Member Review

Cover Image: Protecting the Presidential Candidates

Protecting the Presidential Candidates

Pub Date:

Review by

Chris H, Reviewer

The date of November 22nd 1963 was a terrible day for many people. For John McCormack, the 71-year-old Speaker of the House, it was an even more shocking time than for most. For McCormack was told initially not only that President Kennedy but also that his Vice President Lyndon Johnson had both been assassinated during their trip to Dallas. According to the line of succession this meant that he himself, as Speaker was now the US president. As the news sunk in, McCormack was overcome by a wave of vertigo and found himself momentarily unable to stand. When McCormack learnt the truth moments later: the Vice President was in fact completely unharmed, a wave of relief spread across the old man's face.
Mel Ayton's book about the protection afforded to both presidents and candidates since the Kennedy era is full of such fascinating titbits. Both JFK and his brother, Bobby who was also assassinated while seeking the presidency in 1968 both shared a fatalistic attitude to the possibility of assassination. As it turns out, Bobby's tragic assassination could have been very easily prevented. The racist presidential candidate, George Wallace, in contrast was generally very wary of the prospect of attack but was shot and paralysed during a brief moment of recklessness while on the campaign trail in 1972. Perhaps understandably, Ted Kennedy's political career was haunted by constant fears that he might become the third successive Kennedy to fall foul of an assassin's bullet. Richard Nixon used Ted Kennedy's secret service detail as a means to spy on the senator who was a potential rival. Others have abused the secret service supplied, to them. JFK and Gary Hart both used them as a means to help facilitate their own womanising. Others have been resistant or unhelpful to their detail: Nixon's tendency to plunge enthusiastically into large crowds without earning reportedly led him to be dubbed "a sniper's dream." Other candidates have treated their detail with respect or even something approaching friendship.
Ultimately, this is a full and revealing account of a fascinating subject. It is a shame that in the later chapters, Ayton's political prejudices. notably his clear hostility to the Clinton family, get in the way of an otherwise compelling and readable factual account.
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