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Obama at Kennedy Institute Opening
Obama at Kennedy Institute Opening
President Obama attended the opening of the Edward M. Kennedy Institute in Boston and delivered remarks praising the longtime Massachusetts senator.
Video by Associated Press on Publish Date March 30, 2015. Photo by Gabriella Demczuk for The New York Times.
BOSTON â President Obama on Monday condemned the demise of bipartisan compromise in American politics that he said had prompted voters to turn away in bitterness and âdisgust,â using the dedication of the Edward M. Kennedy Institute to call for a new era of consensus-building.
âWe live in a time of such great cynicism about all our institutions, and we are cynical about government and about Washington most of all,â Mr. Obama told about 1,800 people in a speech here outside the institute, which was constructed to help repair the reputation of the United States Senate, where Mr. Kennedy represented Massachusetts for 47 years.
âWe can fight on almost everything, but we can come together on some things, and those some things can mean everything to a whole lot of people,â Mr. Obama said.
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In a 26-minute speech by turns hopeful and mournful that evoked both Mr. Kennedyâs thundering Senate oratories and his sometimes impish antics, Mr. Obama paid tribute to the man often called âthe lion of the Senateâ while acknowledging how the institution he revered had changed.
âItâs a more diverse, more accurate reflection of America than it used to be, and that is a grand thing, a great achievement, but Ted grieved the loss of camaraderie and collegiality, the face-to-face interaction,â Mr. Obama said. âHe regretted the arguments now made to cameras instead of colleagues, directed at a narrow base instead of the body politic as a whole, the outsized influence of money and special interests, and how it all leads more Americans to turn away in disgust and simply choose not to exercise their right to vote.â
The president, who served one term in the Senate â much of it consumed with speculation over whether he would seek the presidency â indirectly acknowledged his own role and that of his generation in the transformation of Congress.
He noted that Mr. Kennedy had waited more than a year before delivering his first speech in the Senateâs august well, an exact replica of which is the instituteâs most striking feature.
âThatâs no longer the custom,â Mr. Obama said, to laughter. (He made his debut on the Senate floor just two days after being sworn in, in January 2005.)
Nor does Mr. Obamaâs style or temperament bear much resemblance to that of Mr. Kennedy â where the president is aloof, disciplined and disdainful of the social aspects of serving in Washington, the senator was warm and often boisterous, and he excelled at the art of feuding by day but socializing by night with political adversaries.
Still, Mr. Obama and Mr. Kennedy forged a bond that helped propel the president to the White House, one that he acknowledged on Monday.
âHe was my friend; I owe him a lot,â Mr. Obama said.
Mr. Obama routinely went to Mr. Kennedy for Senate advice, including guidance before entering the presidential race in 2008. Mr. Kennedyâs endorsement of Mr., Obama during that yearâs Democratic presidential primaries gave Mr. Obama the high-profile stamp of approval of a party symbol at an important moment.
The capstone to their alliance came in 2010, when Mr. Obama signed the Affordable Care Act, legislation that Mr. Kennedy had championed and that his wife, Victoria Reggie Kennedy, noted in introducing the president on Monday was âwhat Teddy called the cause of his life.â
The dedication drew a host of prominent figures from both parties, including the former Senate majority leaders Trent Lott, Republican of Mississippi, and Tom Daschle, Democrat of South Dakota, a tribute to Mr. Kennedyâs deep relationships in Congress.
âHe was an anchor to many of us in our personal lives, but he was also the anchor in an institution that we revered,â said Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., who served for 36 years with Mr. Kennedy. He said the senator âtreated me like a little brother.â
Mr. Biden described how Mr. Kennedy acted as his âtutor and my guideâ when he arrived in the Senate, squiring him around the gym introducing him to senators who were undressed. âGod, was I embarrassed,â Mr. Biden recalled. The vice president went on to praise Mr. Kennedy for instilling in him the importance of maintaining trust and a personal rapport even with arch-nemeses such as Southern senators opposed to the Civil Rights Act.
âAll politics is personal, and no one, no one in my life understood that better than Ted Kennedy,â Mr. Biden said. âThis country hungers for a resurgence of a baseline belief in a system of self-governance admired for its wisdom in the face of passionate differences, and for the ability to compromise seemingly unbridgeable divides with some dignity.â
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