Father, SEC Chairman, Hollywood movie executive, U.S. Ambassador to Britain, anti-Semite, bootlegger?
Not words one hears together often, and definitely not what you’d expect about the patriarch of one of America’s most famous political families. But Joseph P. Kennedy earned various titles throughout his life—some deserved, and others debunked in David Nasaw’s new book “The Patriarch: The Remarkable Life and Turbulent Times of Joseph P. Kennedy.”
Nasaw, who had unprecedented access to family documents and audio tapes, depicts Kennedy as a complicated father, businessman, and political mind often at odds with the very people he loved and cared for the most.
During his time in politics, Nasaw said to The Cycle hosts Wednesday, Kennedy was isolationist and against the creation of NATO, the Marshall Plan, and the Truman Doctrine—a stark Republican comparison to his sons, who some consider to be the founders of modern liberalism.









