Sunday, November 22, 2009

Politics

The Most Consequential Elections in History: Lyndon Johnson and the Election of 1964

Johnson's overreaching in Vietnam was seen by Americans as an expensive mistake

Posted September 17, 2008

The stakes in this year's presidential campaign are high. But that's nothing new. There have been many other pivotal presidential elections in our history, some that set an entirely new course for the United States and a few that were crucial to the very survival of the republic. To put the current campaign in perspective, U.S. News's White House Correspondent Kenneth T. Walsh, author of four books on the presidency, examines the 10 most consequential elections in American history—the races that produced the biggest change and had the most lasting impact. An installment of this 10-part series will run on the U.S. News website each Wednesday through September. This is the ninth in the series.

Portrait dated 09 March 1964 of US President Lyndon Johnson at the White House in Washington.
President Lyndon Johnson at the White House.

It was Republican presidential candidate Barry Goldwater who said the 1964 election offered Americans "a choice, not an echo." Unfortunately for him, America's choice, overwhelmingly, was his opponent, incumbent Democrat Lyndon B. Johnson—and the vast expansion of government power and activism that LBJ represented.

"Few presidents aspired to do more in office than did Lyndon Johnson," writes political scientist Alvin Felzenberg in The Leaders We Deserved (and a Few We Didn't). "A man of gargantuan appetites and ambitions, Johnson wanted nothing less than to break the record of his hero, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who had greatly expanded the role of the federal government in American life. Johnson wanted to pick up where FDR had left off."

He did that, and a lot more, including the escalation of the Vietnam war to an intensity that few Americans expected when they cast their ballots for him.

A former majority leader in the Senate and vice president under John F. Kennedy, Johnson succeeded to the presidency after Kennedy's assassination in November 1963. He immediately set about persuading Congress not only to approve the martyred president's agenda but to move far beyond the bills Kennedy had in mind. What followed was a huge profusion of legislation to improve social welfare, including the historic Civil Rights Act of 1964 that opened the way for greater equality for African-Americans, federal aid to education, and a large variety of social programs that Johnson called the "War on Poverty."

"Speedy passage of bills was Johnson's primary concern," writes Felzenberg. "As soon as one measure had passed, Johnson would move on to the next. In that sense, Johnson never made the transition from Senate majority leader to president of the United States." He was a nuts-and-bolts politician and a Washington insider, and lacked the communication skills or charisma to give the country a wider sense of vision or to inspire his fellow citizens, as Kennedy had done.

Another part of Kennedy's legacy was even more troublesome—support for South Vietnam in its bitter conflict with the north. Johnson positioned himself as less bellicose than Goldwater in the 1964 campaign, and his relative moderation was appealing to voters. But after the election, LBJ vastly escalated Kennedy's commitment from fewer than 20,000 U.S. troops to more than a half million.

The 1964 campaign was also noteworthy because Democrats pioneered the kind of negativity that has become a staple of American politics ever since. They succeeded in scaring the country into opposing Goldwater, a conservative senator from Arizona who was portrayed as extremely far right and warlike. In one famous TV ad, the Johnson campaign showed a little girl in a flower-filled meadow. In the commercial, the girl suddenly looked up and a mushroom cloud appeared on the screen. Johnson's voice was then heard saying "These are the stakes"—an obvious suggestion that Goldwater would blunder into a nuclear war. The ad was so effective that it ran only once on network television. More than that seemed overkill to Johnson and his handlers.

They were correct. Johnson won the 1964 election by a landslide. This enabled him to continue expanding what he called his "Great Society" programs as he bulldozed and cajoled a Democratic-controlled Congress into following his lead. Among the vast array of bills that he got passed were health assistance for the elderly and the poor and measures to protect the environment, increase aid to education, prohibit discrimination in housing, and protect consumers.

More damaging to LBJ's standing, however, was his escalation in Vietnam. "I knew from the start," he told a writer, "that...if I left the woman I really loved—the Great Society—for that bitch of a war on the other side of the world, then I would lose everything at home." But, fearing that Republican conservatives would hurt the Democrats badly if he withdrew from Vietnam without victory, he made a resolution. "I will not be the first president to lose a war," he said.

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Reader Comments

Lyndon Johnson opposed racism and segregationism

Lyndon Johnson opposed racism and segregationism when it was a very powerful force in America.

Remember "Mississippi in Flames", hanging blacks from trees. Remember picnics to hang black people. Youngsters should Study History.

The KKK never loved Johnson, afterwards.

Lyndon Johnson had a lot of courage. He opposed the currents and mentality of the South ( his land ).... He sacrificed some friendships and admiration in the South but he entered the Hall of Fame of History.

Wathever his defects, he had some greatness.

Vicente Duque

Johnson - a Boob

Lyndon Johnson was no historical architect of any social revolution. Without the republicans in congress, his Civil Rights Bill and other legislation pertaining to civil rights would have gone nowhere. The book Master of the Senate details how power hungry and what a meglomaniac Johnson was. He was also extremely racist and use to make racial slurs against blacks ad nauseum. Not much of a human being, certainly not a great president.

Lyndon Johnson was a Great President .... Civil Rights

I have an image of Lyndon Johnson as a Great Guy and a Major Historical Figure, because of Civil Rights.

It is very unfortunate that millions died in South East Asia because of a Big Mistake. A true Holocaust.

Imagine what would be of America without that progress in Civil Rights and Voting Rights. Kennedy was the inspiration and Johnson the execution.

I find it very hard to believe in some movies ( documentaries ) that try to present Johnson as a Mafia friend or a murderer of Kennedy.

That guy had something good and disliked racial hatred. Johnson is extremely important in the History of Progress of the Human Race.

He lost the South for the Democrats, and he knew that he was losing that region, when signing those civil rights and voting bills.

Johnson is Great in History. No doubt.

Vicente Duque

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