This collection of transcribed interviews with Robert F. Kennedy recorded in the months after President John F. Kennedy’s assassination and Lyndon B. Johnson’s accession captures a man in mourning and a government in transition.
Kennedy comes across as blunt, combative, and unsentimental. His assessments of people and institutions are grounded in competence, loyalty, and usefulness, with sharp criticisms of the State Department, J. Edgar Hoover/the FBI, and the overall bureaucratic resistance to reform. The interviews cover the wide range of issues Bobby Kennedy was involved in such as, the Cuban Missile Crisis, unrealised plans to normalise relations with Cuba, Latin American foreign policy, the Berlin Crisis, civil rights battles in Oxford, Montgomery, and Mississippi, his campaign against organised crime, poverty in America, and some brief insights into his time as campaign manager.
At times, Kennedy comes across a bit defensive, but this feels inevitable given the rawness of his brother's very recent death and his own uncertain place in Johnson’s White House. His deep dislike for LBJ is present, but the overriding thread is his fierce defence of his brother and the administration they built. This is not the idealistic, hopeful Bobby Kennedy of his later solo political career, but part grief-stricken RFK, part Bulldog Bobby, hardened, determined, and navigating a complex, constrained political landscape.