dick Tracy of the 19, of the late 19th century. Like Kamala Harris. Exactly. Like Kamala Harris.
He's obviously, he's got loads of money because daddy's credit card is coming in for quite
a, quite a pounding. So daddy's still, still all around, isn't he? Yes, he is. He's had
a stroke. So he's kind of, he can't be saying a thing or do anything. He can just sign the checks.
Except for sign the checks. Exactly. So he gives that famous Martin Luther King speech
and actually he wins. So Indiana is one down and it got the result. He wins about four
out of 10 votes. He wins the majority of the delegates and on election night, he says to
his aides,
this is great, I want to build, and I quote, a new coalition of Negroes and working class
white people against the union and the party establishments. But can he do that? If you
look at the Indiana results, he has a few glaring weaknesses. So first of all, I said
a lot of people can't stand him. This is born out. Three out of every five people in Indiana
do not vote for him. This is in the Democratic primary. And historians have really dug into these figures because
this, you know, his fate is so fascinating to historians. And they've discovered that
among white voters, he does really, really badly. And it's basically black voters that
are his margin of victory. He is locked into now this kind of core constituency of people who are quite
poor, some of these kind of so-called white ethnic voters, black voters, Hispanic voters
and so on, because he's the champion of the underdog. The question is, can he pivot from
that towards the center ground later on? And the problem is if you've got an election year
in which the cities are going up in flames, law and order is on everybody's lips, all the papers are full of crime and chaos and
all of this stuff, it's going to be really, really difficult to do.
So this makes him very different from his brother.
John F. Kennedy had been the man of the center ground really.
Nothing you could really object to.
Robert Kennedy has put himself way out on what you might call, I guess, the left.
And it's quite hard for him to win over people who don't already agree with him.
And you see this in the next contest.
So this is in Oregon, 28th of May.
Oregon, obviously it's in the Pacific Northwest.
It's a small town farming state, very well-educated, very white, very progressive.
Perfect for Eugene McCarthy.
And Kennedy, when he gets there, he doesn't like it.
He says to his aides, this place is like one giant suburb.
Let's face it, I appeal best to people who have problems.
McCarthy's in his element.
He's kind of going to all these little liberal arts colleges and whatnot.
They've got little bookshops, bookstores.
Yeah, he loves it.
Poetry sections.
Exactly.
And he is, to use the vernacular, much loved by our former producer, Dom Johnson, he rinses
Kennedy about Vietnam and about the Cold War.
And he says, look, he was part of the people who got us into this mess, right?
He was a Cold War hawk.
He's part of the military industrial complex.
That's a term that McCarthy's using a lot at this point.
He's absolutely part of the military industrial complex. All his friends are in the military industrial complex. That's a term that McCarthy is using a lot at this point. He's absolutely part of the military industrial complex.
All his friends are in the military industrial complex.
Why would you vote for someone like this?
Who is clearly part of the problem, not part of the solution.
The result?
McCarthy wins.
45 to 39%.
The first time a Kennedy has ever lost a public election.
And this is the news, that's the headline.
The Kennedys are not invincible.
They can be beaten.
And this kind of guy who everyone was saying was a joke six months ago.
They're not laughing now.
Yeah.
The guy who was talking about the Punic Wars, he's just wiped the floor with Kennedy.
So what you have now is a situation where, Hubert Humphrey is still
accumulating one of his delegates, by the way, but the left of centre of American politics is clearly
being divided in two. On the one hand, you have the suburban middle class, the university
people, well-heeled, the Guardian readers of America. They are team Eugene McCarthy.
And on the other hand, you have obviously the Camelot fan club, but you also have black
voters, Hispanics, people who feel that they are, as it were, towards the bottom, the losers
of society, if you like.
They are Kennedy's people.
He keeps hoping that McCarthy will drop out or will reach a compromise.
McCarthy despises him so much, and of course has all this Humphrey money, that there's
no way he's ever going to do that. So it's all going to come down to California.
California's primary is on the 4th of June and California is massively important. It's
just overtaken New York as the biggest state in the union.
