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d-20857House OversightOther

Deleted passages from William Manchester's manuscript allege Joseph Kennedy was a Nazi sympathizer

The excerpt repeats long‑standing, unverified claims about Joseph Kennedy’s alleged Nazi sympathies that have been discussed for decades. It provides no new documents, names, dates, or financial detai Claims originate from a manuscript copy provided anonymously to The Realist. Alleged that Joseph Kennedy, as ambassador (1938‑1940), predicted German victory over Britain. Suggests the passages were

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #015080
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The excerpt repeats long‑standing, unverified claims about Joseph Kennedy’s alleged Nazi sympathies that have been discussed for decades. It provides no new documents, names, dates, or financial detai Claims originate from a manuscript copy provided anonymously to The Realist. Alleged that Joseph Kennedy, as ambassador (1938‑1940), predicted German victory over Britain. Suggests the passages were

Tags

media-suppressionhistorical-allegationpoliticalhistoricalkennedy-familyhouse-oversight

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Extracted Text (OCR)

EFTA Disclosure
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
The Parts Left Out of the Kennedy Book An executive in the publishing industry, who obviously must remain anonymous, has made available to The Realist a photostat copy of the original manuscript of William Manchester's book, The Death of a President. Those passages which are printed here were marked for deletion months before Harper & Row sold the serialization rights to Look magazine; hence they do not appear even in the so-called “complete” version published by the German magazine Stern. # At the Democratic National Convention in the summer of 1960, Los Angeles was the scene of a political visitation of the alleged sins of the father upon the son. Lyndon Johnson found himself battling for the presidential nomination with a young, handsome, charming and witty adversary, John F. Kennedy. The Texan in his understandable anxiety degenerated to a strange campaign tactic. He attacked his opponent on the grounds that his father, Joseph P. Kennedy, was a Nazi sympathizer during the time he was United States Ambassador to Great Britain, from 1938 to 1940. The senior Kennedy had predicted that Germany would defeat England and he

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