185 lines
9.8 KiB
Plaintext
185 lines
9.8 KiB
Plaintext
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LYNDON B JOHNSON
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Early Life.
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Johnson was born on Aug. 27, 1908, near Johnson City, Tex., the eldest son
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of Sam Ealy Johnson, Jr., and Rebekah Baines Johnson. His father, a struggling
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farmer and cattle speculator in the hill country of Texas, provided only an
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uncertain income for his family. Politically active, Sam Johnson served five
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terms in the Texas legislature. His mother had varied cultural interests and
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placed high value on education; she was fiercely ambitious for her children.
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Johnson attended public schools in Johnson City and received a B.S. degree
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from Southwest Texas State Teachers College in San Marcos. He then taught for
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a year in Houston before going to Washington in 1931 as secretary to a
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Democratic Texas congressman, Richard M. Kleberg. During the next 4 years
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Johnson developed a wide network of political contacts in Washington, D.C. On
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Nov. 17, 1934, he married Claudia Alta Taylor, known as "Lady Bird." A warm,
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intelligent, ambitious woman, she was a great asset to Johnson's career. They
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had two daughters, Lynda Byrd, born in 1944, and Luci Baines, born in 1947. In
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1933, Franklin D. Roosevelt entered the White House. Johnson greatly admired
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the president, who named him, at age 27, to head the National Youth
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Administration in Texas. This job, which Johnson held from 1935 to 1937,
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entailed helping young people obtain employment and schooling. It confirmed
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Johnson's faith in the positive potential of government and won for him a group
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of supporters in Texas.
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In 1937, Johnson sought and won a Texas seat in Congress, where he championed
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public works, reclamation, and public power programs. When war came to Europe
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he backed Roosevelt's efforts to aid the Allies. During World War II he served
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a brief tour of active duty with the U.S. Navy in the Pacific (1941-42) but
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returned to Capitol Hill when Roosevelt recalled members of Congress from
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active duty. Johnson continued to support Roosevelt's military and
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foreign-policy programs. During the 1940s, Johnson and his wife developed
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profitable business ventures, including a radio station, in Texas. In 1948 he
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ran for the U.S. Senate, winning the Democratic party primary by only 87
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votes. (This was his second try; in 1941 he had run for the Senate and lost to
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a conservative opponent.) The opposition accused him of fraud and tagged him
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"Landslide Lyndon." Although challenged, unsuccessfully, in the courts, he took
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office in 1949.
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*N*
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Senator and Vice-President.
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---------------------------
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Johnson moved quickly into the Senate hierarchy. In 1953 he won the job of
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Senate Democratic leader. The next year he was easily reelected as senator and
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returned to Washington as majority leader, a post he held for the next 6 years
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despite a serious heart attack in 1955. The Texan proved to be a shrewd,
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skillful Senate leader. A consistent opponent of civil rights legislation
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until 1957, he developed excellent personal relationships with powerful
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conservative Southerners. A hard worker, he impressed colleagues with his
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attention to the details of legislation and his willingness to compromise.
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In the late 1950s, Johnson began to think seriously of running for the
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presidency in 1960. His record had been fairly conservative, however. Many
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Democratic liberals resented his friendly association with the Republican
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president, Dwight D. Eisenhower; others considered him a tool of wealthy
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Southwestern gas and oil interests. Either to soften this image as a
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conservative or in response to inner conviction, Johnson moved slightly to the
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left on some domestic issues, especially on civil rights laws, which he
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supported in 1957 and 1960. Although these laws proved ineffective, Johnson
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had demonstrated that he was a very resourceful Senate leader.
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To many northern Democrats, however, Johnson remained a sectional candidate.
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The presidential nomination of 1960 went to Senator John F. Kennedy of
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Massachusetts. Kennedy, a northern Roman Catholic, then selected Johnson as
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his running mate to balance the Democratic ticket. In November 1960 the
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Democrats defeated the Republican candidates, Richard M. Nixon and Henry Cabot
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Lodge, by a narrow margin. Johnson was appointed by Kennedy to head the
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President's Committee on Equal Employment Opportunities, a post that enabled
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him to work on behalf of blacks and other minorities. As vice-president, he
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also undertook some missions abroad, which offered him some limited insights
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into international problems.
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*N*
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Presidency.
