Caroline Kennedy may become US's London envoy

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated:

Former US president John F Kennedy’s daughter Caroline Kennedy could follow in her grandfather Joseph P Kennedy's footsteps and become ambassador to Britain.

Former US president John F Kennedy’s daughter Caroline Kennedy could follow in her grandfather Joseph P Kennedy's footsteps and become ambassador to Britain.
 
Kennedy, it may be recalled, removed herself from the New York Senate race for personal reasons.

Kennedy, 51, the only daughter of the assassinated president, would have become the latest in a continuous line of Kennedys in the Senate stretching back to her father's first Senate win in 1952.
 
Her uncle Robert Kennedy once held a Senate seat from New York and her other uncle, Edward Kennedy, now suffering from a brain tumour, is a longstanding senator from Massachusetts.
 
Brought up in the public eye, she shunned the spotlight until she stepped out in the presidential election campaign to offer decisive support for Barack Obama in the Democratic primaries.
 
Her political debut bombed with the public, however, when she refused to make financial disclosure and mumbled during press interviews, saying “you know” 142 times in a single interview with The New York Times.

An aide said yesterday that she withdrew because of a personal matter that was not related to the illness of Senator

Now that her Senate ambitions have come to an end, attention returned to the earlier prospect of her pursuing an ambassadorial career.

During the campaign Ms Kennedy was mooted as a possible US ambassador to Britain or to the United Nations.

The UN job has been filled but she could still be named to the Court of St James's.

Her grandfather, Joseph Kennedy, served as US Ambassador to Britain from 1938 until 1940. He is remembered for his strong support for the policy of appeasing Hitler.

He stepped down after telling The Boston Globe in November 1940 that “Democracy is finished in England. It may be here.”