How John F. Kennedy and Eleanor Roosevelt went from rivals to allies

How John F. Kennedy and Eleanor Roosevelt went from rivals to allies

The 'first lady of the world' was more liberal than JFK and held a decades-old grudge against his father

Read the full article in the Dallas Morning News

Our country faces wide gulfs today along partisan, ideological, geographical and racial boundaries. Recent gaps between Republicans and Democrats on approval ratings for President Donald Trump expose the largest schism in polling history: nearly a 90% difference between partisan views of his presidency. Sometimes it seems as if red and blue America will never turn purple, unless it results from holding our collective breath over what new disasters—natural, viral, economic or civic—could befall our beloved country.

In despair, we might believe that the present is the worst of times, in contrast to some bygone era of good feelings. The United States did experience one of those golden decades in the aftermath of the War of 1812, when conflict between our first two parties ended with the Federalists’ demise and the Democratic-Republicans’ ascendancy. Such a Pax Americana is rare, however, and our politics have most often been marked by everything from cataclysmic division over first principles to less seismic intraparty policy squabbles.

First in the queue to receive an olive branch was the Democratic Party’s grande dame, Eleanor Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt’s widow.

At the recent virtual Democratic National Convention, John F. Kennedy’s daughter, Caroline, and his grandson, Jack Schlossberg, offered a tribute to the former president. They cited the 60th anniversary of his New Frontier acceptance speech at the 1960 convention.

“The New Frontier of which I speak is not a set of promises,” the young Massachusetts senator declared. “It is a set of challenges. It sums up not what I intend to offer the American people, but what I intend to ask of them.” Now that he had won the nomination, his initial challenge was to unify the party.

First in the queue to receive an olive branch was the Democratic Party’s grande dame, Eleanor Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt’s widow.

Read the full article in the Dallas Morning News