Matthew Maxwell Taylor Kennedy (born January 11, 1965) is an American lawyer and author. He is the ninth child of Robert F. Kennedy and Ethel Skakel Kennedy.
Kennedy was formerly an assistant district attorney in the Philadelphia DA's Office,[11] where he prosecuted felonies[6][10] and worked in the juvenile crime unit.[10] After three years in the prosecutor's office,[10] he moved to Los Angeles,[6] where he lived in Brentwood,[10] and interrupted his legal career to compile a book on his father.[11][6] The work, Make Gentle the Life of This World: The Vision of Robert F. Kennedy and the Words That Inspired Him, was published by Harcourt Brace in 1998.[12] Kennedy later returned to the East Coast to lead the Watershed Institute at Boston College,[6] an environmental nonprofit group,[13] and was chairman of the re-election campaign of his uncle, U.S. SenatorTed Kennedy, in 2000.[6] Kennedy also taught English at Boston College for a time.[7]
In 2001, Kennedy explored a campaign for the Democratic nomination for the Massachusetts's 9th congressional district, a seat vacated by Democrat Joe Moakley, and moved from Cambridge, Massachusetts to the 9th district in preparation for a possible run.[14] Kennedy never declared his candidacy, citing his desire to spend time with his family, including his three children under the age of 10.[13] Kennedy later moved to California.[15]
Kennedy was nominated by President Obama to serve as a member of the Board of the Directors of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC), and the Senate confirmed him by voice vote in October 2011.[22] He served as a board member from 2011[23] until January 2018.[citation needed]
In 2004, along with his mother and siblings, Kennedy supported the demolition of the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles (the site of his father's 1968 murder) in order to make way for a new public school complex. Kennedy said that a school was "a fitting memorial" for his father and that no part of the hotel site should be retained as a memorial, writing, "The Ambassador Hotel has nothing to do with who my father was or what he tried to do with his life."[24] In 2021, after his father's assassin, Sirhan Sirhan, was recommended for parole, Kennedy was one of six surviving Kennedy children to oppose the proposed release;[25] two other surviving children supported parole for Sirhan.[26]
When Max and Edward Kennedy Jr. were children, grandmother Rose would tell them the story of how their uncle, President John F. Kennedy, saved a member of his PT boat crew in World War II by towing him to an island.[28] Max visited the Solomon Islands in 2002 with Robert Ballard to revisit the scene of the story of John F. Kennedy's PT-109; they met Biuku Gasa and Eroni Kumana, the native coastwatcher scouts who found the missing Kennedy and his crew.[28]