Keen On America

Stop, Don't Do That: Peter Edelman on What Bobby Kennedy Can Still Teach America

Apr 3, 2026
Peter Edelman, law professor and longtime advocate for low-income Americans who once served as Robert F. Kennedy’s principal aide. He recalls Kennedy’s transformation after JFK’s death and the Mississippi trip that shaped his anti-poverty work. He tells the story of marrying Marian Wright, breaks with Clinton over welfare policy, and celebrates modern protest movements saying, “Stop, don’t do that.”
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ADVICE

Use Public Protest To Check Harmful Policies

  • Speak out publicly when policies threaten democratic norms or harm people by using the refrain 'Stop, don't do that.'
  • Edelman cites Minnesota protests as an example of citizens effectively asserting democratic limits.
INSIGHT

Kennedy Would Have Called Out Authoritarianism

  • Peter Edelman believes Bobby Kennedy would have publicly challenged an authoritarian-leaning occupant whose image now hangs on the Robert F. Kennedy Department of Justice building.
  • He connects contemporary protests to Kennedy's spirit of calling out power.
ANECDOTE

Meeting Marian Wright During The Mississippi Trip

  • Peter Edelman met Marian Wright during Bobby Kennedy's 1967 Mississippi trip investigating severe poverty in the Delta.
  • Their meeting led to marriage a month after Kennedy's assassination and anchored Edelman's lifelong anti-poverty work.
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