Title: The New Frontier: JFK and the Age of Camelot
1The New Frontier JFK and the Age of Camelot
2Part I The 1960 Election
- The Election of 1960 marked a major change in the
way Americans participated in politics. Politics
became a televised event.
3The New Generation
- Americans had hope for the future
- Had gotten through the Depression
- Had beaten Fascism in Europe and Japan
- Had rebuilt the world (especially the West) to be
democratic - Had the best nuclear arsenal in the world
- Had become more prosperous, lived healthier, and
longer than ever
4John Fitzgerald Kennedy
- Long established Massachusetts family, made
wealthy from selling alcohol during Prohibition - Considered nouveau riche, part of the newly
monied - Irish-Catholic, attended private schools,
including Harvard - Served in U.S. Navy during WWII, earned medals
for valor and purple heart (back injuries)
5JFKs Politics
- Elected to Congress as a Democratic
Representative for MA - Represented the young Baby-Boomer generation
- Promoted Liberal ideas government should work
for the people
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7Richard Milhous Nixon
- Long established Republican politician from
California - Pushed for strong political and economic
conservatism - Small government
- Traditional morality
- Tax cuts
- Strong on Communism
8The 1960 Election
- JFK looked relaxed, young, handsome
- Made for TV, looked groomed, PR ready
- Nixon looked stiff, uncomfortable, and sweaty
- First televised debates in history
- Would be a very close election, decided by a few
thousand votes
9The Issues
- Kennedys position
- U.S. faced serious issues abroad and at home
- Needed to spend money to protect and help
American interests, especially in Cuba - Nixons position
- U.S. was just fine, after 8 years of
Eisenhower/Nixon - Needed to cut spending, because domestic spending
was too expensive
10Part II The Age of Camelot
- JFK brought a distinctive style of leadership,
organizing a young, ambitious Cabinet and
attempting an overhaul of the inner-cities.
11The Results
- JFK won by narrow majority
- Youngest president elected in American history
- First Catholic president
- Assembled youngest Cabinets, many Harvard grads
- Brother, RFK was Attorney General
- Robert McNamara, Secretary of Defense
12The New Frontier
- Bold, new domestic programs
- Education
- Welfare
- Health Care
- Elderly Assistance
- Inner-Cities
- Continue FDRs social action
13JFKs Problems
- Small Democratic majority in Congress
- Barely won the presidency
- Congress didnt support policies
- Christian Southern Conservative Democrats didnt
like him - Battled high inflation
- Contending in tensions in Cuba, Berlin, Russia,
and Vietnam - Most legislation would NOT pass
14The Warren Court
- JFK nominated conservative judge, Earl Warren,
for Chief Justice - Became an activist judge, who took a stand on a
number of important social issues
15Warrens Decisions
- Protect the citizen, protect the police
department, protect the Constitution Basic
civil rights - Baker v. Carr Change voting laws, reapportion
election process to be based on population (keep
power in cities) - Gideon v. Wainwright (1963) cant use evidence
illegally gathered - Escobedo v. Illinois (1964) and Miranda v.
Arizona (1966) the right to remain silent,
anything said can be used in a court of law,
right to lawyer - Engel v. Vitale (1962) No prayer in schools
- Griswold v. Connecticut (1965) Overturns ban on
birth control
16Part III JFKs Foreign Policy
- As a result of the Berlin Wall, Russias
deployment of missiles to Cuba, and the threat of
Communism spreading in Vietnam, JFK asked for a
flexible response to make America safe.
