August 27, 2009 4:30 PM

Possible Obama Visit Shows Bond to Kennedy

By
CBSNews
(AP)  When President Obama's prospects for the presidency sagged, Sen. Edward Kennedy lifted the candidate with a coveted endorsement.

When brain cancer kept the Massachusetts Democrat from delivering his stepdaughter's college commencement address, Mr. Obama left the campaign trail and stood in for his then-Senate colleague.

And when Mr. Obama made one of the most closely watched decisions of his young presidency - the type of puppy for his daughters - it was Kennedy who gave him "Bo," a Portuguese Water Dog like the pair that have been a fixture in Kennedy's Capitol Hill offices.

With Kennedy now at his vacation home in Hyannis Port on Cape Cod and Mr. Obama setting off on his weeklong stay on nearby Martha's Vineyard, there's speculation the president may come see the ailing senator.

A visit could provide a rallying point for Democrats as Mr. Obama seeks to achieve one of Kennedy's career goals: overhauling the nation's health insurance system to provide near-universal coverage.

It also would show anew the close relationship between the first African-American president and the last vestige of the Camelot White House era.

Despite a gulf in age, race and life experience, the 48-year-old Mr. Obama and the 77-year-old Kennedy have forged a personal bond evident in the tribute the president paid Kennedy and his assassinated brothers, President John F. Kennedy and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, before he signed the Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act into law in April.

"I want all Americans to take up that spirit of the man for whom this bill is named; of a president who sent us to the moon; of a dreamer who always asked, `Why not?' - of a younger generation that carries the torch of a single family that has made an immeasurable difference in the lives of countless families," Mr. Obama said.

Those who know both men find the relationship understandable, despite the age difference.

"He is the kind of president that Kennedy can relate to," said Robert Shrum, who helped drafted the senator's famous 1980 Democratic National Convention concession speech and remains a close personal friend.

"He's trying to do very, very big things. He's appealed to people's idealism. He's appealed to their notion of service, things that have been touchstones of Kennedy's life," Shrum said.

Capitol Hill aides say the two men were not especially close during Mr. Obama's first 18 months in the Senate, which began in 2005. They shared a mutual bond in opposing the Iraq war, but there was little more than a collegial relationship.

The turning point came in 2006, when Mr. Obama visited Kennedy to ask whether he should run for president.

"Your time only comes once, and this is your time," Kennedy told Mr. Obama, according to a Kennedy aide who spoke on condition of anonymity to recount a private conversation.

During the following months, Kennedy avoided endorsing any Democratic contender, including New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton. She had been first lady under another Kennedy acolyte, former President Bill Clinton.

Yet Kennedy's admiration for Mr. Obama, coupled with a feeling the Clintons had incited racial concerns about Mr. Obama, led Kennedy to endorse Mr. Obama in January 2008. He and his niece, Caroline Kennedy, evoked parallels to the early 1960s excitement surrounding the presidency of her father, John F. Kennedy.

"I've seen it. I've lived it. And with Barack Obama, we can do it again," the senator said during a raucous rally at American University in Washington.

On May 17, 2008, Kennedy suffered a seizure at his home in Hyannis Port. It was the result of a terminal brain tumor.

Unable eight days later to deliver the commencement address to his stepdaughter and her classmates at Wesleyan University, Kennedy asked Mr. Obama to speak in his place.

"It is rare in this country of ours that a person exists who has touched the lives of nearly every single American without any of us even realizing it," Mr. Obama told the graduates. "And I have a feeling that Ted Kennedy is not done just yet."

Indeed, Kennedy returned to the Capitol in July 2008 to cast the tie-breaking vote on a Medicare bill.

The next month, Kennedy cast side concerns from doctors about exposure to crowds and made a surprise, 7-minute speech for Mr. Obama at the Democratic National Convention in Denver. "The work begins anew. The hope rises again. And the dream lives on," he said, repeating lines Shrum wrote for him in 1980.

And Kennedy was there on Capitol Hill again in January, despite the frigid weather, at Mr. Obama's inauguration.

At a luncheon afterward, Kennedy suffered a seizure. Mr. Obama went backstage to deliver his best wishes before the senator was taken away by ambulance.

"I would be lying to you if I did not say that right now a part of me is with him," an anguished Mr. Obama said when he took the podium. "This is a joyous time, but it's also a sobering time."

The new president invoked Kennedy again in February, during his first speech before a joint session of Congress. He urged the House and Senate to pass the Kennedy public service act. They did so within Mr. Obama's first 100 days in office.

