Lyndon
Baines Johnson was
born in Texas with a rural background. He
was 55 years old when he took the oath as
president of the United States after John
F. Kennedy's assassination in Dallas
on 22 November 1963.
His career started in the 1930s as an aide
to a Texas congressman, then as the director
of the New Deal's National Youth Administration
in Texas. In 1936 he became a congressman
with close personal ties to Franklin
Delano Roosevelt. In 1948 he became senator.
He campaigned to become the Democratic party's
nominee for the presidency in 1960. However,
the Democratic convention chose John F. Kennedy
as the Democratic nominee and Johnson became
Kennedy's Vice-president.
When Kennedy was assassinated, Johnson had
twenty-six years of political experience
and was ready for the job as 36th president
of the United States of America.
LBJ established domestic politics as his
first priority and declared that he would
follow JFK's programs. Civil rights and a
'war on poverty' were two of his biggest
issues and were in the tradition of the New
Deal. After his landslide victory in the
1964 election he introduced his brainchild
'Great Society', which initiatives aimed
at improving the health, nutrition and education
of (poor) Americans. The ambitious Great
Society had its greatest successes in its
first years, notably the Civil Rights Act
of 1964, which outlawed racial discrimination
in public accommodations and the Voting Rights
Act of 1965, which ensured the right to vote
for all.
At the foreign front things did not go as
smoothly, however. As time proceeded, LBJ
and his administration got increasingly caught
up in an ever-growing quagmire in Vietnam.
His decision to 'Americanise' the war in
Vietnam meant an ever-growing number of American
soldiers in South East Asia. At the time,
however, the growing American involvement
in Vietnam was not seen as ludicrous, for
it was very much in line with the foreign
policy principles pursued by all American
presidents after WWII based on the principle
of 'containment' as articulated in the Truman Doctrine.
Johnson believed that it was America's duty
to be involved in Vietnam in order to prevent
it from falling to communism -in other words:
to prevent North Vietnam and the Viet Cong
(VC) from winning. As the war progressed,
opposition to the growing involvement, the
increasing amount of casualties and destruction
mounted.
After the Tet-offensive, on January 31 1968,
LBJ's popularity was at an all-time low.
On March 31 of that same year he appeared
on national television announcing that the
bombing of North Vietnam would come to an
end -except for the parts close to the DMZ.
The war in Vietnam had left Lyndon Johnson
broken. In that same speech he made public
his decision not to run again for the United
States Presidency.
He left the political
scene and died a few years later. LBJ would
go into history as the man who dragged America
into the Vietnam war, as a racist fighting
a racist war. Despite his ambitious Great
Society, which certainly had been successful,
especially in its early years, Johnson's
name would forever be associated with the
disaster in Vietnam. |