17Flexible Response
- Challenged Eisenhowers idea of massive
retaliation - Pushed for the use of conventional weaponry and
military to combat Communism - U.S. couldnt rely on nuclear arsenal to protect
itself
18Alliance for Progress
- JFKs pledge of support for Latin America
- Considered a Marshall Plan for brown people
- 20 billion to support internal improvements
- Supported education and schools
- Built hospitals and promote health care
- Helped distribute land
- Pros helped some
- Cons much abuse and corruption
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20The Peace Corps
- JFKs call for American international
volunteerism - The commitment
- Spend 2 years in developing nations
- Specialize in education, agriculture, irrigation,
sewage treatment, or health care - Promote democracy and American influence
- Remains one of the most lasting legacys of JFKs
presidency
21The Space Race
- JFKs promise to be the first to the moon
- 1962 NASA sends John Glenn, first American in
space - Used Saturn V rocket to propel out of Earths
orbit - 1969 Saturn V rocket launches Apollo 11
- First, and only, successful moon landing
- Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins
22The Bay of Pigs Invasion
- Considered JFKs first major foreign policy issue
- Intended to overthrow Fidel Castro, who had
become too cozy with Khrushchev - Eisenhower, before leaving office, had approved
CIA training of Cuban exiles
23JFK Starts the Bay of Pigs Invasion (April 17,
1961)
- JFK hopes to start a revolution, authorizes
invasion - Total Failure
- 1,400 armed Cubans, called La Brigada
- Runs aground on a coral reef
- JFK cancels air support, keep Americas
involvement secret - Castro captured or killed almost all of La
Brigada - Exposed American covert operations
24The Berlin Wall(August 1961)
- Immediately following the Bay of Pigs
- JFK and Khrushchev meet in Berlin to discuss E.
German refugees escaping to West Berlin - JFK promises to continue support
- Khrushchev orders the construction of the wall
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26The Cuban Missile Crisis(Oct. 12, 1962)
- American spy plan discovers the construction of
missile launching sites in Cuba - Khrushchev had offered nuclear missiles to force
JFKs concessions in Berlin - Began 13 days of an intense negotiation
27Nuclear Chicken
- JFK pushes for naval blockade
- Goal
- Seize any ships going into/out of Cuba
- Force the immediate removal of missiles
- The Problem
- A direct attack on Soviets would be an act of war
- The existence of the missiles were an act of war
28The Fallout(Oct. 28, 1962)
- Russia blinks!
- Russia removes missiles from Cuba
- U.S. removes missiles from Turkey
- Quarantine ends, but embargo begins
- The Problems
- Khrushchev forced from office
- Kremlin begins nuclear expansion
- U.S. and Russia agree to test ban treaty
- Establish direct communication link the red
phone
29Part IV LBJ and the Great Society
- Taking the presidency after JFKs assassination
(Nov. 22, 1963), LBJ was immediately confronted
with an explosion of violence over civil rights,
the need to engage more troops into Vietnam, and
a need to improve conditions throughout American
society.
30Johnsons Background
- Experience as long-running conservative, Southern
Democrat from Texas - Known for building coalitions by strong-arm,
handshake, drinks, and backslaps - Immediately sworn in as president
- Continued JFKs social and domestic programs
31The Great Society
- LBJs political experience helped push many bills
through Congress - Firmly committed to social action
- Declared a War on Poverty
- Started Economic Opportunity Act to coordinate
economic recovery - Neighborhood Youth Corp Helped youth graduate
and get jobs - Job Corps Provide job training and placement
for inner-cities - VISTA (Volunteer Service to America) Domestic
Peace Corps
32Creating a More Equitable Society
- Medicaid (1965) Comprehensive medical insurance
for low-income families - Medicare (1965) Comprehensive health coverage
for the elderly
33Education and Environment
- Project Head Start (1965) Fund preschool
programs for low-income families - The Water Quality Act and The Clean Air Act
(1965) Increase regulations on industrial
pollution
34Civil Rights
- The Civil Rights Act of 1964 Banned
discrimination of ANY kind - The Voting Rights Act of 1965 Ensured voting
rights to black Americans - Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Barred
discrimination based on race OR gender in the
workplace
35Lyndon Johnsons Legacy
- Provided entitlement funds--out of the federal
budget to disadvantaged groups - Skyrocketed federal budget, causing stress on
programs - LBJ distracted by other domestic and foreign
policy issues - Vietnam
- Social Protest
- Anti-War
- Free Speech
- Feminism
- Hippies/Free Drug Movement
- Civil Rights
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