John English, a
Nassau County leader who helped
John F. Kennedy during the
1960 presidential election, encouraged Robert Kennedy to oppose Keating. At the time,
Samuel S. Stratton, a member of the
United States House of Representatives from
New York's 35th congressional district, was considered the most likely Democratic candidate. At first, Kennedy resisted. After President Kennedy's assassination, Robert Kennedy remained as Attorney General for
Lyndon B. Johnson. However, Johnson and Kennedy feuded. Kennedy decided to run for the Senate in New York in August, and resigned from the Cabinet on September 3, 1964. While many reform Democrats resisted Kennedy, support from
Robert F. Wagner, Jr., and party bosses like
Charles A. Buckley, of
The Bronx, and Peter J. Crotty, of
Buffalo, helped Kennedy win the nomination at the party convention. During the campaign, Kennedy was frequently met by large crowds. Keating accused Kennedy of being an arrogant "
carpetbagger" from
Massachusetts. Kennedy responded to these charges in a televised town meeting by saying, "If the senator of the state of New York is going be selected on who's lived here the longest, then I think people are going to vote for my opponent. If it's going be selected on who's got the best New York accent, then I think I'm probably out too. But I think if it's going be selected on the basis of who can make the best United States senator, I think I'm still in the contest." ==Results==