Monday 21 April 2014

Lyndon Johnson Biography

Lyndon Johnson was the 36th President of the US from 1963 to 1969. It was one of the most turbulent and influential periods in American politics. Lyndon Johnson helped to implement 'great society' reforms - extending welfare support and civil rights legislation. He also presided over an escalation of American involvement in Vietnam which proved increasingly controversial.

Lyndon Johnson
Johnson was born on August 27, 1908, in central Texas. Growing up in the Great Depression, he gained a first hand perspective on poverty and the great society reforms he later implemented were an attempt to make this kind of poverty a thing of the past.

He successfully won election to the House of representatives in 1937, aged only 29. During the Second World war he served in the navy, winning the silver star for service in the Pacific. In 1948, he was elected to the Senate and become the youngest minority house leader in 1953. He worked closely with Dwight D Eisenhower and helped to get some of his policies through the Senate. In 1960, he stood as vice President to the youthful John F Kennedy. The idea was that the Protestant, southern Johnson would make a dream ticket to accompany the youthful, dynamic, northern Catholic liberal, John F. Kennedy. In one of the tightest elections ever, JFK-Johnson was elected winning the 1960 election. The three years of JFK proved turbulent, with the Cuban Missile Crisis and the Cold war dominating. America also started to become involved in aiding the South Vietnamese against their northern Communist enemies.

In 1963, JFK was assassinated. Johnson was sworn in as Vice President and addressed a shocked nation.

This is a sad time for all people. We have suffered a loss that cannot be weighed. For me, it is a deep, personal tragedy. I know the world shares the sorrow that Mrs. Kennedy and her family bear. I will do my best; that is all I can do. I ask for your help and God's. (22 November 1963)

In 1964, Lyndon Johnson was re-elected in a landslide for the Democrats. In this period, America became more involved in the Vietnam war moving from providing intelligence to bombing the north. JFK's and Lyndon Johnson's secretary of defence, Robin McNamara, has suggested that if JFK had lived American involvement in Vietnam would have been decreased. But, with the Gulf of Tonkin resolution of 1964, Johnson gained a free hand from Congress to take greater involvement in the Vietnam war. He said in 1965,

I do not find it easy to send the flower of our youth, our finest young men, into battle.

But, the war was increasingly escalated, and the casualties mounted. The war became increasingly unpopular and costly to the American people. By 1968, there were widespread protests and civil disobedience in protest at the war.

On a domestic front, Johnson was able to pass more legislation through Congress as part of his Great Society reforms. These extended welfare support for poorer Americans. For example, millions of elderly people benefited through the 1965 Medicare amendment to the Social Security Act. Johnson also enacted civil rights legislation protecting in law, equal rights independent of racial creed. In 1965, he introduced the Voting Rights Act

Every American citizen must have the right to vote...Yet the harsh fact is that in many places in this country men and women are kept from voting simply because they are Negroes... No law that we now have on the books...can insure the right to vote when local officials are determined to deny it... There is no Constitutional issue here. The command of the Constitution is plain. There is no moral issue. It is wrong—deadly wrong—to deny any of your fellow Americans the right to vote in this country. There is no issue of States' rights or National rights. There is only the struggle for human rights. (15th March 1965

However, the new laws often didn't change the situation on the ground and there were growing civil rights protests led by non violent protests by Martin Luther King and also more radical protests by Malcolm X.

Lyndon Johnson shocked American by not standing for re-election in the 1968 election. He died of a heart attack in 1973.

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