And also the eyes of the world are on it. Exactly. The Summer of Love, the hippies and
all that. Exactly. But you've got Reagan too, haven't you? This is the great thing about California,
it's 60s America and Mike Cosm. You've got the student protests in Berkeley, you've got
riots in Watts, you have the white backlash in suburbia that propelled Reagan. So it's
almost you can tell the whole story of 60s America through the state of California. California
also sends the most delegates to the Democratic convention, I think something like 174. So what is that about eight or nine times New Hampshire where
McCarthy had started his campaign. The timetable of the primaries now is so compressed that
there's basically a two week campaign. And it's one of the most anticipated and keenly
followed primary campaigns in American history. Because
what both candidates are doing is they're both doubled down on their appeal. McCarthy
in the TV studios, very reasoned, very calm, goes to the college campuses quoting Catholic
writers of the 1910s that no one's ever heard of.
But I can't imagine that being popular with the freaks.
No, I don't think the freaks, not the freaks, but the sort of slightly squarer students,
maybe only a little bit squarer, but students who are idealistic. Students who are dreamers.
They like the idea of this romantic underdog, a cerebral, serious person, you know, who
quotes, who writes poems and is interested in philosophy.
But are the furry freak brothers, they're breaking for Bobby, are they?
Well, so what Bobby does, his aides say to him, do you want to row back a little bit
on going all in on these massive rallies in scruffy areas and things? Is this really a
wise strategy? And he says, no, no, this is what I do. So he goes all in on massive rallies,
goes to poor areas of cities, he's got big black
crowds. And one headline at the time said it was basically a contest between an evangelist
and a philosopher. I think there's some truth in that. That captures the kind of temperamental
difference. Of course, if you're a real freak, Tom, you wouldn't go to either, would you?
I mean, do you go to political rallies if you're a...
Stick it to the man.
Yeah.
By, yeah, spliffing up, taking LSD.
A sign of how exciting the campaign is that they have a TV debate, which is actually quite
boring because they don't really disagree about anything, which is watched by 32 million
people. So a huge audience for a debate in one primary in one state among the supporters
of one party. They have a disagreement about how they're going to break up the ghettos.
Kennedy says you have to take jobs and housing and stuff into the ghettos. McCarthy says, no,
that's kind of apartheid. You have to kind of break them up and then have an argument
about that. Kennedy says, what, you're going to take all these black people and move them
out into Orange County? It was very suburban, very conservative. And lots of people say,
oh gosh, that's a terrible dog whistle. But actually what's so fascinating about this campaign, which is so
embittered, so dramatic, is that it is pure vibes. So it's like the Roman Republic. It's totally the Roman Republic. I was thinking of this while reading about it just now, that what's the
optimates and the populares? So the people who think they are the representatives of the old
privileged class, restrained, sober, cerebral, and then the other people who they are the representatives of the old privilege class, restrained, sober,
cerebral, and then the other people who are sort of part of the mob.
Is that the distinction?
Well, no, not quite, but yes, appealing over the heads of the traditional elites.
Yeah, a sort of populist and a patrician.
It's about style rather than about, well, they're both elite.
I mean, that's the whole thing.
Well, which you could say about these two senators, right?
Yeah.
So it's a good parallel.
So I think that is a good parallel.
Anyway, we get to the last full day of campaigning, the 3rd of June.
That day, Robert Kennedy traveled 1200 miles.
He went from Los Angeles to San Francisco, then back down to Long Beach to Watts to San
Diego, then back to Los Angeles.
Massive rallies, pressing the flesh.
He's giving these speeches about his two big issues,
which are the Vietnam War and poverty in America. He is absolutely shattered. His hands are
covered with blood. They're very badly bruised. He's shaken so many hands. He's in fact been
advised to stop shaking hands because he's literally shaking hundreds, if not thousands.
I've never heard of that happening.
Every day. Oh yeah. I mean-
Hands bleeding because you're shaking hands so often.
But think about it, if you see the footage of his rallies.
Yeah, of course I see kind of reaching out and pumping in the Kennedy way, Camelot shake.
Absolutely.
But it's very different from his brother's rallies, which are much more controlled.
These are, there's a frenzied, you know, very 1968, a frenzied frenetic atmosphere
to this.
People screaming and shouting.
It's hot, obviously it's California in June.
You know, the whole thing is really overwrought.
Chase Stadium vibe.
Very much.
Candlestick Park.
Yeah.
He's lost his voice.
He's on the verge of collapse.
His team are very worried now about the danger of assassination.
They've had a lot of death threats.
Ethel is very frightened.
What's worse is they have terrible relations with the local police in California because the
boss in Los Angeles, this guy called Sam Yorty, is not a Kennedy ally by any means. Their
relations with the local police department, the LAPD, are very bad. The Kennedy people
said the LAPD refused to help us. The LAPD guys said afterwards, actually the problem
was the Kennedy people were arrogant and they wouldn't cooperate with us.
