Congress

Rep. Joe Kennedy III Formally Announces Senate Run

The 38-year-old Joe Kennedy will face 73-year-old incumbent Sen. Edward Markey in next year's primary

U.S. Rep. Joe Kennedy III formally declared his candidacy for the U.S. Senate on Saturday, becoming the first member of the Kennedy political dynasty to bid for the upper chamber of Congress since Edward M. Kennedy in 1962.

"Let's get this out of the way right away: I'm here to announce that I'm going to be a candidate for the United States Senate," Kennedy told his supporters on Saturday morning. “Our country deserves better. We deserve more. Our people deserve an economic justice where a hard day’s work means an honest day’s pay.”

The Massachusetts Democrat formally announced his campaign in an email before the kickoff event in East Boston, where the Kennedy clan first settled after arriving from Ireland well over a century ago.

"I'm running because our country is at a moment of truth," Kennedy told supporters in the email. "Donald Trump has forced a long overdue reckoning in America. And how we respond will say everything about who we are."

Joe Kennedy, who made several campaign stops around the state on Saturday, including one at a homeless shelter in Salem, was greeted by crowds cheering, 'Let's go, Joe!'

Joe Kennedy thinks he can do a better job than incumbent Sen. Edward Markey and says the time is now because of who's in the White House.

"Donald Trump, I think — not only has he forced a reckoning across our country, he’s forced all of us to ask the question ‘What can we do?’” he said Saturday.

Joe Kennedy is a grandson of Robert F. Kennedy, who was attorney general in his own brother John F. Kennedy's White House and was a senator running for the Democratic presidential nomination when he was assassinated in 1968. JFK was felled by an assassin's bullet five years earlier, in 1963.

The 38-year-old Joe Kennedy will face 73-year-old Markey in next year's primary.

Joe Kennedy's father, Joseph Kennedy, also served in Congress. Others elected to office include former U.S. Rep. Patrick Kennedy II and Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, who served two terms as Maryland's lieutenant governor.

First elected to Congress in 2012, Kennedy has tried to position himself as more of a pragmatist than those on the left of his party.

Nevertheless, Kennedy has adopted many of the causes driving the party's liberal wing. He has called for Congress to initiate impeachment efforts against President Donald Trump and has backed a "Medicare for All" bill in the House. He has also said he supports the Green New Deal initiative to combat climate change, something Markey is championing along with Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York.

Given his political pedigree, Kennedy has been seen as a rising star in the party. In 2018, he was tapped to deliver the Democratic response to Trump's State of the Union address.

"Far too many dreams have been blocked or deferred, rather than realized," Kennedy said. "I know that for the first time in modern American history, we have a president that is trying to make that harder. We have a Senate that instead of trying to harness the opportunity and potential of every single person in this country, they're trying to pull us back."

A Kennedy-Markey contest will put more than a few high-profile Democrats in an awkward position, most notably Sen. Elizabeth Warren, the White House hopeful from Massachusetts.

Warren has worked with Markey in the Senate and taught Kennedy at Harvard Law School. She formally endorsed Markey before Kennedy floated the idea of a challenge to Markey.

Markey, who joined thousands of young climate change activists who rallied in Boston on Friday as part of a global, youth-led day of environmental action, has the backing of many environmental activists.

On Friday, one of those groups, Environment Massachusetts, vowed to raise $5 million to help Markey win re-election.

"We are lucky to have one of the nation's strongest climate champions, Ed Markey, representing Massachusetts in the U.S. Senate," Ben Hellerstein, state director for Environment Massachusetts, said in a prepared statement, explaining that voters need to understand Markey's record on renewable energy, clean water, clean air and the protection of public lands.

Markey stayed quiet Saturday with the exception of a YouTube video in which he challenged Joe Kennedy, Shannon Liss-Riordan and Steve Pemberton to a climate change debate.

Prior to Joe Kennedy's announcement, Markey was already facing two lesser-known candidates: Liss-Riordan, a workers' rights lawyer, and Pemberton, a former senior executive at Walgreens.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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