Read The Passage of Power Online

Authors: Robert A. Caro

The Passage of Power (155 page)

BOOK: The Passage of Power
7.25Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Telephoned Brown and Jones:
Transcripts, “11:20 A.M. to George Brown,” “11:04 A.M. to John Jones,” both Jan. 8, 1964,
TPR,
Vol. III, pp. 280–81, 265.
Saxon announced:
“Decision of Comptroller of the Currency James J. Saxon on the Application to Consolidate …, —Statement,” Jan. 13, 1964;
NYT, WSJ,
Jan. 14, 1964.
“Is the
Chronicle?”
:
Transcript, 9:05 P.M., Jan. 20, 1964,
TPR,
Vol. III, p. 678.
“A paragraph”
:
Transcript, “8:45 P.M. to Jack Valenti and Mary Margaret Valenti,”
TPR,
Vol. IV, p. 394.
Bank:
The JFKL says that the Saxon Papers cannot be seen by researchers because they have not been processed, and that there are no plans at present to process them. In 1968, Gus Wortham’s American General Co. increased its investment in the bank from 120,000 to 925,000 shares (
NYT,
March 20, 1968).

“What do we need”
:
Transcript, “8:45 P.M. to Albert Jackson,” Jan. 4, 1963,
TPR,
Vol. II, pp. 150–51.

Christmas Day … call:
Transcript, “8:39 P.M. to Amon Carter, Jr., President joined by Lady Bird Johnson,” Dec. 25, 1963,
TPR,
Vol. II, pp 826–32.
Close depot:
NYT,
Dec. 13, 1963.
Retiring Timmons:
By Jan. 19, 1964, the byline of the
Star-Telegram’s
new Washington
reporter, Robert Hilburn, had begun appearing in the paper. Easley, Mayer, Hollingsworth,
Record
interviews.
“During his”
:
Timmons OH, LBJL.

“White House business”
:
McCammon OH.
“To see to it”
:
WSJ,
Aug. 11, 1964.
“With Moursund”
:
McCammon OH.
“Mr. Johnson”
:
Fehmer interview.
“Linked”
:
WSJ,
Aug. 11, 1964.
“The same thing”
:
McCammon OH.
Sometimes:
Clark, Shapiro interviews.

“Wasn’t labeled”
:
Ferguson interview.
Other lines:
Clark, Deathe interviews.
“I want”
:
Transcript, “Time Unknown, before 12:45 A.M., Office conversation with Walter Jenkins,” Jan.13, 1964,
TPR,
pp. 491–92.

“Deteriorating”
;
“The past thirty days”
:
Johnson,
Vantage Point,
pp. 62–63.
“wishful thinking”
:
Vantage Point,
p. 63.
“quite a lecture”
:
Dallek,
Flawed Giant,
p. 103.
“The situation is very”
;
“a little less”
:
Gibbons,
The U.S. Government and the Vietnam War, Part II: 1961–1964,
pp. 211–12.

Mansfield’s memo:
Gibbons,
U.S. Government,
pp. 215–216.
Johnson’s response:
Transcript, “9:55 P.M. to Frank Valeo, Dec. 23, 1963,”
TPR,
Vol. II, pp. 757–75.

“The stakes”
:
Dallek,
Flawed Giant,
p. 103.
Rusk arrived:
Logevall,
Choosing War,
p. 91.
Approving more advisers and a committee:
Gibbons,
U.S. Government,
p. 212.

Krulak committee’s report;
“progressively escalating”
:
Beschloss,
Taking Charge,
p. 200.
“There’s one”
:
Transcript, “5:45 P.M. to John Knight,” Feb. 3, 1964,
TPR,
Vol. IV, p. 98.
“No President”
:
Dallek,
Flawed Giant,
p. 101.

“It was clear”
;
“juggling”
:
Gibbons,
U.S. Government,
p. 213. The
Pentagon Papers
call it “an accounting exercise” (p. 191).
“In the last”
:
Pentagon Papers,
pp. 303–06.
“We have called back”
:
Public Papers of the Presidents: Lyndon B. Johnson, 1963–1964,
p. 211.

Johnson approves Krulak report; no such memorandum:
Gibbons,
U.S. Government,
pp. 213–14. “We’re going to try to launch some counterattacks ourselves.… We’re going to try to touch them up a little bit in the days to come,” Johnson told a friendly newspaper executive on January 31 (Transcript, “1:32 P.M. to Walker Stone,” Jan. 31, 1964,
TPR,
Vol. III, p. 1044).

“Above all else”
:
Logevall,
Choosing War,
p. 108.
“What is your own internal thinking?”
Transcript, “12:35 P.M. from McGeorge Bundy,” March 2, 1964,
TPR,
Vol. IV, p. 847.

Whittington incident:
E. Ernest Goldstein, “How LBJ Took the Bull by the Horns,”
Amherst,
Winter 1985; Goldstein OH, LBJL;
DT-H,
Jan. 5, 1964; Busby, Fehmer interviews.

Had its beginning under Kennedy:
Lemann,
The Promised Land,
pp. 129–45; Goldman,
The Tragedy of Lyndon Johnson,
pp. 37–38; Reeves,
President Kennedy,
p. 656; Sorensen,
Kennedy,
p. 753; Giglio,
The Presidency of John F. Kennedy,
pp. 117–18; Harrington,
The Other America;
Douglas Cater, “The Politics of Poverty,”
The Reporter,
Feb. 13, 1964; Newfield, Schlesinger, Sorensen, interviews.

