Head Start Head Start support. Section 3: The Great Society Main Idea: The demand for reform helped create a new awareness of social problems, especially.

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Section 3: The Great Society

Main Idea: The demand for reform helped create a new awareness of social problems, especially in matters of civil rights and the effects of poverty

Why it Matters Now: Reforms made in the 1960s have had a lasting effect on the American justice system by increasing the rights of minorities

LBJ’s Path to Power

• Lyndon Baines Johnson was from Texas working-class family. He entered politics in 1937 as a Representative

• Johnson idolized FDR, and he styled himself as a “New Dealer” and spokesperson for the small ranchers and struggling farmers– He had interest in politics that

helped the poor and working classes

A Master Politician

• LBJ had a legendary ability to persuade senators to support his bills; people called it the “LBJ treatment”– LBJ used his imposing physical size and

intimidating personality to get his point across and persuade senators to vote in his favor

– “its tone could be supplication, accusation, cajolery, exuberance, scorn, tears, complaint and the hint of threat. It was all of these together. It ran the gamut of human emotions…”

The LBJ Treatment

What is the LBJ treatment?

Johnson’s Domestic Agenda• Once he was President, Johnson asked

Congress to honor the late President Kennedy by passing the civil rights and tax bill that he had proposed

• Early in 1964, Congress did indeed pass a tax reduction of over $10 billion – This lead to economic growth because

people spent more, which means more profit for businesses, which increases tax revenue

• Then later in 1964, Congress also did (finally) pass the Civil Rights Act of 1964: prohibits discrimination based on race, religion, national origin, and sex– LBJ was able to persuade Southern

Senators to stop blocking its passage

The War on Poverty• Once Kennedy’s proposals were made reality, LBJ moved to

pass his own agenda. His vision for America is called the Great Society.

• This included alleviating poverty in what he called a “war on poverty in America”

• LBJ proposed, and Congress enacted, the Economic Opportunity Act (1964); it created programs designed to fight poverty:– Job Corps Youth Training Program– VISTA (Volunteers in Service to America)– Project Head Start– Community Action Program

What problems in American society did the Economic Opportunity Act seek to address?

-what problems was the Act made to solve?

The 1964 Election

Dem: Lyndon B. Johnson• Believed federal government

should continue to help right social and economic wrongs

• Johnson did not think we should send troops to Vietnam

Rep: Barry Goldwater• Believed federal government had

no business trying to right social and economic wrongs

• Suggested he would use nukes on Cuba and North Vietnam

The 1964 Election• LBJ won the election by a

landslide, winning 61% of the popular vote and 486 electoral votes; Goldwater won only 52 electoral votes

• Democrats also increased their majority in Congress

• A Democratic President with a majority Democratic Congress: LBJ could launch his reform program (the Great Society) full speed ahead.

Building the Great Society

• The Great Society was LBJ’s vision for America in which there would be no poverty and no racial injustice– Also, a higher standard of living,

equal opportunity, and richer quality of life for all

– By the time LBJ left the White House Congress had passed 206 of his proposals

Building the Great Society- Education

• LBJ considered education “the key which can unlock the door to the Great Society.”

• The Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 provided over $1 billion in federal aid to public schools to buy textbooks and library materials– First major federal aid package for

education in the nation’s history

What were the goals of the Great Society program?

What did LBJ want to achieve in this Great Society?

Building the Great Society- Healthcare

• LBJ and Congress changed Social Security by establishing Medicare and Medicaid– Medicare: provided hospital

insurance and low-cost medical insurance for almost every American age 65 and older

– Medicaid: extended health insurance to welfare recipients

Building the Great Society- Immigration

• Before 1965, existing immigration laws established immigration quotas that discriminated strongly against people from outside Western Europe

• Under LBJ’s administration, the Immigration Act of 1965 opened the door for many non-European immigrants to settle in the United States by ending quotas based on nationality

Reforms of the Warren Court• Just as LBJ’s presidency was

characterized by liberal reform, so was the Supreme Court of the 1960s characterized by liberal reform

• The Chief Justice of this Court was Earl Warren, so the court is called the Warren Court– The Warren Court took an

activist stance on the leading issues of the day

Warren Court: Brown v Board of Education

• Supreme Court declared school segregation unconstitutional

Warren Court- reapportionment

• Reapportionment: the way in which the states redraw election districts based on the changing number of people in them

• Cases: Baker v Carr (1962), Reynolds v Sims (1964)– “one person, one vote”– Federal courts had the authority to tell states to

reapportion (re-divide) their districts for more equal representation

Warren Court- Rights of the accused

• The Warren Court greatly expanded the rights of people accused of crimes

• Mapp v Ohio (1961): the Warren Court ruled that evidence seized illegally could not be used in court

• Gideo v Wainwright (1963): Court required criminal courts to give free legal counsel to those that could not afford it

• Escobedo v Illinois (1964): ruled that the accused person has a right to have their lawyer present during questioning

• Miranda v Arizona (1966): all suspects must be read their rights before questioning

How did the Warren Court change American society?

Impact of the Great Society

• The Great Society and the Warren Court changed the United States

• Lyndon B Johnson extended the power and reach of the federal government more than any president in the post-WWII era– Poverty did decrease, from 21% to 11%– A growing budget deficit– LBJ had been a peace candidate in the 1964 election,

yet later on he was called a “hawk,” a supporter of the Vietnam war

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