August 13, 2003 - San Francisco Chronicle: Kennedy/Shriver connections add oomph to Schwarzenegger's political quest, says author

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Kennedy/Shriver connections add oomph to Schwarzenegger's political quest, says author





Caption: Actor Arnold Schwarzenegger (L) gives a thumbs up as he is joined by his wife Maria Shriver (C-R) after he filed his declaration of candidacy papers for the California gubernatorial recall election at the Los Angeles County Registrar's Office in Norwalk, California. Maria Shriver is the daughter of Peace Corps Founding Director Sargent Shriver and has a long history of public service, like everyone in her family. (AFP/Hector Mata)


Read and comment on this interview from the San Francisco Chronicle with Nepal RPCV Laurence Leamer who says that Arnold Schwarzenegger's wife, journalist Maria Shriver, the daughter of Peace Corps founder Sargent Shriver and Eunice Kennedy Shriver is not only a Kennedy but one of the "Kennedy women."
You start with Sargent Shriver -- first head of the Peace Corps; before that he worked for Joseph Kennedy, ran the Merchandise Mart in Chicago, where he met Eunice. He was president of the Chicago Board of Education, a major political figure in Illinois. If JFK had not run for president in 1960, Sarge would have run for governor of Illinois -- but two Kennedys couldn't run at the same time. You can't say this man is living off the coattails of the Kennedys. He made all these contributions.

Beyond that, he's just the most thoughtful human being -- I was in the Peace Corps in Nepal 1964 to '66, and a few years ago one of my closest friends from that time was dying of leukemia. I dedicated "The Kennedy Men" to him; he was a psychologist in Vermont. It was just when Eunice Shriver was very sick. I called Sarge's assistant and said my friend has died, there's a memorial service, it would be wonderful if he could write a letter, I'll even write it. I'll fax you a letter -- my idea of what he could say. The next day, I got the most incredible letter that had not a single word of what I'd said. I read it at my friend's memorial service; it was the most touching thing.
"It's not a question of her bringing so much to the marriage. It's one of these marriages where it works totally both ways -- she brings as much to the table as he does -- it's a very modern marriage. Maybe her greatest gift to him, besides the children, is that political idealism that comes from her family -- Arnold learned from that." he added. Read the complete interview at:

Kennedy/Shriver connections add oomph to Schwarzenegger's political quest, says author*

* This link was active on the date it was posted. PCOL is not responsible for broken links which may have changed.



Kennedy/Shriver connections add oomph to Schwarzenegger's political quest, says author

Heidi Benson, Chronicle Staff Writer Wednesday, August 13, 2003

Arnold Schwarzenegger's wife, journalist Maria Shriver, knows something about politics, albeit from the other side of the party line. It's important to remember that the daughter of Peace Corps founder Sargent Shriver and Eunice Kennedy Shriver is not only a Kennedy but one of the "Kennedy women." We talked to author Laurence Leamer, author of "The Kennedy Women: The Saga of an American Family," about the candidate's wife and her place in the Kennedy dynasty: .

Q: Is it likely that Camelot will gain a Sacramento branch?

A: I don't think Camelot ever existed.

All these stories talk about how Arnold is married to a Kennedy. He's married to a Shriver/Kennedy. She has the best aspects of each -- think of how extraordinary this family is. Every single member of this family has made exceptional contributions to American life.

You start with Sargent Shriver -- first head of the Peace Corps; before that he worked for Joseph Kennedy, ran the Merchandise Mart in Chicago, where he met Eunice. He was president of the Chicago Board of Education, a major political figure in Illinois. If JFK had not run for president in 1960, Sarge would have run for governor of Illinois -- but two Kennedys couldn't run at the same time. You can't say this man is living off the coattails of the Kennedys. He made all these contributions.

Beyond that, he's just the most thoughtful human being -- I was in the Peace Corps in Nepal 1964 to '66, and a few years ago one of my closest friends from that time was dying of leukemia. I dedicated "The Kennedy Men" to him; he was a psychologist in Vermont. It was just when Eunice Shriver was very sick. I called Sarge's assistant and said my friend has died, there's a memorial service, it would be wonderful if he could write a letter, I'll even write it. I'll fax you a letter -- my idea of what he could say. The next day, I got the most incredible letter that had not a single word of what I'd said. I read it at my friend's memorial service; it was the most touching thing.

I met him when I was researching "The Kennedy Women" -- I just hit it off with them. I just feel a special rapport, especially with Sarge because he was one of my heroes as head of the Peace Corps. Eunice comes off the best in my book -- there's a scene where she's with her mother, Rose Kennedy, who is very frail at the time, and her sister Rosemary -- the retarded one who had a lobotomy -- and they're walking along the seashore, and she's talking to them as if they understand.

