Today’s NYT profiles Robert F. Kennedy Jr., covering his environmental activism and his recent foray into electoral politics. Among other things, it contains this account of what inspired his Rolling Stone article alleging Republicans “stole” the 2004 Presidential election.
Mr. Kennedy spent Christmas skiing in Sun Valley, Idaho, at the home of Ms. David and her husband, Larry David, the “Seinfeld” creator and “Curb Your Enthusiasm” protagonist. Mr. David urged him to read a book on the 2004 election by the news media critic Mark Crispin Miller.
Mr. Kennedy did, and a few days later he was skiing with the Rolling Stone publisher, Jann S. Wenner, an old friend and Sun Valley homeowner. Mr. Kennedy suggested that Mr. Wenner commission a story on the “stolen election.” Mr. Wenner said he would, provided Mr. Kennedy wrote it. He had written a much-discussed and much-challenged story for Rolling Stone last year linking childhood vaccines and a rise in autism.
After some hesitation, Mr. Kennedy said, he agreed to write the election article. Since it was posted on Rolling Stone’s Web site on June 1, the Web has been ablog with a split between those who believe this is the biggest unreported story ever and those who think it’s old news, discredited long ago. Mr. Kennedy said it’s hard to prove that any election had been “stolen.”
“If you’re looking for proof and certitude, you’re not going to find it,” he said. Either way, Mr. Kennedy said he is committed to stoking the outrage of 2004, wherever it leads. “This is going to remain one of my central concerns for a while,” he said, adding, “America should be indignant.” But is it, beyond certain liberal airwaves and blogs? Congress has not exactly been rocked with speeches on the matter or with calls for investigations.
In a phone interview, Mr. Wenner said that John Kerry, the big loser in 2004, “does not question the validity of the piece,” hardly a signal of outrage.
Senator Christopher Dodd, the Connecticut Democrat and a longtime advocate of electoral reform, called the article “tremendously compelling.” But not compelling enough to talk about it: Mr. Dodd’s comments were relayed in a statement from his office.
UPDATE: Tom Maguire comments on the NYT story here.