From Yahoo:
“Markey defeats Kennedy in
Massachusetts Senate race”
Rep. Joe Kennedy III fell short
in his bid to unseat incumbent Massachusetts Sen. Ed Markey on Tuesday, ending
a fractious Democratic primary by becoming the first member of the Kennedy
family to lose an election in the state. Kennedy, 39, attempted to portray
himself as the change candidate against the 74-year-old Markey, who has only
held the Senate seat since 2013 but began representing Massachusetts in the
House in 1976. When Kennedy first launched his campaign, polling showed him
ahead of Markey, a relative unknown compared to some of the other names to
recently represent the Bay State in the Senate (Ed Kennedy, John Kerry and
Elizabeth Warren). But Markey surged with the help of grassroots energy and
youthful support, boosted by an endorsement from Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,
his ally on the Green New Deal. Ocasio-Cortez appeared in a widely seen TV ad
for Markey and urged supporters to phone bank for him, tweeting on Election
Day: “It’s not your age that counts — it’s the age of your ideas.” The Sunrise
Movement, a youth climate change organization, also threw its support to
Markey. "Ed Markey might not be from our generation, but he is the
candidate of our generation because whether it’s racial justice or climate
change or COVID, he’s shown he’s ready to stand up to corporations and the
fossil fuel industry and fight for our generation and working families,” Stevie
O’Hanlon, the Sunrise Movement’s communications director, told Yahoo News. Warren,
Markey’s Senate colleague who mounted an unsuccessful presidential bid this
year, endorsed him before Kennedy was even in the race, but had essentially
stayed out of the fray until earlier this summer. Markey also received the
endorsement of the Boston Globe, which wrote, “Kennedy has not made a
persuasive case for removing Markey.” Markey combined appeals to his
working-class upbringing (citing his father’s job as a milkman) with a strong
digital campaign that capitalized on the enthusiasm generated by the
Ocasio-Cortez endorsement and his record on climate change. In mid-August, Markey
released a 3-minute biographical video that was viewed more than 3 million
times.
Kennedy argued that while he and
Markey agreed on many issues, it was he that could be counted on to work for
liberal progressive goals for many years — implying that Markey was nearing the
end of his career anyway. He won the endorsement of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
In the race’s closing weeks, Kennedy countered Markey’s attempts to portray him
as entitled and overly ambitious with accusations that Markey was out of step on
racial issues and was papering over a more conservative past. Kennedy had tried
to hit Markey on a number of his past votes — including his support of the 1994
crime bill and the Iraq War — while claiming that he simply hasn’t done enough
to leverage his role as senator. Kennedy has also been critical of Markey on
various other issues, including missing congressional votes and for opposing
busing desegregation in the 1970s. Kennedy, the son of former Rep. Joe Kennedy
II and grandson of former Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, has aspired for
years to continue his family’s legacy. A win would have represented a chance to
restore a sense of vigor to the family name, to rebuild some of its lost
luster. It has been over a decade since the death of former Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, the so-called Lion of the Senate. But even Teddy, as he was known, had
to work many years as a legislator to achieve something akin in national
stature to what his brothers had achieved as president and attorney general. And
a new Kennedy as senator, one with a spotless personal record, would have been
able to graft a reputation for personal integrity on to that of a skilled
lawmaker. Ted Kennedy’s personal life achieved a large measure of redemption in
his later years after he met his second wife, Victoria Reggie Kennedy, but his
checkered past haunted him in the minds of many Americans. In contrast, even as
far back as Joe Kennedy III’s college days, he abstained from alcohol entirely,
drinking only milk.
But Kennedy’s ambition was easily
portrayed as entitlement. The American electorate, with a deep populist streak,
proved especially challenging this year for the Kennedy scion. Decades of loss
of trust in institutions and other factors created an egalitarian ethic that
views the past with more skepticism. Even his name, with “the third” as suffix,
could be conceived as more fitting for a bygone era of hereditary wealth and
privilege. Markey’s attempts to use the Kennedy name against the congressman
seemed to slightly backfire at first. Pelosi jumped into the race and endorsed
Kennedy after the incumbent turned one of John F. Kennedy’s most famous and
venerated speeches upside down. In his 1961 inaugural address, President
Kennedy closed his speech to the nation by calling on a spirit of volunteerism:
“My fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do for you — ask what you
can do for your country.” In August, Markey’s campaign video ended with Markey
saying, “We asked what we could do for our country. We went out. We did it.
With all due respect, it’s time to start asking what your country can do for
you.” Pelosi endorsed Kennedy in part in response to Markey’s attack. “I wasn’t
too happy with some of the assault that I saw made on the Kennedy family, and I
thought Joe didn’t ask me to endorse him, but I felt an imperative,” she said. Any
regret Markey may have felt over the tactic faded in the final days of the
campaign. He repeated the line in his final rally the night before Election
Day.
^ I said Kennedy wasn’t going to
be the rising star years ago when he made the official Democrat response to
Trump’s State of the Union Address. It seems the people of Massachusetts agree
with me. ^
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