Civics In A Year

How Eleanor Roosevelt And JFK Turned Conflict Into Partnership

35 min · 3 jun 2026
aflevering How Eleanor Roosevelt And JFK Turned Conflict Into Partnership artwork

Beschrijving

Eleanor Roosevelt and John F. Kennedy don’t sound like a natural pairing and that’s exactly why we wanted to sit with this story. We talk with presidential historian Barbara Perry of UVA’s Miller Center about her forthcoming book, Reconcilable Differences: The Unlikely Political Alliance of John F. Kennedy and Eleanor Roosevelt, and what it reveals about political courage when your toughest critic is inside your own party.  We start at Hyde Park and Val-Kill, where a single photo of Eleanor walking with JFK opens up years of tension: generational divides, party faction fights, and a clash over what leadership should look like in public. We dig into the hard stuff Eleanor wouldn’t let go, from civil rights and anti-lynching efforts to McCarthyism and the cost of staying silent. Barbara shares the moments that surprised her most, including Eleanor’s sharp telegrams and JFK’s steady, almost stubborn respect for her voice.  Then we follow what happens when disagreement turns into partnership. Eleanor pushes from the outside with unmatched influence as a media figure and power broker, while Kennedy navigates Congress, the New Frontier agenda, and the slow build toward a meaningful civil rights stance. We also explore Eleanor’s impact at the United Nations through the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, plus the overlooked Kennedy era work on women’s equality, including the President’s Commission on the Status of Women and the path to the Equal Pay Act.  If political division feels permanent, this conversation offers a different model: principled pressure, reluctant compromise, and real civic responsibility. Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who loves American history, and leave a review with the biggest lesson you’re taking from Eleanor and JFK. Check Out the Civic Literacy Curriculum [https://civics.asu.edu/civic-literacy-curriculum]! School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership [https://scetl.asu.edu/] Center for American Civics [https://civics.asu.edu/]

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233 afleveringen

aflevering Social Media And Modern Elections artwork

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aflevering D-Day: What Does Courage Look Like When History Is Watching artwork

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aflevering The Supreme Court’s Shadow Docket artwork

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4 jun 202626 min
aflevering How Eleanor Roosevelt And JFK Turned Conflict Into Partnership artwork

How Eleanor Roosevelt And JFK Turned Conflict Into Partnership

Eleanor Roosevelt and John F. Kennedy don’t sound like a natural pairing and that’s exactly why we wanted to sit with this story. We talk with presidential historian Barbara Perry of UVA’s Miller Center about her forthcoming book, Reconcilable Differences: The Unlikely Political Alliance of John F. Kennedy and Eleanor Roosevelt, and what it reveals about political courage when your toughest critic is inside your own party.  We start at Hyde Park and Val-Kill, where a single photo of Eleanor walking with JFK opens up years of tension: generational divides, party faction fights, and a clash over what leadership should look like in public. We dig into the hard stuff Eleanor wouldn’t let go, from civil rights and anti-lynching efforts to McCarthyism and the cost of staying silent. Barbara shares the moments that surprised her most, including Eleanor’s sharp telegrams and JFK’s steady, almost stubborn respect for her voice.  Then we follow what happens when disagreement turns into partnership. Eleanor pushes from the outside with unmatched influence as a media figure and power broker, while Kennedy navigates Congress, the New Frontier agenda, and the slow build toward a meaningful civil rights stance. We also explore Eleanor’s impact at the United Nations through the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, plus the overlooked Kennedy era work on women’s equality, including the President’s Commission on the Status of Women and the path to the Equal Pay Act.  If political division feels permanent, this conversation offers a different model: principled pressure, reluctant compromise, and real civic responsibility. Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who loves American history, and leave a review with the biggest lesson you’re taking from Eleanor and JFK. Check Out the Civic Literacy Curriculum [https://civics.asu.edu/civic-literacy-curriculum]! School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership [https://scetl.asu.edu/] Center for American Civics [https://civics.asu.edu/]

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aflevering Jackie Kennedy: First Lady of the New Frontier artwork

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