Kennedy's own biographer, Larry Tai, says, the truth is the candidate himself is part
of the problem here. That he's given advice, be careful, don't maybe too visible. But of
course he wants to be visible because the courage is such an important, proving his
courage is so important.
And to McCarthy as much as to anyone else, I suppose.
Yeah, absolutely.
It's so important to him.
What kind of presidential candidate hides away?
Well, as we will see, Richard Nixon, but we'll get onto that later on.
So the 4th of June polling day, if Kennedy loses, he is out.
He cannot continue if he loses to McCarthy a second time.
It's a cold day, unseasonably cold, the smog over Los Angeles. The Kennedy
Maynard is staying at Malibu. They've been lent the beach house of the film director
John Frankenheimer who made the Manchurian Candidate. Great conspiracy, political conspiracy
thriller of course of the 1950s. Kennedy because he's exhausted he sleeps in late and then
he goes swimming with his family. Son David is almost drowned and he dives in to rescue him, which is a very nice,
very Kennedy behaviour, Tom.
Unlike his younger brother, of course, Teddy Kennedy.
Yes.
Chappaquiddick notably failed to behave like that.
That's true. That's harsh. That's harsh. But I can't argue with it. Anyway, they get back
to the house. Thankfully nobody has died on
this occasion unlike a chap critic. And the first reports are coming through. It's looking
quite good, but they're not certain. It's going to be very close. Frankenheimer, the
film director, drives Kennedy into the city. He takes a very strange meandering route because
he's going to avoid the crowds, which gets everybody very stressed, more stressed. They
finally get to the Ambassador Hotel at about seven o'clock. So the Ambassador Hotel
is on Wilshire Boulevard. It's in the middle of the great sprawl of Los Angeles and it's
a city landmark. It had been built in the twenties and it was famous for this nightclub
called the Coconut Grove, which was the ultimate Hollywood hangout. And Frank Sinatra was always there.
Dean Martin.
Yeah, all that kind of thing. But the whole thing is very faded now, right? We talked in the previous
episode about Memphis. One of the things about late sixties America is that all these old places,
these kind of art deco places.
You wouldn't find Jim Morrison there.
No, they're kind of faded and old fashioned. And this is very true of the Ambassador Hotel. Up he goes to suite 512. He's got all his aids, he's got banks of telephones, you know, the whole scene
that you would expect from a Kennedy campaign. The polls close at eight o'clock and the returns
are very slow to come in and they're studying the returns. As expected, McCarthy is piling
up votes in the small towns and in the suburbs. He is clearly going to win Northern California, the area around San Francisco.
Kennedy is doing really well with the black and Hispanic voters.
The question is can he get enough of them in Los Angeles County to offset
MacArthur's strength in Northern California.
It's really nerve-racking for him and his team. The results are coming in very
slowly. There's computers breaking down. It's a very, very familiar American election night scene. Finally, we
get to about 11 o'clock at night. They get good news. They have won Los Angeles County
very decisively. All that time spent on those rallies has been worth it. It seems pretty
clear he's going to win a narrow victory, perhaps 46 to 42 percent. But that's enough.
Narrower than he would have liked because it keeps McCarthy in.
But he's now got the big mo.
Well, or has he?
This is the question.
At this moment in his sweep, people are pouring over delegate counts.
They cannot be sure exactly how the delegates are going to go at the convention.
There's one delegate count that has shown to Robert Kennedy just before he died that is very bleak for him. They say Humphrey's
on 994, you're on 524 and a half, I don't know how you can get half a
delegates but there you go, and McCarthy on 204. There are others that are closer
but he is still a long way behind Humphrey. Also the polls show counter
intuitively to people who have drunk deep of the romance of the 60s. Humphrey is still by far the preferred choice of registered Democrats. They know
him, he's the party man, everybody likes him. Kennedy only gets about a third of
registered Democrats as their top choice. What's also a problem for him is the
next primary is in New York. McCarthy is definitely not going to pull out.
McCarthy has already held a massive rally in Madison Square Garden.
He's got loads of promises of money from people in New York.
His aides are actually quite confident that he can do really well in New York, perhaps
win it.
So at that moment up in his suite, Kennedy is musing with his team, shall I make McCarthy
an offer?