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The assassination of President Kennedy on November 22, 1963, elevated Johnson
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to the White House, where he quickly proved a masterful, reassuring leader in
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the realm of domestic affairs. In 1964, Congress passed a tax-reduction law
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that promised to promote economic growth and the Economic Opportunity Act,
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which launched the program called the War on Poverty. Johnson was especially
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skillful in securing a strong Civil Rights Act in 1964. In the years to come
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it proved to be a vital source of legal authority against racial and sexual
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discrimination. In 1964 the Republicans nominated Senator Barry M. Goldwater
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of Arizona as their presidential nominee. Goldwater was an extreme
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conservative in domestic policy and an advocate of strong military action to
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protect American interests in Vietnam. Johnson had increased the number of
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U.S. military personnel there from 16,000 at the time of Kennedy's
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assassination to nearly 25,000 a year later. Contrasted to Goldwater, however,
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he seemed a model of restraint. Johnson, with Hubert H. Humphrey as his
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running mate, ran a low-key campaign and overwhelmed Goldwater in the election.
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The Arizonan won only his home state and five others in the Deep South.
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Johnson's triumph in 1964 gave him a mandate for the Great Society, as he
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called his domestic program. Congress responded by passing the MEDICARE
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program, which provided health services to the elderly, approving federal aid
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to elementary and secondary education, supplementing the War on Poverty, and
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creating the Department of Housing and Urban Development. It also passed
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another important civil rights law--the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
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At this point Johnson began the rapid deepening of U.S. involvement in
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Vietnam; as early as February 1965, U.S. planes began to bomb North Vietnam.
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American troop strength in Vietnam increased to more than 180,000 by the end of
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the year and to 500,000 by 1968. Many influences led Johnson to such a policy.
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Among them were personal factors such as his temperamental activism, faith in
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U.S. military power, and staunch anticommunism. These qualities also led him
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to intervene militarily in the Dominican Republic--allegedly to stop a
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Communist takeover--in April 1965. Like many Americans who recalled the
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"appeasement" of Nazi Germany in the 1930s, Johnson thought the United States
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must be firm or incur a loss of credibility.
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While the nation became deeply involved in Vietnam, racial tension sharpened
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at home, culminating in widespread urban race riots between 1965 and 1968. The
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breakdown of the interracial civil rights movement, together with the
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imperfections of some of Johnson's Great Society programs, resulted in
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Republican gains in the 1966 elections and effectively thwarted Johnson's hopes
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for further congressional cooperation.
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It was the policy of military escalation in Vietnam, however, that proved to
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be Johnson's undoing as president. It deflected attention from domestic
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concerns, resulted in sharp inflation, and prompted rising criticism,
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especially among young, draft-aged people. Escalation also failed to win the
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war. The drawn-out struggle made Johnson even more secretive, dogmatic, and
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hypersensitive to criticism. His usually sure political instincts were
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failing.
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The New Hampshire presidential primary of 1968, in which the antiwar
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candidate Eugene McCarthy made a strong showing, revealed the dwindling of
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Johnson's support. Some of Johnson's closest advisors now began to counsel a
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de-escalation policy in Vietnam. Confronted by mounting opposition, Johnson
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made two surprise announcements on Mar. 31, 1968: he would stop the bombing
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in most of North Vietnam and seek a negotiated end to the war, and he would not
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run for reelection.
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Johnson's influence thereafter remained strong enough to dictate the
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nomination of Vice-President Humphrey, who had supported the war, as the
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Democratic presidential candidate for the 1968 election. Although Johnson
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stopped all bombing of the North on November 1, he failed to make real
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concessions at the peace table, and the war dragged on. Humphrey lost in a
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close race with the Republican candidate, Richard M. Nixon.
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*N*
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Retirement.
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After stepping down from the presidency in January 1969, Johnson returned to
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his ranch in Texas. There he and his aides prepared his memoirs, which were
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published in 1971 as The Vantage Point: Perspectives of the Presidency,
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1963-1969. He also supervised construction of the Johnson presidential library
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in Austin. Johnson died on Jan. 22, 1973, 5 days before the conclusion of the
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treaty by which the United States withdrew from Vietnam.
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Bibliography
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------------
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Evans, Rowland, and Novak, Robert, Lyndon B. Johnson, The Exercise of Power:
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A Political Biography (1966);
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Geyelin, Philip, Lyndon B. Johnson and the World (1966);
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Goldman, Eric F., The Tragedy of Lyndon Johnson (1969);
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Johnson, Lady Bird, White House Diary (1970);
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Kearns, Doris, Lyndon Johnson and the American Dream (1976);
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Schandler, Herbert, The Unmaking of a President: Lyndon Johnson and Vietnam
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(1977);
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White, Theodore, The Making of the President--1964 (1965);
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Wicker, Tom, JFK and LBJ: The Influence of Personality Upon Politics (1968;
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repr. 1970).#
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