From Robert Kuttner, The American Prospect <[email protected]>
Subject Kuttner on TAP: Why Is Joe Kennedy Running Against Ed Markey?
Date July 1, 2020 7:02 PM
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**JULY 1, 2020**

Kuttner on TAP

Why Is Joe Kennedy Running Against Ed Markey?

More than a year after he announced his primary challenge, Bobby
Kennedy's grandson has yet to come up with a convincing reason.

Markey, the incumbent, is an effective progressive, if anything to
Kennedy's left. The main difference is generational: But at 73, Markey
still has all his marbles and has been the more effective leader and
legislative strategist.

The short answer is that Joe, currently a member of the House, thinks he
can have the Senate seat because he's a Kennedy. That's not good
enough. But based largely on name recognition, Kennedy is leading Markey

in polls.

There is a time and place for primary challenges of incumbents, but this
isn't one of them. The race will eat up millions in campaign
contributions, better spent elsewhere in a crucial election year.

More than a year ago, I got a call from a Kennedy staffer who said that
Joe would like to come by and talk with me. No agenda except to talk
ideas. The tacit agenda, of course, was to cultivate opinion-leader
backing for a not-yet-announced Senate challenge.

I had never spoken with him one-on-one before. Joe was nice enough, but
far from impressive.

In fairness, there is a Kennedy family tradition of nepotism, and
sometimes it has worked out. Kennedys are often late bloomers. Joe's
grandpa Bobby Kennedy began as a Senate investigator for Joe McCarthy.
He became one of our greatest leaders on racial healing, getting out of
Vietnam, and rebuilding America.

When Ted Kennedy first ran for Jack's Senate seat, in 1962 at the
tender age of 30, his primary rival, state Attorney General Eddie
McCormack (himself from a political family), famously declared that if
Ted's name was Edward Moore rather than Edward Moore Kennedy, his
candidacy "would be a joke."

True enough. Something similar could be said of Joe, who is 39. Uncle
Ted, who had a very bumpy first few decades in the Senate, matured into
the Senate's most effective progressive. Maybe at 60, Joe will be a
great progressive, too.

The difference, of course, is that Teddy was not trying to elbow out an
effective progressive incumbent.

~ ROBERT KUTTNER

Follow Robert Kuttner on Twitter

Robert Kuttner's latest book is
The Stakes: 2020 and the Survival of American Democracy
.

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