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Kennedy is a leading voice on mental health issues. He championed a landmark bill that Congress passed requiring insurance companies to treat mental health on an equal basis with physical illnesses. He has often spoken candidly about his personal struggles with depression and substance abuse. Kennedy has been treated for substance abuse since crashing his car outside the Capitol in 2006, and he has struggled with alcoholism and drug addiction for much of his life. Kennedy will highlight the need for expanding brain research with a conference in Boston in May on the 50th anniversary of JFK's moonshot challenge. He recalled that the treatment his father received helped prolong his battle with brain cancer. "My dad was given an extra year of life because the science was good," Kennedy said. "Against initial expectations, he had a much longer time, and that was meaningful time, at least in our relationship. So that's personal." Five months after his father's death in 2009, Kennedy announced he would not seek a ninth term. As he leaves Congress, there's speculation about who could emerge, if anyone, to revive the family's political legacy in Washington. Some Democrats hope Kennedy's brother Edward Kennedy Jr. will run for Congress. The Connecticut attorney has said he is considering politics but has no immediate plans. Vicki Kennedy, Edward Kennedy's widow, has been mentioned as a possible challenger in 2012 against Republican Scott Brown, who succeeded her husband. Former Rep. Joe Kennedy balked at running for his uncle's Senate seat in Massachusetts last year, but he has been mentioned as a possible Brown challenger. Most recent Kennedy political bids have failed. Kathleen Kennedy Townsend's 2002 Maryland gubernatorial bid sputtered. Caroline Kennedy fell short in seeking an appointment in New York to fill a Senate seat. Darrell West, vice president and director of governance studies at the Brookings Institution, said it has become more difficult over the years for Kennedy family members to extend their brand of liberalism outside the Northeast. "As the country has grown more conservative," West said, "it's been harder for the Kennedys to win elective office."
[Associated
Press;
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