Offer him Secretary of State. If he pulls
out now and I become president, I hate McCarthy and he's treated me like with total contempt,
but I will offer him this prize job if he pulls out, but will he go for it? Anyway,
enough we have to go down and declare victory. He takes a few moments, he has a little cigar,
he's sitting there on the floor of his suite,
very Robert Kennedy, 1960, very groovy, cross legged on the floor, smoking his cigar.
And what's even groover is that they then go down and sing Woody Guthrie songs.
Yes.
So he goes downstairs to the ballroom where all his crowd, all his supporters are waiting.
The place is absolutely packed.
If you watch clips of this on YouTube, it's unbelievable how they, not only that they've
managed to fit so many people into the ballroom, but the platform, this
kind of dace at the end of the room, is absolutely stuffed with people singing Woody Guthrie
songs. So Kennedy pushes his way onto the platform. He's surrounded by people. He's
almost dwarfed by all these people. It's an ecstatic reception. People are screaming and shouting. It's now
two minutes past midnight. And Kennedy declares victory. We've won in California. Brilliant.
He gives the speech that you would expect. He says, we can end the divisions in the United
States between black and white. We're a great country and a selfish country, a compassionate
country. I'm going to make this my basis for running. We want to deal with these problems
and we want peace in Vietnam. So my thanks to all of you and on to Chicago
and let's win there. And then he gives a V sign, peace, but also victory. And now he
turns to go. Now the plan is to go out to a second rally on a lower floor where an overspill
crowd of supporters are waiting. And then to go into an annex where there's a load of pressmen and there's going to be
a press conference.
In the chaos as he leaves the stage because it's so crowded, his campaign manager shouts
in his ear and says, it's too crowded and it's so late, we will skip the second rally
and we'll go straight to the press conference.
And they push their way out through the back of the ballroom, through these swinging doors
into the hotel kitchen.
It's unbelievably crowded.
And in the crush behind him,
Kennedy is separated from his bodyguard.
His bodyguard is helping Ethel,
who is heavily pregnant, off the platform.
But he's got all his team around him.
They continue to sort of push into the kitchen.
They're almost carried along by this great sort of wave of people,
a huge mob of photographers behind them. The kitchens are full of the kitchen, they're almost carried along by this great sort of wave of people, a huge mob of
photographers behind them. The kitchens are full of the kitchen staff who have waited because they
get a glimpse of, you know, America's most famous political celebrity. And as they go through the
kitchen, Kennedy is reaching to shake hands. They go through into a kind of corridor, sort of pantry
style corridor. There's an ice machine. There's a row of heated steel cupboards.
It's just yards to go now until the room where the newspaper men are waiting.
As they say in an American melodrama, the Sunday Times guys, it was
like an alleyway in a ship.
It was like the corridor of the Titanic or something.
It's got naked metal, cooking smells, yellow light.
It's very kind of unsettling atmosphere and packed with people. As Kennedy passes through into this room a radio journalist is
asking him about the fact that he's so far behind Humphrey in the delegate count
and he's turning his head to talk to this guy. At the same time he's reaching
out in another direction to shake hands with a Mexican busboy or as you would
say in English a kitchen assistant called Juan Romero. And at this
point as he's reaching out, somebody pushes through the crowd and this is a young man
who has been waiting there all this time. People say he was wearing a blue sweatshirt
and he had what they called a sickly expression on his face. And the young man is holding a gun and he fires. A number of shots, how many is contested.
There is a huge melee. People are piling onto this bloke, throwing themselves onto him,
get the gun, get the gun. The radio reporters are recording this. So we have the audio footage of
people screaming and shouting, get the gun, break his fingers, get the gun. Kennedy had fallen back against
the ice machine and then he's down on the floor. He's still conscious and his eyes are
open, but people see there is blood coming out from behind his ear. Juan Romero, the
Mexican busboy, drops to his side and Kennedy says to him, whispers, is everybody okay?
Romero, yes, everybody's okay. But now the blood is absolutely flooding out from behind Kennedy's ear.
In fact, what has happened is that he has been shot three times, once in the head
and twice in his back.
Five other people were shot too in the chaos, reporters and campaign volunteers,
but none of them injured so badly.
Romero reaches into his pocket and gets out some rosary beads and presses them
into Kennedy's hand and he cradles his head and his hand is now covered with blood because
there's so much blood coming from his head. Ethel is now caught up with her husband and
she's crying and she says give him room to breathe, give him room to breathe and then
she whispers to Robert Kennedy, I'm with you, I'm with you my baby. One of Kennedy's friends
who was a journalist called Pete Hamill said at this point that Kennedy had this strange
smile on his face like he was very...
