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Storied Past, Golden Résumé, but Mixed Reviews for Kerry
By Todd S. Purdum
New York Times, November 30, 2003
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In 1971, when most of his rivals for the presidency were in college, in graduate school or just beginning ambitious but still anonymous careers, John Forbes Kerry was already a decorated combat veteran of two tours in Vietnam and such a prominent leader of the antiwar movement that "60 Minutes" profiled him and the correspondent Morley Safer asked, "Do you want to be president?"
"Of the
But then his face broke into a broad grin that suggested the idea had crossed his mind more than once, and he added, "That's such a crazy question at a time like this, when there are so many things that have to be done, and so many changes that have to be made, that I'm not sure you can set out and do those things and at the same time, you know, keep people as happy as you have to."
Now, after an odyssey — as a prosecutor, lieutenant
governor and, for nearly 20 years, junior senator from Massachusetts — Mr.
Kerry is running for president at last, and he is having trouble keeping people
as happy as he has to. In an unsettled time, he has become a prisoner of the
golden biography that was built to propel him. As he turns 60, he is struggling
to explain the relevance of his lifetime experience, both to party insiders who
have long had mixed feelings about him and to a new generation of antiwar
activists for whom
Mr. Kerry wants it to be simple. "Gary Hart endorsed
me the other day by saying, `I subscribe to the quaint notion that when
somebody runs for the president of the
But it is not simple. Having spent much of his career as a
loner and an outsider, he finds himself fighting the impression that he is a
quintessential
In fact, there have always been two parallel, conflicting interpretations of John Kerry's life and career. More than most politicians, he has battled an enduring gap in perceptions: there is the circle of longtime friends and family who know and love him, and then there is a more skeptical collection of colleagues, contemporaries and critics who seem more or less persuaded that he does not add up.
Is Mr. Kerry the idealistic teenager who worshiped John F.
Kennedy and the New Frontier's notion of public service? Or is he a careerist
who aped the young president with the same initials, volunteering for service
on a Navy patrol boat that was the
Is he an indifferent legislator who used the Senate as a launching pad for high-profile investigations, or a born leader with a natural executive temperament who chafed at routines, took on thankless tasks and yearned to break free?
Is he a perpetual equivocator, who voted for the resolution
authorizing war with
Depending on who is doing the telling, John Kerry is all of those things.
"It takes longer than 30 seconds to explain him,"
said his friend Bob Kerrey, the Nebraska Democrat who spent years alongside Mr.
Kerry in the Senate and is a fellow
Comparing Senator Kerry's recently published letters home
from
An Aura He Created
Mr. Kerry's 6-foot-4-inch frame has radiated stature for
decades. As a gangly teenager at
By the time he won the presidency of the Yale political union — as a Democrat on a largely Republican campus — the impression that he was heading places had hardened. "I took 6,000 pictures of Arnold Schwarzenegger and 6,000 pictures of John Kerry," said George Butler, a Yale classmate, who directed "Pumping Iron" with Mr. Schwarzenegger and is making a film about Mr. Kerry. "I was convinced from the outset that they both had destinies."
Harvey Bundy, a
Yet even then, something about him rankled. "Keep the Puck Kerry" they called him at St. Paul's, an elite Episcopalian boarding school where he was among a handful of Catholic students, a Kennedy supporter in a sea of junior Nixonites, and not nearly as rich as most of his classmates.
"I was always aware that John was maybe a little too serious for the average college guy, and therefore was misunderstood," said David Thorne, another Yale friend, whose twin sister, Julia, became Mr. Kerry's first wife. He added, "They couldn't see that the idealistic candle burned just as bright as the ambitious one."
Mr. Kerry professes never to have heard the nasty nicknames at the time. "I think that's after the fact," he said.
But he added: "I do know that, you know, being determined and being clear about things early in life is counter to lots of people's place, as I've learned as I get older. If I'd had, you know, a better sense of all that then, I would probably have tried to be a little more thoughtful about it all. But I have no regrets about it. I mean, I'm comfortable with it. So what if nobody loved you? I don't look backwards."
Mr. Kerry's never-complain, never-explain roots run deep.
