Robert Walker Kenny (August 21, 1901 – July 20, 1976), 21st Attorney General of California (1943-1947), was "a colorful figure in state politics for many years" who in 1946 ran unsuccessfully against Earl Warren for state governor (a race in which Warren won both Republican and Democratic nominations).

Robert W. Kenny
Kenny in the 1930s
21st Attorney General of California
In office
January 4, 1943 – January 5, 1947
GovernorEarl Warren
Preceded byEarl Warren
Succeeded byFrederick N. Howser
Member of the California Senate
from the 38th district
In office
January 2, 1939 – January 4, 1943
Preceded byCulbert Olson
Succeeded byJack Tenney
Personal details
Born(1901-08-21)August 21, 1901
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
DiedJuly 20, 1976(1976-07-20) (aged 74)
La Jolla, California, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse
Sara B. McCann
(m. 1922; div. 1938)
EducationStanford University

During World War II, Kenny was an active proponent of the incarceration of Japanese Americans which the office has since apologized for describing it as a "failure of political leadership" and a racist policy.[1] In 1947, he led the defense of the Hollywood Ten.[2][3]

Background

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Robert Walker Kenny was born on August 21, 1901, in Los Angeles, California. His mother was Minnie Summerfield. His father, Robert Wolfenden Kenny (1863-1914) was a successful banker and civic leader in Los Angeles and Berkeley, California. Kenny's grandfather, George L. Kenny, arrived in San Francisco in the early 1850s with his friends, the brothers A.L. Bancroft and Hubert Howe Bancroft. The three men formed a partnership and established the first bookstore in San Francisco.[4] In 1921, Kenny graduated at 18 from Stanford University.[2][3]

Career

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Press

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In 1921, Kenny joined the Los Angeles Times, where he worked with Chapin Hall, and eventually became a financial editor there. In 1922, he joined United Press news service. He then worked for the Chicago Tribune in Paris. In 1923, he returned to Los Angeles and worked for United News. He then opened his own press service with Ted Taylor, called the Los Angeles Press Service, while also working the for the Los Angeles Express. After studying law privately, in 1926 he passed a civil service examination and was admitted to the state bar.[2][3]

California government service

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In 1927, Kenny began working in the Los Angeles County counsel's office as "Deputy of the County Counsel."[2][3] In 1929, he joined the state legislature.[3] In 1930, Kenny supported James Rolph Jr., who became California governor, and received an appointment as judge to the Los Angeles Municipal Court, followed by promotion to the Los Angeles Superior Court.[2][3] In 1934, he won an election and became municipal judge for small claims court.[3] He then became a judge in the law and motion court.[3] At some time in the 1930s, Kenny became a Democrat.[2]

Kenny also served as a Municipal Court Judge and later a Superior Court Judge in Los Angeles, California. He served in the California State Senate from 1939 to 1943.

Private practice

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Kenny resigned his judgeship. In 1939, he dissolved a law partnership with Paul Vallee and Lawrence Beilensen. He set up a new partnership with Morris E. Cohen, which lasted until 1948. Robert O. Curran joined the firm but left to fight in World War II; Robert S. Morris replaced him.[3]

Clients included William Schneiderman, head of the California section of the Communist Party USA; Kenny helped him with citizenship papers in 1940, a case he lost but which Wendell Willkie helped win on appeal in 1943.[3]

Attorney General of California

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In 1942, Kenny was elected Attorney General of California, beating Louis H. Burke, and served one term to 1947.[3][4] Under Kenny in this period, Robert B. Powers worked as "coordinator of law enforcement agencies".

