Back to the Real Salt Lake Newsfeed

Hugh Hewitt: The party of Robert F. Kennedy is gone

In the aftermath of the murder of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, then a candidate for president, went forward with a planned rally at 17th and Broadway in the heart of Indianapolis' African American community. The country had witnessed more than 100 race riots that left at least 83 dead and 1,800 injured the previous summer, and Kennedy knew that news of King's assassination could result in similar violence. Instead, he called for "an effort to understand with compassion and love."

Kennedy's speech is rightfully hailed as one of the great moments of American political rhetoric.