She started Special Olympics -- it's a worldwide organization, the most important social organization since the Red Cross in terms of how many countries participate.

Q: What will Maria Shriver bring to the role of California's first lady if Schwarzenegger wins?

A: She was the only daughter in this family, with four brothers. Her mother brought her up not to succeed in life because of her femininity or her beauty, but on different sorts of merit. She wanted to be a TV journalist, so she went off to a little town, didn't want to do it just on her name. And she carries those social concerns: She's on the board of Special Olympics. She's written three books, and donated all the money to charity for her last book.

Q: How might the role affect her journalism career? And how might her experience as a journalist affect the governor's office, should he win?

A: If she wanted to do celebrity journalism, she would have been bigger than Barbara Walters, but she chose not to do that; she didn't think it was serious. She also made a decision that she didn't want to work full time; she wanted to be a mother, which also affected her career.

She's just a spectacular person. Very cautious with the media. As a journalist she understands how the game is played.

Q: How has her Kennedy mystique helped Schwarzenegger?

A: It's not a question of her bringing so much to the marriage. It's one of these marriages where it works totally both ways -- she brings as much to the table as he does -- it's a very modern marriage. Maybe her greatest gift to him, besides the children, is that political idealism that comes from her family -- Arnold learned from that. Some people compare him to Reagan -- say he wasn't president of the Screen Actors Guild -- but he's had a lot of experience. He headed George Bush Sr.'s commission on physical fitness, and with the Special Olympics he wasn't just a figurehead.

Q: What about her Democratic genes? Will they work together as a team? Will she influence policy?

A: If you look at the Kennedy family now, there's the whole political spectrum -- on the right you have Doug Kennedy, the youngest son of RFK, who works for Fox News -- he's a terrific reporter, not one of these talking heads.

He's a libertarian. On the left, you have Teddy, representing the liberal wing of the Democratic Party. The kinds of things Schwarzenegger stands for -- he's not that different from President Kennedy, who was a moderate Democrat. People think that because Robert Kennedy became a liberal and Teddy is a liberal, that JFK was. But he wasn't. He was a moderate.

Arnold's greatest contribution to American life may be that he will resurrect the liberal wing of the Republican Party. Some of these right-wing ideologues don't understand that yet. I think he's a new kind of Republican.

Q: Do you think he'll win?

A: He certainly is the front-runner. He's like Ronald Reagan -- one: One of his greatest advantages is that he's underestimated.

Q: Is Shriver instrumental in his decisions?

A: (The decision to run) was a family decision. She knows more than anyone, the way only a Kennedy family member could know, the cost of politics. Immediately, you think of the deaths in the family, but it's not only that -- it's the way it has the potential to tear apart your family life. She knew what it was like as a little girl when her parents were gone so much . . . (which is one of the reasons that) she wanted to be a great mother.

So the fact that she's agreed to this is an enormous gift to her husband. She's a fantastic person with her own political concerns.

I said in the last presidential election that I would have been happier to vote for either of the first ladies than their husbands.

Californians like bargains, and I think they'll find that -- in this case --

they get two for one.

When she married him in 1986, remember, many people thought of him as a kind of muscle-bound idiot. She knew that this was an extraordinary person. It's going to be very exciting.

He's an immensely wealthy man and a shrewd businessman as well as a superstar.

People are always ready to exploit -- but it's not going to happen with her.

The amazing thing to me about her, despite all she knows about the world and all she knows about the bad things humans are capable of and how manipulative they can be, she has a deeply positive attitude toward humanity.

William Morrow will publish Leamer's new book -- "The Sons of Camelot: The Fate of an American Dynasty" -- in 2004. E-mail Heidi Benson at hbenson@sfchronicle.com.



August 10, 2003 - Maria Shriver: Beauty and The Barbarian





Caption: Actor Arnold Schwarzenegger (L) gives a thumbs up as he is joined by his wife Maria Shriver (C-R) after he filed his declaration of candidacy papers for the California gubernatorial recall election at the Los Angeles County Registrar's Office in Norwalk, California. Maria Shriver is the daughter of Peace Corps Founding Director Sargent Shriver and has a long history of public service, like everyone in her family. (AFP/Hector Mata)


Read and comment on this story from MSNBC on August 10, 2003 about Peace Corps Director Sargent Shriver's daughter Maria and her role in the her husband's campaign for governor of California:
"Maria’s father, Sargent Shriver, the founding director of the Peace Corps, gets credit for helping shape his son-in-law’s political views. Schwarzenegger is bright, with a lot of street smarts, but he doesn’t have an advanced education. “There were a lot of discussions over cigars,” says a friend.