While in this capacity, Kenny was responsible for the office's complicity in the racist incarceration of Japanese Americans. His actions have been disavowed as a failure of leadership and unjust by his successors.[1]

In 1946, Kenny sought the Democratic nomination for Governor, but was defeated by Earl Warren. Although Warren was a Republican, California law at that time permitted a candidate to run in both primaries, a practice known as cross-filing. Warren also won the Republican nomination that year and went on to score an easy general election victory.[3][5]

NLG, Hollywood Ten, and HUAC

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In 1937, Kenny supported Franklin Delano Roosevelt's battle to "pack" the United States Supreme Court with extra justices via the Judicial Procedures Reform Bill of 1937.[2] As The New York Times wrote in Kenny's obituary: "Out of that battle grew the National Lawyers Guild" (NLG).[2]

On February 22, 1937, when the NLG formed, Kenny was a founding member.[3] (Note: he was also a member of the NLG's predecessor, the International Juridical Association.[6]) He was elected president of the NLG in 1940 and held the post till 1948.[2][3] During his tenure as president, he became involved in the aftermath of the Zoot Suit Riots.[7][8]

In May 1945, while serving as Attorney General, Kenny accompanied Bartley Crum and Martin Popper to the founding session of the United Nations in San Francisco, where the three men were NLG's "official" consultants to the American delegation at the behest of the U.S. Department of State.[9] In 1946, after losing California's Democratic gubernatorial primary, Kenny returned to private practice.[2]

In 1947, NLG members Charles Katz[9] and Ben Margolis[10][11] asked Kenny to become lead counsel, with Crum as his second,[12] for the "Unfriendly Nineteen" film industry professionals subpoenaed to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). Later, NLG members Martin Popper of Washington and constitutional lawyer Sam Rosenwein of New York also joined the legal team.[9][13] Only ten of the nineteen wound up testifying before the HUAC. They all refused to answer questions about their Communist Party affiliation, and were cited for contempt of Congress. They became known as the Hollywood Ten.[3]

Some believe that Kenny's decision to defend the Hollywood Ten may well have dashed any aspirations he had for career advancement. In her review of Janet Stevenson's 1981 biography of Kenny, The Undiminished Man, Dorothy Gray writes:

Until Bob Kenny chose to oppose the outrages of the McCarthy era, it appeared as though he would achieve a high political office or gain appointment to the California Supreme Court. When, in the late 1940's, he chose to defend those accused of being pro-communist, he sacrificed all hope of high office and became a political untouchable.[14]

Later life

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In 1948, Kenny and Robert S. Morris formed a new law partnership. In the 1940s and 1950s, they represented "many people under indictment for questionable activities."[3] Clients included Luisa Moreno Bemis, Guatemalan labor activist, many "unfriendly" witnesses (including the Hollywood Ten) before HUAC in Los Angeles in 1952, as well as musicians before HUAC in 1956. Kenny was a member of the American Committee for the Protection of Foreign Born. Partner Robert S. Morris was a member of the Immigration and Deportation Committee in the Los Angeles chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).[3]

In 1950, Kenny ran for California state senator against Glenn Anderson and Jack Tenney for the Democratic nomination; Tenney won. The same year, he ran for Los Angeles mayor; Fletcher Bowron won in a recall.[3] In 1957, he was one of the lawyers who helped 23 Hollywood screenwriters and actors win a Supreme Court review of their challenge of the Hollywood blacklist.[2] In 1960, Kenny was treasurer of the National Committee to Abolish the House Un-American Activities Committee (NCA-HUAC).[15][16] In 1962, Kenny served as counsel of Albert J. Lewis and Steve Roberts of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee before HUAC.[17]

In 1963, the Congressional Record re-recorded information from October 26, 1955, that "public records, files, and publications of this committee" (HUAC) showed Kenny "not necessarily a Communist, a Communist sympathizer, or a fellow traveller" but noted nevertheless that he was affiliated with the American Youth for Democracy, Civil Rights Congress, Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Committee, and California Labor School.[18] In 1966, California Governor Edmund G. Brown appointed Kenny again a state judge. In 1975, he retired from the bench.[2][3]

Personal life and death

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In 1922, Kenny married Sara McCann; she died in 1966.[3]

In the 1930s, Kenny was a "liberal Republican."[2]