A kind of sweet, accepting smile.
Yeah, exactly.
Then there are paramedics pushing their way through the crowd and the paramedics are straight
to his side and they immediately try to lift him to get him out.
And at that, Kennedy says, he just says very quietly, oh no, don't lift me.
And those are the last words he ever says because he passes out.
So Kennedy is taken out of the hotel and rushed to the, eventually to the
Good Samaritan Hospital.
And news flashes around the country.
I will just say this.
McCarthy is in his hotel room writing his concession speech and his campaign
manager told me that when the news reached McCarthy that Kennedy had been
shot, his first reaction was to say
he brought it upon himself.
A day goes by, the nation is waiting, people are stunned and shocked by this.
But it's not until the 6th at 2 o'clock in the morning that Kennedy's press secretary
comes out of the hospital, and again you can see it on YouTube,, absolutely stricken and he says to the waiting reporters that he has died. In fact, he had effectively
died.
When he was shot like his brother.
Exactly.
And indeed like Martin Luther King.
Now to compare it with the shootings of John F Kennedy and Martin Luther King, one difference
is that we know precisely who the gunman was beyond any possible doubt, because the people
threw themselves on top of him at the time and fought to get the gun out of his hand.
He was 24 years old and he was called Sahan Sahan.
He was Palestinian, born in Jerusalem in 1944.
Not as you often read, a Palestinian Muslim, but a Palestinian Christian.
He said later that he had been traumatized by the war of the late 1940s,
that his brother had been run over by an Israeli military vehicle.
I guess it's just about possible he might just remember the late 1940s if you're four or five years old.
His family had moved to the United States when he was 12 and he'd been to school in Los Angeles.
He was very short and slight and a loner, a drifter. He'd been in and out of various
churches. He'd been a Baptist, a Seventh-day Adventist. He'd even been a Rosicrucian, would
you believe?
So all these people are drifters.
Yeah, well, there's a pattern, right?
The assassins.
Of course. Sohan Sohan said later that he had been radicalized,
as it were, by the Six-Day War of 1967,
which had begun exactly one year before the day he assassinated
Robert Kennedy.
He later told David Frost in an interview
that he shot Kennedy because of, quote,
his support for Israel and his deliberate attempt
to send 50 fighter jets to Israel
to obviously do harm to the Palestinians. And we know that he wrote in his diary about his determination
to eliminate RFK, Kennedy must die before June the 5th. The reason is because he wants
to shoot Kennedy to mark the anniversary of the Six Day War.
Again, amazing. Another parallel with 2024, the salience of the war in Israel and Gaza.
Exactly, as providing a kind of background to what's going on.
He admitted his guilt straight away and he was sentenced to death.
That sentence was commuted to life imprisonment when California scrapped
the death penalty, and then he decided that he wasn't guilty after all
and said that actually he'd been framed or he'd been brainwashed or whatever.
You know, I said that that director.
Kind of Manchurian candidate thing again another
weird link there that the main conspiracy theory as far as I can tell I
mean there are lots of different conspiracy theories about Sahant but one
of the most popular is that he was in some way part of a CIA experiment and
had been brainwashed and that this was all a CIA plot to kill Kennedy. I don't
want to offend listeners who believe
it, but I have to say, I regarded as totally untrue. Sohan Sohan is still alive. He's 80
years old as is Ethel Kennedy is still alive.
As is Ethel, yeah, 96.
Sohan Sohan has made 17 different appeals for parole, which have all been turned down
in 2021. He had an unexpected support. All the Kennedy children said, please don't let this guy out, except one.
That was RFK Jr., the eccentric erstwhile presidential candidate who said, no, no,
I support his campaign, let him out.
But they didn't.
The final question, what if, you know, the great question of Kennedy's life.
When he was taken out of the kitchen, the journalists
noticed that somebody had scrawled graffiti on one of the walls. They didn't know it was
a coincidence or what it was. They had scrawled the words, the once and future king.
So that's a Camelot illusion.
Camelot illusion.
King Arthur.
Exactly. And that's his enduring reputation among liberal Democrats, I think, or 60s veterans,
that he is the great loss leader, the martyr, the champion of the underdog. And if he had
lived, maybe everything would have been different. That this is a real turning
point in history and that the political course of American life...