The Shrivers are Kennedys without the tawdriness-”all that great taste and less scandal,” says an adviser."
Read the story at:

The Spouse: Beauty and The Barbarian*

* This link was active on the date it was posted. PCOL is not responsible for broken links which may have changed.



The Spouse: Beauty and The Barbarian

Armed with a Kennedy’s political savvy, Maria Shriver may be Arnold’s best asset

By Eleanor Clift

NEWSWEEK

Aug. 18 issue - The buzz in Hollywood had Maria Shriver opposed to her husband’s running for governor. As the daughter of Eunice Kennedy Shriver, she worried about the inevitable invasion of privacy. Even more troublesome was the memory of the assassinations of her uncles John and Bobby. But she didn’t want to be the one to stand in her husband’s way. That’s not the role of a Kennedy woman.

THIS SUMMER HAS BEEN hard on her Kennedy kin. Cousin Patrick Kennedy launched into a drunken outburst at a political fund-raiser. Cousin Kerry Kennedy Cuomo is divorcing after her husband outed her in the tabloids for infidelity. A new book with allegations about cousin John F. Kennedy Jr.’s rocky personal life stung the family. And now this: a picture of a youthful Schwarzenegger with a naked woman has already appeared on the Internet. “She didn’t want to be the next person to go through the wringer,” says a family friend.

But politics and public service are the Kennedy credo. A recent visitor to the couple’s palatial compound reports a series of Andy Warhol paintings of Shriver on one wall offset by two framed photos at opposite ends of the living room. One is “To Maria from Uncle Jack,” the other “To Maria from her boyfriend Lyndon.” It’s a way to keep history around her-history that’s both political and personal.

Shriver was born in Chicago in 1955 and raised, along with four brothers, on the family estate in Maryland. In 1977, NBC anchor Tom Brokaw introduced Shriver to Schwarzenegger at a charity tennis tournament at Ethel Kennedy’s home. Shriver liked Arnold’s blunt way of speaking, his drive-”I was fascinated by his ability to say, ‘I don’t care what they say, I know where I’m going’,” she once told Us Weekly-and the way he could get away with saying things nobody else could. He told her mother soon after they met, “Your daughter has a great butt.” The couple wed in 1986 in the same white clapboard church in Hyannis, Mass., where her uncles were once altar boys. Caroline Kennedy was maid of honor. She and Maria are the closest of friends.

Maria’s father, Sargent Shriver, the founding director of the Peace Corps, gets credit for helping shape his son-in-law’s political views. Schwarzenegger is bright, with a lot of street smarts, but he doesn’t have an advanced education. “There were a lot of discussions over cigars,” says a friend.

The Shrivers are Kennedys without the tawdriness-”all that great taste and less scandal,” says an adviser. Maria has taken her kids to Rose Kennedy’s house, where Maria spent time as a child, but the Kennedys are Boston and she’s L.A. She’s Georgetown (class of 1977), not Harvard. She went into journalism, tackling it with gusto. Neal Shapiro, her boss at “Dateline NBC,” recalls Shriver’s climbing a ladder outside O. J. Simpson’s estate to make sure she didn’t get lost to the cameras amid the media mob. Yet after the first of her four children was born, exhausted from cross-country commuting and guilty about time away from home, she took herself off the fast track. “Maria has never defined herself strictly by career,” says Shapiro. She once postponed a prized interview with Fidel Castro because it was her eldest daughter’s first day of preschool. Charmed by her commitment, Castro rescheduled.

The question now is whether Shriver, a staunch Democrat, will help Republicans close the gender gap in the one state critical to the Democrats’ chances of winning the White House. “If she says, ‘Vote for my husband, he’s a good man and he understands your life,’ that would be huge,” says a Team Arnold adviser. Politics, after all, is in her blood.

With Holly Peterson

© 2003 Newsweek, Inc.



August 9, 2003 - Shrivers and Kennedys mum on Arnold





Caption: Actor Arnold Schwarzenegger (L) gives a thumbs up as he is joined by his wife Maria Shriver (C-R) after he filed his declaration of candidacy papers for the California gubernatorial recall election at the Los Angeles County Registrar's Office in Norwalk, California. Maria Shriver is the daughter of Peace Corps Founding Director Sargent Shriver and has a long history of public service, like everyone in her family. (AFP/Hector Mata)


Read and comment on this story from the Boston Globe on Arnold Schwarzenegger's run for governor of California and the attitude of the Kennedy clan towards his canidacy. When Mr. Schwarzenegger married Maria Shriver in 1986, he joined a family dedicated to public service. The patriarch, Sargent Shriver, who served as George McGovern's running mate in the 1972 presidential election, founded the Peace Corps in 1961. He and his wife, Eunice Kennedy Shriver - the younger sister of John F. Kennedy - founded the Special Olympics, which their son Tim now runs. Mark Shriver is the vice-president of Save the Children. Two more sons are involved in other philanthropic ventures. Read the story at:

Kennedys mum on Arnold*

* This link was active on the date it was posted. PCOL is not responsible for broken links which may have changed.