In March, Mr. Obama led a "Happy Birthday" sing-a-long at a Kennedy Center party for the senator. And during a visit to the Vatican in July, he hand-delivered a letter the senator wrote to Pope Benedict XVI.

Most recently, Mr. Obama awarded Kennedy the nation's highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

Kennedy could not attend the Aug. 12 ceremony, which occurred the day after his sister, Eunice Kennedy Shriver, died. Mr. Obama made the award to the senator's daughter, Kara.

"The life of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy has made a difference for us all," the president said.

AP
Add a Comment See all 39 Comments
by BlueDogDem August 24, 2009 4:13 PM EDT
Kennedy has been one of the greatest and most effective senators in U.S. History. Conservatives are so happy that Chappaquiddick happened because it's the ONLY thing that stopped him from becoming president.
Reply to this comment
by dibbs977 August 24, 2009 2:11 PM EDT
Obama and Kennedy---two great men who will go down in history as great men!
Reply to this comment
by dibbs977 August 24, 2009 2:08 PM EDT
Dear grabandgo, Ted Kennedy has been a prolific senator. You only spread hate, bile and lies.
Reply to this comment
by pw08-2009 August 24, 2009 12:18 PM EDT
Hey everybody,

Obamma isn't the Kennedy's. It's so funy how the media compares them two families and how American womes soak it up like the ding dongs they are.
Reply to this comment
by dibbs977 August 24, 2009 2:04 PM EDT
So you think that American women are ding dongs. Shows how critical and hateful you are. Obama and Ted Kennedy are great men and you are someone who can't even spell. Obama and Kennedy have served our country well. What have you done to serve our country?
by jackp32 August 24, 2009 9:41 AM EDT
Don't visit him Mr. President. What he has is contageous.
Reply to this comment
by hungry1968-16 August 24, 2009 9:38 AM EDT
by thgdriver August 23, 2009 10:24 AM EDT
Lets see, whats more dangerous? Being in business with the Clintoons like John Foster was? Having an affair with the president and his brother Bobby like Marilyn Monroe did? Riding in a car with a drunk Teddy Kennedy like Mary Jo did? See Answer below.







What's more dangerous?

Serving in the US military while George Bush and DDick Cheney were president and co-president.
Reply to this comment
by hungry1968-16 August 24, 2009 9:28 AM EDT
by HereIsBaghdad2009 August 23, 2009 8:36 AM EDT
nextgenMonkey09 how many times I'll have to tell you that I hold both US and Brazilian citizenship?







When America was attacked, you fled like a coward.

Your citizenship was revoked.
Reply to this comment
by proudmilvet August 23, 2009 1:11 AM EDT
You have to give the Republicans & the Right Wing credit for being consistent. They we're against President Obama before he was elected, after he was elected & since he was Inaugurated. Why? Because Rush Limbaugh & Fox News told them so! It does not have anything to do with the economy, the stimulus package, the War in Iraq or Afghanistan, Health care Reform or anything else. Just the fact that he is a Democrat & they lost the election is all that matters to them. Anything he says or does, suggests or tries to do they will critisize, attack & try to subvert. Instead of offering suggestions of their own to help move the country in the right direction, Republicans will continue only to personally attack him At every opportunity. Calling him a Muslim, a Socialist, a Marxist, a Communist, a Nazi & a Racist. They critisize him & the first lady for what they wear, when & where they go on vacation, & they critisized the President a few months ago for putting mustard on his hamburger at a Wash.D.C. Restaurant. It is nothing but the old scorched earth politics & win at any cost attitude of Newt Gingrich, & to Hell with the American People, as long as they win! All of this Republican B.S. started back in 1972 with Nixon, His "Silent Majority" Watergate, & his Enemies List! It stopped for a couple of years, only because President Ford was a decent man, then started up again under Reagan, Bush 41, continued all during the Clinton years courtesy of Rush Limbaugh, Newt Gingrich & Fox News, & of course Bush/Cheney. So now that they are out of power they will do anything to stop President Obama. Sad...So Sad!
Reply to this comment
by rbstrcklnd August 23, 2009 12:38 AM EDT
Kennedy boys and their killing women...Mary Jo and Marilyn. Sad isn't it.

They learned well. Their Daddy ordered a lobotomy of their unruly sister Rosemary because she didn't live up to his expectations. That was as good as killing her.
Reply to this comment
by reveal5 August 23, 2009 12:19 AM EDT
Also, most of the right wing posters here are the retired, grumpy old fart and fartettes of the GOP. They want you to think they are fire breathing dragons who are gonna rule America and revolutionize and such. You betcha! They like to pretend. Don't be scared. Just hope you never get that crotchety.
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