His mother, Rosemary Forbes Kerry, was descended from John Winthrop, who helped
settle
His paternal ancestry is much more complicated. His
grandfather, a Czech-Austrian Jew, was born Fritz Kohn; he changed his name to
Frederick Kerry and converted to Catholicism before emigrating
to the
"It raised as many questions as it answered, because there was nobody around to answer the questions," Mr. Kerry said, describing his father as "bitter about the loss of his father, and then later the loss of his sister to cancer and polio," and "very sort of disconnected to roots and those kinds of discussions; he was more into theory and policy."
John Kerry grew up one of four children, partly in
At Yale, Mr. Kerry briefly dated Janet Auchincloss,
Jacqueline Kennedy's half-sister, and sailed with President Kennedy at the helm
off
For Mr. Kerry,
"How do you ask a man to be the last man to die in
The protest was controversial at the time, and it still provokes
debate. Describing the march on the campaign trail today, Mr. Kerry says,
"We camped right below the Congress," but detractors have long
claimed that Mr. Kerry himself slept comfortably in
Mr. Butler confirms that Mr. Kerry spent part of the time
at his house in
"By the time he was done with that appearance before the committee, those guys were all drooling over him to be a candidate," Mr. Walinsky recalled. "The moment he finished talking, there wasn't the slightest doubt about it. It was a real star turn, one of those deals that used to happen more then than now — we're so much more jaded.
"But even now, there can be times when somebody just gets something in a particular way, and you can really grab the attention of virtually the entire country. He did."
Much of Mr. Kerry's public life since then can be seen as comparatively anticlimactic: a failed campaign for Congress on an antiwar platform in 1972, after an embarrassing public search for a suburban Boston district in which he might have the best chance of winning; law school, then service as assistant district attorney in Middlesex County; election as lieutenant governor of Massachusetts on a ticket with Michael S. Dukakis in 1982; and to the Senate in 1984; re-election three times since, once in a hard-fought race against a popular Republican governor, William F. Weld, in 1996.
In the Senate, he has been a sometimes awkward younger
brother to Edward M. Kennedy, his boyhood idol's own younger brother. He has
been better known for his investigations into the Bank of Credit and Commerce
International, drug dealing by Gen. Manuel Noriega of
Perhaps his proudest achievement was his dogged work in the
1990's with Senator John McCain of
To this day,
"I regret to say, we lost him in
In 1999, one of Mr. Kerry's
"He saved my life," Mr. Sandusky said. "He had his staff come out and put me in a hospital, and got me into treatment. I was ready to do it. I was ready to go downhill. He saved me."
Mr. Kerry, too, has known personal pain. He and Julia
Thorne separated in 1983, after 13 years of marriage during which, she has
since written, she suffered severe depression. Mr. Kerry commuted weekly to
"I found getting divorced a superpainful process," Mr. Kerry said, adding that dating was no fun. "Everybody thinks it's terrific, but it can be absolutely quite lonely."
In the early 1990's, Mr. Kerry began dating Teresa Heinz,
the widow of Senator H. John Heinz III of
A former United Nations interpreter who was born in
"When you live with someone, you adapt," Ms. Heinz Kerry said. "With my late husband, we were both kids, young, so you grow up together. With John, there were two adults. I had my baggage, my wounds, my hurts; he had his. The only difference is I came from having been married a long time, 25 years successfully married, and John had been 12 years alone. He had to learn how to share some things which he probably never thought he had to share."
Mr. Kerry's friends say his remarriage has softened and warmed him, sanded down his sharper edges. Asked how he had changed, Mr. Kerry responded a bit like the first President Bush, in sentence fragments, with few personal pronouns: "Just much more relaxed, and comfortable and calm about life and much broader vision of all the choices of life, if you will. Don't define myself by politics. Very comfortable doing lots of different things. Learned a lot about opening up. Being more accessible."
Ms. Heinz Kerry said of her husband: "He's not aloof. He's just so goddamned, excuse me, busy. He's so busy that he's off here, he's off there, doing something. That might seem to some people aloof. As I've said, that's something that I had to get used to as well and try to say, `Hey! Hey! Hey! I'm here.' But it's not aloof. It's busy."
On Feb. 28, 1969, while Mr. Kerry was on patrol in
Adm. Elmo Zumwalt would later say jokingly that it was not clear whether Mr. Kerry should be court-martialed or awarded the Silver Star. He got the Silver Star.
Has he turned his boat toward the shore once more? "That's maybe a month away or so," Mr. Kerry said with a small smile. "But we're going up the river. We're certainly moving up the river."