Senatorial Buffoonery

I am puzzled by what the Senate allows and what they do not allow. Maybe, I should clarify the later so it is understood what I am going to discuss. There is another Kennedy in the Senate who hails from a different Kennedy family. This is other than the more famous Kennedys who played significant roles in the nation and its government. Both President John and Senator Robert Kennedy were assassinated.

This Kennedy is unrelated (so I read) to the more famous Kennedys who served the nation with distinction. I am being redundant in repeating this fact. Both of the NE Kennedys were a loss. The Kennedy I am picking on is John.

Kennedy the Senator from Louisiana. If John retired, he would be doing the nation and Louisiana a service.

September 2024 and Louisiana Senator Kennedy is questioning people testifying to the Senate.

He plays the role of concerned politician with consummate flair when he made his way around southeast Louisiana. He was assuring Hurricane Francine victims he was there for them in their time of need.

This week, he’s back in Washington and bringing the wrong kind of attention to our state. 

If Kennedy was not just marching out his faux corn pone personality yet again. Otherwise his wearisome schtick would be easy enough to ignore. The Republican junior senator went beyond the pale Tuesday with his unacceptable questioning of Maya Berry. Maya Berry is the director of the Arab American Institute. Kennedy said “she should hide her head in a bag.” 

The occasion was a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on antisemitism and anti-Arab hate. The topic has been at the forefront since last October. The terrorist group Hamas attacked a music festival in kibbutz Re’im, killing more than 700 people and taking over 100 more hostage. 

Since then, the Israeli death toll has surpassed 1,000 in subsequent Hamas attacks. This, while the Jewish state’s military response in Gaza has killed more than 41,000 Palestinians. 

AB: It has only worsened as the Israel is still taking it revenge on civilians. Jumping a paragraph in the article.

John Kennedy felt compelled to demonstrate the need for such a hearing when he pressed Berry, an Arab American, to answer whether Maya Berry supported Hamas and Hezbollah, another terrorist-connected political group.

Maya Berry withstood the onslaught from Kennedy, who continuously was asking whether she supported either group even after she made it clear she backed neither. She responded to Kennedy.

“Oddly enough, I’m going to say thank you for that question because it demonstrates the purpose of our hearing today.” 

Undeterred or perhaps unable to hear over his own prattle, Kennedy pressed on and finished with his “head in a bag” comment, drawing groans from other committee members. Senate Judiciary Chairman Dick Durbin, D-Illinois, then allowed Berry to respond.

“This has been regrettably a real disappointment but very much an indication of the danger to our democratic institutions that we’re in now,” she said in conclusion.

Kennedy’s boorish display will likely go over big with his more ardent constituents. As well as with folks on the far right who encourage such intolerance. This follows the senator’s pattern of Donald Trump-style demagoguery and playing up to the MAGA crowd. A crowd whose challenge to their leaders seems to be not “how far can you take us?” but “how low can you go?” in the contest to be the most hateful, insensitive and divisive.

During his political ascension, Kennedy actually held promise as a constitutional scholar and voice of reason and common sense. He delivered on the promise you would expect from a graduate of Vanderbilt University, Virginia School of Law and Oxford University. That held true even after he switched from the Democratic to the Republican Party in 2007. 

Louisiana deserves better than a mean-spirited caricature in the U.S. Senate. At the very least, John Kennedy needs to be sent a message that the level of rudeness he displayed Tuesday toward Berry doesn’t sit well with the home crowd. 

More importantly, Louisiana needs to have a zero-tolerance policy for the people we elected to represent us: No racism, no bigotry, no misogyny, no dogmatism, no more refusal to budge from intransigent views.

A Louisiana Newspaper responding to Senator Kennedy’s diatribe.