Book contents
- LBJ’s America
- LBJ’s America
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Power and Purpose: LBJ in the Presidency
- Chapter 2 LBJ and the Contours of American Liberalism
- Chapter 3 Lyndon Johnson and the Transformation of Cold War Conservatism
- Chapter 4 The Great Society and the Beloved Community: Lyndon Johnson, Martin Luther King Jr., and the Partnership That Transformed a Nation
- Chapter 5 Lyndon Johnson, Mexican Americans,and the Border
- Chapter 6 The War on Poverty: How Qualitative Liberalism Prevailed
- Chapter 7 LBJ’s Supreme Court
- Chapter 8 “If I Cannot Get a Whole Loaf, I Will Get What Bread I Can”: LBJ and the Hart–Celler Immigration Act of 1965
- Chapter 9 “It’s Always Hard to Cut Losses”: The Politics of Escalation in Vietnam
- Chapter 10 Lyndon Johnson and the Shifting Global Order
- Chapter 11 “Through a Narrow Glass”: Compassion, Power, and Lyndon Johnson’s Struggle to Make Sense of the Third World
- Afterword: LBJ’s America
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- Index
Chapter 2 - LBJ and the Contours of American Liberalism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 October 2023
- LBJ’s America
- LBJ’s America
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Power and Purpose: LBJ in the Presidency
- Chapter 2 LBJ and the Contours of American Liberalism
- Chapter 3 Lyndon Johnson and the Transformation of Cold War Conservatism
- Chapter 4 The Great Society and the Beloved Community: Lyndon Johnson, Martin Luther King Jr., and the Partnership That Transformed a Nation
- Chapter 5 Lyndon Johnson, Mexican Americans,and the Border
- Chapter 6 The War on Poverty: How Qualitative Liberalism Prevailed
- Chapter 7 LBJ’s Supreme Court
- Chapter 8 “If I Cannot Get a Whole Loaf, I Will Get What Bread I Can”: LBJ and the Hart–Celler Immigration Act of 1965
- Chapter 9 “It’s Always Hard to Cut Losses”: The Politics of Escalation in Vietnam
- Chapter 10 Lyndon Johnson and the Shifting Global Order
- Chapter 11 “Through a Narrow Glass”: Compassion, Power, and Lyndon Johnson’s Struggle to Make Sense of the Third World
- Afterword: LBJ’s America
- Acknowledgments
- Notes
- Index
Summary
This chapter examines the ways in which Lyndon Johnson attempted to build on and expand the liberal tradition in twentieth-century American politics. As he did so from the perch of the Oval Office, Johnson ran directly into the structural limitations and debilitating political fears of liberalism that were at work right at this high point for Johnson’s career: the racial accord that Northern Democrats had entered into with Southerners in the 1930s, and the fears about appearing weak on national security. In the end, the political vulnerabilities and limitations of this tradition would overwhelm him, leaving him to announce that he would not run for reelection in October 1964 and defining his legacy over the failed war in Vietnam. While it is important to understand how Johnson’s own agency led to his downfall, it is equally relevant to understand how the nature of American liberalism trapped Johnson into these positions. The president was caught in the basic contradictions of the agenda that he inherited and championed. The same tradition that strengthened his resolve to grow the government to tackle new areas of domestic life also pushed him toward the decisions that drowned his legacy for decades to come. This is not just the story of Lyndon Johnson – it’s the story of American liberalism in the twentieth century.
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- LBJ's AmericaThe Life and Legacies of Lyndon Baines Johnson, pp. 44 - 69Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023