Title: The Great Society
1The Great Society
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- Angela Brown
- Chapter 19 Section 2
2Learning Targets
- Describe Johnsons path to the White House.
- List some of the programs and effects of
Johnsons Great Society. - Identify some of the landmark cases handed down
by the Supreme Court under Chief Justice Earl
Warren.
3LBJs Path to the White House
- House of Representatives in 1937 New Deal
Democrat from Texas - 1948 Senate by 87 votes
- Johnson became famous for ability to work within
the political system to accomplish his goals.
4Johnson
- Bid for democratic nomination failed in 1960
- Agreed to vice-presidential position but soon
frustrated by powerlessness of office missed
Congress
5Building the Great Society
- Swift passage of Kennedys Civil Rights and tax
bills followed the assassination. - Johnson branched out he sought laws to aid
public education, provide medical care for
elderly and eliminate poverty. - 1964 called goals the Great Society
6The Election of 1964
- Landslide victory for Johnson over Barry
Goldwater. - (486 to 52 electoral votes 61 of popular
vote) - Democrats established a majority in both houses.
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8Barry Goldwater
- Goldwaters conservative views seemed radical to
Americans. - He opposed Civil Rights legislation and believed
military commanders should be allowed to use
nuclear bombs as they saw fit in battle.
9The Tax Cut
- Believed a budget deficit could be used to help
the economy - Johnson agreed to cut government spending to get
tax cut through Congress. - GNP rose 7.1 in 1964 8.1 in 1865 9.5 in
1966 the deficit shrank - The revival of prosperity generated new tax
revenues unemployment fell, and inflation
remained in check
10The War on Poverty
- The Economic Opportunity Act of 1954 was created
to combat illiteracy, unemployment, and
inadequate public services - 950 million. - Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA) sent
volunteers to help in poor communities.
11Aid to Education
- Elementary and Secondary Education Act provided
aid to states based on of children from
low-income homes. - (1.3 billion to both public and private schools)
- 1965 Head Start Program was created to prepare
economically disadvantaged preschoolers for
school. - Today serves 11 million children under age five.
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13Medicare and Medicaid
- Medicare provided hospital and low-cost medical
insurance for most American age 65 and older. - Medicaid provided low-cost health insurance for
poor Americans of any age. - Most important Social Welfare legislation since
the passage of Social Security Act in 1935 - Demonstrated government commitment to provide
help to those Americans who needed it.
14Immigration Reform
- Immigration Act of 1965 eliminated quotas for
individual countries and replaced them with more
flexible limits - 170,000 from Eastern Hemisphere
- 120,000 from Western Hemisphere
15- Family members of U.S. citizens exempt from
quotas, as were political refugees. - 20,000 maximum from any one country
- 1960s 350,000 immigrants per year 1970s
400,000
16Earl Warren
- Law degree University of California at Berkley
- District attorney, attorney General of
California, Governor, Republican
Vice-Presidential candidate in 1948 - Appointed Chief Justice of U.S. by President
Eisenhower in 1953 served until retirement in
1969
17Earl Warren
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18- Overturned many old laws to establish new legal
precedents - (Brown v Board of Education, Connecticut law
against birth control, prayer in public schools
unconstitutional)
19Criminal Procedure
- Concerned to safeguard constitutional rights of
individuals against power of state - 1961 Mapp v Ohio evidence seized illegally
could not be used in a trial - 1963 Gideon v. Wainwright suspects in criminal
cases who could not afford attorney were given
free legal aid
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21- 1964 Escobedo v Ilinois accused must be given
access to an attorney while being questioned - 1966 Miranda v Arizona suspect must be warned
of rights before being questioned Miranda Rule
22Congressional Reapportionment
- Apportionment distribution of a legislative
bodys seats among electoral districts - Most state governments had not redistributed
districts to reflect population shifts. - Rural citizens were over-represented and urban
citizens were under-represented. - 1962 Baker v Carr declared congressional
districts had to be apportioned one person, one
vote.
23Reapportionment
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24- Today each of the 435 seats in the House
represents an average of 665,000 persons - 1964 Reynolds v Sims not based on one person,
one vote violated equal protection clause of the
14th Amendment - Many decisions were controversial.
- People believed court had gone to far and hoped
for more conservative judges.
25Effects of the Great Society
- At first very popular New Programs raised
expectations - Disillusionment followed when not all demands
could be met. - Complained too many tax dollars spent on poor
- Too much authority in hands of federal government
26- Number of people living in poverty cut in half
during the 1960s and 1970s. - Some complained not enough money spent by
government.
27Exit Slip
- A major part of Johnsons Great Society was.
- Several of the decisions of the Supreme Court
under Chief Justice Earl Warren focused on - Critics of the Great Society complained that it