Kennedys mum on Arnold

By SIMON HOUPT
From Saturday's Globe and Mail

New York — Two fundamental principles have driven the Kennedy clan's success in the United States ever since Joe Kennedy's father, P. J., became the Democratic ward boss for East Boston: family and liberal politics.

Arnold Schwarzenegger's run for governor of California has sent those principles on a high-profile collision course.

So far, the urge to uphold family unity is winning the battle, and few Kennedys are speaking publicly about the matter.

Senator Edward Kennedy issued a statement that read: "I like and respect Arnold, and I've been impressed with his efforts to promote after-school education in California and his willingness to come to Congress and the administration to fight for that program. But I'm a Democrat, and I don't support the recall effort."

When Mr. Schwarzenegger married Maria Shriver in 1986, he joined a family dedicated to public service.

The patriarch, Sargent Shriver, who served as George McGovern's running mate in the 1972 presidential election, founded the Peace Corps in 1961. He and his wife, Eunice Kennedy Shriver - the younger sister of John F. Kennedy - founded the Special Olympics, which their son Tim now runs. Mark Shriver is the vice-president of Save the Children. Two more sons are involved in other philanthropic ventures.

The silence that has descended upon the clan suggests the Kennedys may see Mr. Schwarzenegger's bid as a smirch on their good name.

Michael Shriver would not comment yesterday, though he told The Washington Post earlier: "I'm not talking. He [Mr. Schwarzenegger] is my brother-in-law and I'm supporting him and that's all."

While they are usually voluble over the accomplishments of family members, they refrain from speaking when confronted with scandal, such as the rape accusation against William Kennedy Smith in the spring of 1991 and Michael Kennedy's affair with an underage babysitter that came to light in 1997.

In a February, 2002, on-line chat to promote his movie Collateral Damage, Mr. Schwarzenegger praised his father-in-law as a "powerful force to get those programs done.



Alongside his wife Maria Shriver, actor Arnold Schwarzenegger speaks to reporters after he filed his candidate papers for governor of California at the Los Angeles Registrar's office in Norwalk, August 9, 2003. Schwarzenegger made his candidacy official, telling chanting supporters he would be 'the people's governor.' The Austrian-born action film star and political novice, a Republican, has quickly come to be regarded as the front-runner in the October 7 election to replace the unpopular Democrat Gray Davis. Photo by Jim Ruymen/Reuters

Naturally, when you meet people like that and they have such a great political background and know so much about it, you learn a lot from it."

He added: "I think, you know, I had an interest in giving back to the country anyway. But I think that being with this family definitely has a very big impact on me."

Still, Laurence Leamer, the author of two Kennedy biographies including the forthcoming Sons of Camelot, said of Mr. Schwarzenegger's bid: "This wasn't the Kennedy family getting together in a council and deciding who's going to run next, that's for sure."

But Mr. Leamer pointed out that there are many political stripes on the Kennedy tiger.

"If you look at the political spectrum of the Kennedys, you go on the right from Doug Kennedy, who's a libertarian, to Ted Kennedy on the left, who's a liberal Democrat - and actually Arnold is right in the middle of that as a liberal Republican."

And despite his official party affiliation, Mr. Schwarzenegger may not be too different from his in-laws.

A March, 2001, article in Premiere magazine included various accounts of the star groping women while making and promoting his films.

The article's primary allegation was that the Terminator actor was able to use his power in Hollywood to terminate negative press. No longer.

Yesterday, as Mr. Schwarzenegger faced tough questions during his first TV interviews with journalists rather than talk-show hosts, he looked out of his depth.

He was unable to offer specific ideas for rescuing the California economy except to suggest that leadership is needed.

"Leadership means that you set goals for yourself, as I have always done in my life, go after those goals and accomplish them," he said during an interview with Matt Lauer on the Today Show.

Asked twice by Mr. Lauer whether he would release his tax returns to the press, Mr. Schwarzenegger said he was unable to hear the question.

He said the same thing when asked for his position on California's controversial law regarding paid family leave, against which some businesses have protested for its cost to their bottom lines.

When Mr. Lauer repeated the question, Mr. Schwarzenegger hesitantly said he would have to think about the issue.

"I would have to get into that, because as you know I'm very much for families - I'm very much for children and children's issues," he said.

To date, Mr. Schwarzenegger's chief political achievement has been creating Proposition 49, an after-school funding program that passed last November.




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