Ted Sorensen

Lawyer

Birthday May 8, 1928

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2010-10-31, New York City, New York, U.S. (82 years old)

Nationality United States

#43784 Most Popular

1890

Sorensen was born in Lincoln, Nebraska, the son of Christian A. Sorensen (1890–1959), who served as Nebraska attorney general (1929–1933), and Annis (Chaikin) Sorensen.

His father was Danish American and his mother was of Russian Jewish descent.

His younger brother, Philip C. Sorensen, later became the lieutenant governor of Nebraska.

1928

Theodore Chaikin Sorensen (May 8, 1928 – October 31, 2010) was an American lawyer, writer, and presidential adviser.

He was a speechwriter for President John F. Kennedy, as well as one of his closest advisers.

President Kennedy once called him his "intellectual blood bank".

Notably, though it was a collaborative effort with Kennedy, Sorensen was generally regarded as the author of the majority of the final text of Profiles in Courage, and stated in his memoir that he helped write the book.

1945

He graduated from Lincoln High School during 1945.

He earned a bachelor's degree at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln, and attended University of Nebraska College of Law, graduating first in his class.

1953

During January 1953, the 24-year-old Sorensen became the new chief legislative aide to Senator John F. Kennedy.

He wrote many of Kennedy's articles and speeches.

1957

Profiles in Courage won Kennedy the 1957 Pulitzer Prize for Biography.

1962

Sorensen helped draft Kennedy's inaugural address and was also the primary author of Kennedy's 1962 "We choose to go to the Moon" speech.

1964

Sorensen drafted Johnson's first address to Congress as well as the 1964 State of the Union.

He officially resigned February 29, 1964, and was the first member of the Kennedy Administration to do so.

As Johnson was later to recount in his memoirs, Sorensen helped in the transition to the new administration with those speeches.

Prior to his resignation, Sorensen stated his intent to write Kennedy's biography, calling it "the book that President Kennedy had intended to write with my help after his second term."

He was not the only Kennedy aide to publish writings; Paul “Red” Fay, Jr., Kennedy’s Secretary of the Navy and a close friend of Kennedy’s from his Navy service wrote The Pleasure of His Company, David Powers and Kenneth O’Donnell, Special Assistants to the President wrote Johnny, We Hardly Knew Ye, and historian and special assistant Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. wrote his Pulitzer Prize winning memoir A Thousand Days: John F. Kennedy in the White House during the same period.

1965

Sorensen's biography, Kennedy, was published during 1965 and became an international bestseller.

Sorensen later joined the U.S. law firm of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, where he was of counsel, while still staying involved in politics.

1968

He was involved with Democratic campaigns and was a major adviser of Robert F. Kennedy in Kennedy's 1968 presidential campaign.

1969

After the death of Robert Kennedy he wrote a book entitled The Kennedy Legacy: A Peaceful Revolution For The Seventies (1969) about the political ideals of the Kennedy brothers that could be applied to the Democratic Party in particular and to America and American society in general going forward.

During the next four decades, Sorensen had a career as an international lawyer, advising governments around the world, as well as major international corporations.

1970

During the 1970 United States Senate election in New York, Sorensen was the Democratic party's designee for the Democratic nomination for U.S. senator from New York.

He was challenged in the primary election by Richard Ottinger, Paul O'Dwyer, and Max McCarthy, and polled third.

The winning nominee Ottinger was subsequently defeated by James L. Buckley in the general election.

1973

In 1973, Sorensen wrote a contingency plan for the presidential transition of the Democratic Speaker of the House Carl Albert.

Albert was third in the United States presidential line of succession under the Twenty-fifth Amendment in the event that Richard Nixon was impeached or forced to resign by the Watergate scandal, and if the nomination of Gerald Ford to replace Spiro Agnew as Vice President failed.

2008

In his 2008 autobiography Counselor: A Life at the Edge of History, Sorensen said he wrote "a first draft of most of the chapters" of John F. Kennedy's 1956 book Profiles in Courage and "helped choose the words of many of its sentences."

Sorensen was President Kennedy's special counsel, adviser, and primary speechwriter, the role for which he is remembered best.

He helped draft the inaugural address in which Kennedy said famously, "Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country."

Although Sorensen played an important part in the composition of the inaugural address, he has stated that "the speech and its famous turn of phrase that everyone remembers was written by Kennedy himself."

In his 2008 memoir, Counselor: A Life at the Edge of History, Sorensen claimed, "The truth is that I simply don't remember where the line came from."

During the early months of the administration, Sorensen's responsibilities concerned the domestic agenda.

After the Bay of Pigs debacle, Kennedy asked Sorensen to participate with foreign policy discussions as well.

During the Cuban Missile Crisis, Sorensen served as a member of ExComm and was named by Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara as one of the "true inner circle" members who advised the president, the others being Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, National Security Adviser McGeorge Bundy, Secretary of State Dean Rusk, General Maxwell D. Taylor (chairman of the Joint Chiefs), former ambassador to the USSR Llewellyn Thompson, and McNamara himself.

Sorensen played a critical role in drafting Kennedy's correspondence with Nikita Khrushchev and worked on Kennedy's first address to the nation about the crisis on October 22.

Sorensen was devastated by Kennedy's assassination, which he termed "the most deeply traumatic experience of my life. ... I had never considered a future without him."

He later quoted a poem that he said summed up how he felt: "How could you leave us, how could you die? We are sheep without a shepherd when the snow shuts out the sky."

He submitted a letter of resignation to President Lyndon B. Johnson the day after the assassination but was persuaded to stay through the transition.