The Great Society
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The Great Society. Describe Johnson’s path to the White House Explain Johnson’s efforts to enact a domestic agenda. Summarize the goals of Johnson’s Great Society Identify the reforms of the Warren Court Evaluate the impact of Great Society Programs. LBJ’s Path to Power. I. Background
The Great Society
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Presentation Transcript
The Great Society Describe Johnson’s path to the White House Explain Johnson’s efforts to enact a domestic agenda. Summarize the goals of Johnson’s Great Society Identify the reforms of the Warren Court Evaluate the impact of Great Society Programs
LBJ’s Path to Power • I. Background • Texan from middle-class family • Served in the House of Representatives (D) • Served as Senate majority Leader • Instrumental in passing the Civil Rights Bill of 1957 • Kennedy’s Vice-President
Johnson’s Domestic Agenda • Passed a tax reduction law in 1964 • Defining Moment: Civil Rights Act of 1964 • “prohibited discrimination on the basis of race, religion, national origin, and sex” • The War on Poverty • Economic Opportunity Act: $1 billion for youth programs, antipoverty measures, small-business loans, and job training. 1. VISTA 2. Head Start 3. Job Corps
The Election of 1964 • The Election of 1964 • Republicans – Barry Goldwater • Democrats – Lyndon Johnson • ** Johnson wins in landside • Building the Great Society (Goals) • End Poverty • Racial Injustice - $1 billion for education - Medicare (health care for the elderly) - Medicaid (health care for the poor)
- Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) - Robert Weaver – 1st African American cabinet member - Immigration Act of 1965 - opened the door for non-European immigrants - Environment - Investigated business for pollution - Consumer Protection - safety laws, labeling (Ralph Nader)
Reforms of the Warren Court • Reforms of the Warren Court • Brown vs. the Board of Education (school segregation) • Banned prayer in Public Schools • Rights of the Accused • Mapp v. Ohio – illegally seized evidence can not be used in a trial • Gideon v. Wainwright – courts provide free legal counsel • Miranda v. Arizona – reading of their rights
Impact of the Great Society • Impact of the Great Society • Extension of federal governmental power • War of Poverty – lowered on number of poor • Extension of the national debt • Conservative Backlash • War in Vietnam overshadow the Great Society Programs