Do you think that resonance would be even higher, you know, if he'd been
shot by a white supremacist or somebody from a less marginalized background
than a Palestinian.
Yeah. I mean, it would be a better story, right? It would be a more Hollywood ending.
It would have more resonance, wouldn't it? Because Martin Luther King is shot by a white supremacist.
Yes, he is.
And that obviously amplifies the kind of the resonance of his fate.
Yeah, I agree with you. As it is, and I know a lot of listeners, American listeners in particular,
disagree with me about this. I don't think there was any prospect of him being president in 1968. First of all,
I think it's incredibly unlikely that he would have been the Democratic nominee. So many
people didn't like him in the party. I think it's highly implausible that he would ever
have overhauled Humphrey's lead among the delegates and defied the union leaders and
the city bosses and people who generally controlled the convention.
If he had been the nominee, again, I know a lot of listeners would agree with this,
I think Nixon would have beaten him in 1968 in the general election. And even if he had
then run in 1972, or if he'd just run in 1972, I think Nixon would have beaten him in 1972
as well. And I think the reason is that Americans craved order and stability.
And a lot of middle America would have seen Kennedy as a threat to those things,
rather than as the answer to their problems.
And I think the thing that people often say is you're discounting the Kennedy mystique,
the Kennedy celebrity.
But he'd already lost one election to McCarthy, who's not exactly the best candidate in the world. And what is more, his brother Ted, if you believe in the Kennedy mystique, the Kennedy celebrity, but he'd already lost one election to McCarthy who's not exactly the best candidate in the world. And what is more, his brother Ted, if you
believe in the Kennedy Mystique, his brother Ted couldn't even beat Jimmy Carter in the
Democratic primaries in 1980.
But he was very damaged goods by that point.
He was, but if Tom, I think if you can't beat Jimmy Carter in 1980, you can't beat anyone,
frankly. I know that sounds very harsh. I don't want to stamp on Carter. Anyway, because
I think there'll be lots of people who say, I think that's rubbish.
I think Kennedy could have won.
And maybe we can discuss this in a bonus episode at some point for our club members.
So LBJ is out.
Martin Luther King has been murdered.
Robert Kennedy has been murdered and we're not even halfway through the year.
So there's a lot to come.
We have the Chicago convention.
We have the campaign convention. We have
the campaign of George Wallace, the new populism, and we have one of the great comebacks in
American history, the return from the dead of the ultimate Lazarus, Richard Milhouse
Nixon.
Well, that is exciting. But next episode we'll be with the Yippies. So Yippie for that.
And you can hear it straight away if you want to by signing up at
therestishistory.com and you'll be able to hear all the rest of the series.
If you don't want to, fine.
It will be coming in due course and we will be back very soon.
Missing you already.
Goodbye.
Goodbye. Hello everybody, Dominic here.
Now I have some very good news for you because if you've been enjoying the series that we're
doing on America in 1968 and my tangled relationship with Eugene McCarthy, the news couldn't be
better actually because on Tuesday the 5th of November, thrilling news for people who like
American politics, I will be covering the American presidential election through
the night, live from New York City. Now, the downside of this for people who
enjoy very poor American accents and stories about the Punic Wars, the Bannies,
if you're one of that sort of embattled minority,
Tom Holland will not be joining us.
He's not allowed to come.
I will be joined by, unbelievably, Rory Stewart and Alistair Campbell
from The Rest Is Politics, Anthony Scaramucci from The Rest Is Politics
US and Marina Hyde from The Rest Is Entertainment.
Alan Shearer from the Rest is Football was invited
but he didn't want to come. We will be live on YouTube from 3pm Eastern
time on Tuesday afternoon and we'll be back again dementedly at midnight, terrifying prospect,
to take you through the early hours of Wednesday morning. We will be analysing all the events
as they unfold I read. We will be analyzing all the events as they unfold, I read.
We will be comparing 2024 to elections past in American history, and we'll be
reacting to the unveiling of the next president of the United States.
Now, I know that Rest is History listeners are not necessarily the same persuasion
as those of our sister podcasts.
So to allay your fears for every mention of Donald Trump or Boris Johnson that Alastair Campbell makes,
I will ensure that viewers get at least six anecdotes about Hubert Humphrey or George Wallace.
For more information, why wouldn't you want more information on such a galaxy of stars?
Just search for The Rest Is Politics America Decides on YouTube.