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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Kennedy says Obama, Sept. 11 inspired her

Senate hopeful cites her father’s call to serve the nation

Caroline Kennedy speaks with Save the Children volunteer Virginia Snead in New York City on Friday. Kennedy’s name has surfaced as a possible replacement for Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton.  (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
By LARRY NEUMEISTER Associated Press

NEW YORK – Caroline Kennedy emerged from weeks of near-silence about her bid for a Senate seat by saying Friday that after a lifetime of closely guarded privacy, she felt compelled to answer the call to service issued by her father a generation ago.

She said two events shaped her decision to ask Gov. David Paterson 11 days ago to consider her for the position if Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton is confirmed as secretary of state: the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and her work for Barack Obama’s presidential campaign.

In her first sit-down interview since she emerged as a Senate hopeful, the 51-year-old daughter of President John F. Kennedy cited her father’s legacy in explaining her decision to seek to serve alongside her uncle, Massachusetts Sen. Edward Kennedy.

“Many people remember that spirit that President Kennedy summoned forth,” she said. “Many people look to me as somebody who embodies that sense of possibility. I’m not saying that I am anything like him, I’m just saying there’s a spirit that I think I’ve grown up with that is something that means a tremendous amount to me.”

Since Kennedy expressed interest in the job, she has faced sometimes sharp criticism that she cut in line ahead of politicians with more experience and has acted as if she were entitled to it because of her political lineage. More than a half-dozen elected officials are vying for the seat, including New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo and several members of Congress.

Kennedy said that she had long been encouraged to seek public office and that Clinton’s expected departure from the Senate offered the perfect opportunity to follow in the footsteps of her father, two uncles and cousins.

“Going into politics is something people have asked me about forever,” a relaxed Kennedy said as she ate a grilled cheese and bacon sandwich and sipped coffee at a diner in Manhattan. “When this opportunity came along, which was sort of unexpected, I thought, ‘Well, maybe now. How about now?’ ”

She said she realizes she will have to prove herself and “work twice as hard as anybody else.” She acknowledged that she is an unconventional choice, but added: “We’re starting to see there are many ways into public life and public service.”

Since Kennedy’s name first surfaced as a possible replacement for Clinton, her advisers have shielded her from the media, with the exception of a few brief interviews on a swing through upstate New York and a visit to Harlem with the Rev. Al Sharpton.

Some commentators likened her to Sarah Palin in the way her dealings with the media were being carefully managed.

She agreed to sit down for interviews Friday with the Associated Press and NY1 television.

Kennedy acknowledged that her recent time in the limelight – after a relatively private life as a wife, mother of three, best-selling author and fundraiser in New York City – had not gone entirely smoothly.

But she said she had turned down interview requests and tried not to appear to be campaigning for the job because she knew that the choice rested solely with the Democratic governor.

“I was trying to respect the process. It is not a campaign,” she said. “It was misinterpreted. If I were to be selected, I understand public servants have to be accessible.”

Asked about criticism from other politicians and members of the public that she seems to regard herself as entitled to the job as a member of America’s most storied political dynasty, she said: “Everybody that knows me knows I haven’t really lived that way. … Nobody’s entitled to anything, certainly not me.”

Kennedy chuckled when she was asked if her brother, the late John F. Kennedy Jr., had ever suggested she run for public office some day. “He usually thought about himself,” she said. “He would be laughing his head off at seeing what’s going on right now.”