Robert Walter Kenny died age 74 on July 20, 1976, at Scripps Memorial Hospital in La Jolla, California with no survivors.[2][3]

Legacy

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In 2012, the National Lawyers Guild remembered Kenny as follows:

That the Guild survived the splits in the late '30s and repression of the '50s is primarily a testament to the loyalty, bravery and commitment to principle of two allied but disparate groups. One was made up of communist and socialist activists... The other was a group of dedicated civil libertarians who were unwilling to compromise their principles to curry favor with either the Roosevelt Administration or the Truman and Eisenhower Administrations. Nor would they refuse to work with Communists. But these lawyers were not communists, and steered the Guild in an independent, radical direction. Robert W Kenny, a California State Senator who became President of the Guild in 1940 at a moment of grave internal crisis, disregarding the risks to his political future, and remaining President for eight important years, was a key member of this group.[19]

Works

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  • The Law of Freedom in a Platform by Gerrard Winstanley, edited by Robert W. Kenny (1973)[20]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Reports, Rafu (2023-08-15). "Bonta Issues Apology Acknowledging Complicity of State Attorney General's Office in Incarceration of JAs". Rafu Shimpo. Retrieved 2023-08-16.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Clark, Alfred E. (22 July 1976). "Robert Kenny, Attorney, Dead; Led National Lawyers Guild". New York Times. p. 34. Retrieved 18 April 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u "Register of the Robert W. Kenny Papers, 1823-1975 - Biography". Online Archive of California. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  4. ^ a b "Guide to the Robert Walker Kenny Papers, 1920-1947". The Regents of The University of California. Retrieved 26 August 2012.
  5. ^ Gunther, John (1947). Inside U.S.A. New York, London: Harper & Brothers. pp. 18–19.
  6. ^ "Explanatory Notes". Federal Bureau of Investigation. 28 November 1950. p. 96. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  7. ^ My first forty years in California politics, 1922-1962 oral history transcript Robert W. Kenny
  8. ^ Robert W. Kenny-JoinCalifornia.com
  9. ^ a b c A History of the National Lawyers Guild, 1937-1987 (PDF). National Lawyers Guild. 1987. p. 20 (UN), 26–27 (Hollywood Ten). Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  10. ^ "John McTernan Dies". The Washington Post. 5 April 2005. Retrieved 1 April 2020.
  11. ^ "Ben Margolis: A Lifetime of Contempt for Injustice and Oppression". Guild Practice. National Lawyers Guild. 1999. Retrieved 1 April 2020.
  12. ^ "The Last Party". The New York Times. 27 April 1997. Retrieved 4 April 2020.
  13. ^ Ceplair, Larry; Englund, Steven (1980). The Inquisition in Hollywood: Politics in the Film Community, 1930–1960. Anchor Press. pp. 263 (called), 264 (Popper, Rosenwein), 356 (unanimity). ISBN 9780385129008. Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  14. ^ Gray, Dorothy (1 January 1981). "Book Review [The Undiminished Man: A Political Biography of Robert Walker Kenny]". Santa Clara Law Review. 21 (4).
  15. ^ Journal of the Senate, Legislature of the State of California. California State Printing Office. 1970. pp. 93 (members), 114 (petition). Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  16. ^ "National Committee to Abolish the House Un-American Activities Committee". Library of Congress. 1992-10-07. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  17. ^ Communist and Trotskyist Activity with the Greater Los Angeles Chapter of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee: Report and Testimony. US GPO. 1962. pp. 1544–5, 1547, 1561–2. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  18. ^ Congressional Record. US GPO. 1963. pp. A-4807–8. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  19. ^ Lobel, Jules (2015). "Transformational Movements: The National Lawyers Guild and Radical Legal Service". NLG Review. National Lawyers Guild. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  20. ^ Winstanley, Gerrard (1973). Robert W. Kenny (ed.). The Law of Freedom in a Platform. Schocken Books. p. 160. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
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