I want to believe Hillary Clinton when she says that her recent
comment about Robert F. Kennedy being assassinated in June was a
reference to the long primary season rather than the ever-present
danger that Barack Obama faces. The problem with Clinton is that she is
often her own worst enemy.She issued a statement saying, "The
Kennedys have been much on my mind the last days because of Senator
Kennedy and I regret that if my referencing that moment of trauma for
our entire nation, and particularly for the Kennedy family, was in any
way offensive. I certainly had no intention of that, whatsoever." But
Karen Tumulty, a political correspondent for Time magazine, noted that
it wasn't the first time Clinton had brought up the Kennedy
assassination. An interview published in the March 6 edition of Time
contained this exchange: Time: Can you envision a point at which
- if the race stays this close - Democratic Party elders would step in
and say, "This is now hurting the party and whoever will be the nominee
in the fall"? Clinton: No, I really can't. I think people have
short memories. Primary contests used to last a lot longer. We all
remember the great tragedy of Bobby Kennedy being assassinated in June
in L.A. My husband didn't wrap up the nomination in 1992 until June.
Having a primary contest go through June is nothing particularly
unusual." So, far from the Kennedys being on Clinton's mind
because of the recent disclosure that Sen. Edward M. Kennedy has a
malignant brain tumor, Clinton had made a similar reference more than
two months earlier. As other journalists and bloggers have
pointed out, Bill Clinton's 1992 campaign was effectively wrapped up in
March, not June. And Mark Shields pointed out on PBS's News Hour that
Robert Kennedy's first primary was May 7, 1968. He was assassinated
four weeks later. Therefore, the issue was not one of a long campaign
that lasted until June. For those of us who lived through the
assassinations of John F. Kennedy, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.,
and Robert F. Kennedy, this talk of assassination is not taken lightly. Although
only 16 years old, I remember the sadness that President Kennedy's
death brought to our public housing project. While we endured
segregation in the South, the Kennedys represented a beacon of hope. When
King was slain, I was a student at Knoxville College in Tennessee. I
remember being befuddled by the news of his assassination, thinking: If
someone would do this to an advocate of nonviolence, what would be done
to those who preached self-defense? Years later, as a Washington
correspondent for the Chicago Tribune, I was assigned to Jesse
Jackson's 1984 presidential campaign. I remember being in Las
Vegas with Jackson and Sylvester Monroe, then a correspondent for
Newsweek magazine, when we heard over a police radio that threats had
been made on Jackson's life. According to the dispatcher's loud,
crackling voice, a caller had promised that Jackson would not get out
of Las Vegas alive. After covering Jackson for more than 25
years, I know that the subject of his possible assassination is one of
the few topics he adamantly refuses to discuss. And I understand why.
Dwelling on the issue doesn't do any good, let alone stop any sick
person bent on killing someone. Alma Powell, wife of former
Secretary of State Colin L. Powell, reportedly was against his seeking
the presidency for fear of his being assassinated. The fear is real.
And families, not just public figures, have reluctantly accepted that
risk as the price of public service. There was some controversey
surrounding a weekly newspaper, the Roswell (Ga.) Beacon, after it ran
a photo of Barack Obama viewed through the scope of a rifle, with the
headline: "Local Law Enforcement Braces for Obama Backlash." The
sight was so sickening that I didn't allow myself to check out what I
suspect is a right-wing hate group. Just seeing Obama portrayed as a
target was sickening enough. I have had friends who have tried to
broach the subject of Obama's possibly getting assassinated and I've
cut them off in midsentence. It is simply not a subject I will discuss. While
the possibility is real in the sick society that we live in, I refuse
to entertain the thought of Obama not pushing forward because of fear. The
next time Hillary Clinton decides to engage in assassination talk,
regardless of its purpose, I hope she realizes that this is a sensitive
topic. Too many of our public servants have lost their lives through violence. We can't let hope become the next casualty.
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