
Jack Schlossberg is a 32-year-old New York lawyer. It’s also a phenomenon on social media. He has more than 1.5 million followers on TikTok, Instagram and X, where he posts irreverent videos that include harsh criticism of US President Donald Trump. He dresses up, makes parodies, and, in a fresh, casual style, gives his opinion on some of the issues that matter most to Americans. But Schlossberg, above all, is known as the heir to a line of politicians who represent the American aristocracy and the closest thing the country has to royalty. He is the only male grandson of John Fitzgerald Kennedy and Jacqueline Kennedy.
He took a decisive step last week. He announced his leap into the political arena and applied to compete in the Democratic Party primary elections to fill the congressional seat in New York’s 12th District, which will be vacated by the historic Jerrold Nadler, who will retire after more than three decades in office.
“There is no place I would rather be than in the political arena, fighting for my city,” Schlossberg noted in an Instagram video in which he filed his candidacy. In previous posts on the social network, he was seen imitating other voices, dancing, dressing up or skating while reciting Lord Byron.
He is now seeking to be nominated by Democrats to participate in the midterm elections scheduled for next year, where the 435 members of the House of Representatives and a third of the Senate will be renewed. Crucial elections, because they may cut off Trump’s wings if the Democrats achieve a majority in both chambers of the legislature. “With Congress in control, there’s nothing we can’t do,” added the New York politician who inherited the family’s elegance. He is about six feet tall, with an angular face and thick black hair.
Schlossberg is a vocal opponent of Trump. In a lengthy interview in new york times, Published on the same day he announced his candidacy, he asserted that the Democratic Party needs more votes to denounce the Republican president’s alleged abuse of power. He says in his post on the social media network: “We deserve better, and we can achieve it, and it all begins with the Democratic Party regaining control of the House of Representatives.”
He revealed in his speech that he is embarking on the political race to turn Congress into the first wall in the face of Trump’s political transgressions. He insisted that without legislative oversight, the country was “defenseless” against Republican threats to run for a third term, even though that is prohibited under the 22nd Amendment to the United States Constitution.
Jack Schlossberg is called John Bouvier Kennedy Schlossberg. He calls himself Jack after his grandfather, a nickname he was affectionately called in the family and by which he has gone down in history.
A direct descendant of the lineage known as Camelot in the United States, he is the son of Caroline Kennedy, the only living daughter of John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Lee Bouvier, his grandmother’s maiden name. and respected artist and designer Edwin Arthur Schlossberg. His mother is a writer, lawyer, and diplomat. She was Japan’s ambassador during Barack Obama’s government. And in Australia, during the era of Joe Biden. He has two older sisters, Rose and Tatiana.
Its origin makes it special. He grew up on the Upper East Side, the most elite neighborhood in New York. He spent his summers at summer homes on Martha’s Vineyard and Cape Cod, where major families in the United States vacationed. He went to the best colleges and universities. He studied history at Yale University and received his doctorate in jurisprudence from Harvard University, where he also earned degrees in law and business administration. He passed the 2023 bar entrance exam with a score that placed him in the top 1% of applicants.
But he is not ashamed of his privileged status and highlights his progressive ambition. He was one of the first to support the socialist Zahran Mamdani, who two weeks ago became mayor of New York, with a campaign based on the modern, modern cost of living, with a large presence on social media. Two months ago in an interview with El Pais newspaper, he said: “I am truly concerned about my country because my family fought and died to achieve a better country. For me, everything is politics. This is the way I see the world.”
Last Wednesday, he announced his decision through a video clip he posted on Instagram. He is shown with his shirt sleeves at a rowing club in New York, surrounded by boats and canoes. Rowing is one of his favorite sports. “250 years after the founding of the United States, our country is at a turning point,” he says as he walks toward the dock at the foot of the Hudson River.
“It’s a crisis on every level. A cost-of-living crisis driven by the housing reform law. Historic cuts to the social programs that working families depend on: health, education, and child care. It’s a corruption crisis. The president has earned nearly a billion dollars this year. He favors and harms some and others from the Oval Office. It’s cronyism, not capitalism. It’s a constitutional crisis with a dangerous man in charge of all three branches of government. “It’s depriving citizens of their civil rights and silencing their critics. “The worst part is that it doesn’t have to be this way,” he said with that familiar magnetism, trained by his first steps into theater and comedy during his college years.
Schlossberg prides himself on knowing how to navigate social networks, a forte he considers unknown to the Democratic Party. He encourages his training to take advantage of that opportunity. Use young, direct and engaging language. He does not hesitate to insult Trump or his uncle Robert F. Kennedy, the Republican Secretary of Health and supporter of anti-vaccine conspiracy theories. In some videos, he appears in a blond wig imitating Melania Trump or talking about Jesus Christ. His recordings were provocative and included profane criticism of Republicans.
But it won’t be easy. First, he will have to overcome his party’s primary, which already has a crowded list of challengers. Among these stand out is Micah Lasher, a New York State Assemblyman and disciple of Jerrold Nadler, who is leaving a vacancy for the position that will also be contested by Alex Burris, a New York State Assemblyman; Jami Floyd, journalist and lawyer, and Alan Pardy, former CFO. Eric Butcher, a New York City Council member from the West Side, is also expected to run.
Democrats have eight months to choose their nominee. It will be necessary to find out if it is an aura elected It is enough to work in politics.