Harrington and Macdonald:
“It is part of John Kennedy’s legend that
The Other America
spurred him into action against poverty … but the consensus among Kennedy aides is that he read MacDonald’s review, not the book itself,” Lemann writes (
Promised Land,
pp. 130–31).
“Social Security”
:
Cater, “Politics of Poverty.”
“Future economic growth alone”
:
Council of Economic Advisers,
Economic Report of the President, Together with the Annual Report of the Council of Economic Advisers, Transmitted to the Congress, January 1964,
pp. 2, 72.
Articles by Bigart stirred Kennedy:
Gordon OH IV, LBJL.
“In the air”
:
Goldman,
The Tragedy,
p. 38

“A quiet investigation”
:
Gordon OH IV.
Kennedy gave him;
“to come up”
;
“Perhaps”
:
Capron, quoted in Gillette,
Launching the War on Poverty,
pp. 11, 12.
“The agencies weren’t”
;
“Go back”
:
Cannon, quoted in Gillette,
Launching,
p. 13.
“Keep at it”
:
Heller, quoted in Gillette,
Launching,
p. 14.

Scammon … told:
Reeves,
President Kennedy,
p. 656.
“I then heard”
;
“Come back to me”
:
Heller OH I, LBJL.
“Current”
:
Thomas,
Robert Kennedy,
p. 305.
“I am still very much”
:
Heller OH I, quoted in Gillette,
Launching,
p. 14. Lemann (
Promised Land,
p. 135) writes that “Everyone close to Kennedy agrees that he certainly did not have any kind of major effort in mind.” And he adds (p.141), “In the weeks following the assassination …, John F. Kennedy, as his associates went to work burnishing his reputation, began to become more liberal—in particular, more liberal than Lyndon Johnson. Caution and pragmatism do not make an easy foundation on which to build an argument for historical greatness, and they were not stressed in the memorialization of Kennedy.” One of the early examples of such “memorialization” in regard to a poverty program came very soon after the assassination. Writing in the
SEP,
Schlesinger stated that “in one of the last talks I had with him, he was musing about the legislative program for next January and said, ‘The time has come to organize a national assault on the causes of poverty, a comprehensive program, across the board’ ” (Schlesinger, “A Eulogy for J.F.K.,”
SEP,
Dec. 14, 1963).

“Gordon’s schedule”
:
Capron, quoted in Gillette,
Launching the War on Poverty,
p. 18.
“Public awareness”
:
Evans and Novak,
Lyndon B. Johnson,
p. 434.

“That’s my kind of program”
:
Heller OH I, LBJL.
“So spontaneous”
:
Heller OH I.
“Point blank”
:
Heller, quoted in Lemann,
The Promised Land,
p. 141. In his “Notes on Meeting with President Johnson, 7:40 P.M., Saturday, Nov. 23, 1963” (Gardner Ackley Microfilm, Reel 2, LBJL), Heller wrote that he “strongly urged me to move ahead on the poverty theme in the hope that we can make it an important part of the 1964 program.… In answer to a point-blank question, [He] said we should push ahead full-tilt on the project.” Gordon says (OH IV, LBJL), “He [Johnson] immediately seized on the idea as an important one, one that was compatible with and consistent with his own purposes in the presidency, and encouraged us to go on.”

The emphasis;
“we started out”
;
“it was”
:
Capron, quoted in Gillette,
Launching,
p. 21.
December 20 meeting:
Sundquist, quoted in Gillette,
Launching,
p. 22.

Johnson had reserved:
“We are asking for new obligational authority of $500 million,” he told John Kenneth Galbraith on Jan. 29. “We thought that’s as much as we could get by with to start it off” (Gillette,
Launching,
p. 23). In Johnson’s memoirs he explains that he searched “for ways to reduce spending, mainly in Defense but in other departments as well, so that money could be used to start the poverty programs. A poverty bill that would increase the budget at the outset would have little chance of success” (Johnson,
Vantage Point,
p. 71).
“Gordon and Heller had been thinking”
: Johnson,
Vantage Point,
pp. 73–74.

“How are you going to spend?”
:
Evans and Novak,
LBJ,
p. 428. Their account “was a word-for-word account, without quotes, from my memo on the affair,” Heller was to say (Heller OH I, LBJL).

“Extremely”
:
Heller, quoted in Gillette,
Launching the War on Poverty,
p. 29.
“ ‘Look’ ”
:
Heller OH I.
“He wanted”
:
Heller OH I.
“The challenge”
:
Johnson,
Vantage Point,
p. 74.

“All of us”
:
NYP,
Jan. 5, 1964.

The ranch … was an appropriate setting:
For the psychological impact that being on the ranch had on Johnson, see Caro,
Master of the Senate,
the “Memories” chapter. For a fuller description, see Caro,
The Path to Power,
the chapters entitled “The Best Man I Ever Knew” and “The Bottom of the Heap.”

“I’ve always been an early riser”
:
Cormier,
LBJ,
p. 18.
Calling E. Babe
: E. Babe Smith interview.
“We always get up”
:
Stehling interview. Writing in her diary about this vacation on the Ranch, and the War on Poverty, Lady Bird Johnson said, “It was the right setting to discuss it. It was on that ranch that he had been born, and there were memories. The day he got back, talking with a friend [Mrs. Johnson does not identify him], he said, ’I waked up at 6:30. All my life I waked … I waked up on a road gang. ’You get up early, don’t you? You had to … You can’t tell me you ever made the big leagues not getting up early. It takes us a little longer [to achieve success] than some other folks.’ ”
“We always talked”
:
Cox interview.
“Hated poverty”
:
Hurst interview; Hurst and Cain,
LBJ: To Know Him Better,
p. 12.
“Rags” incident
:
Hurst and Cain,
LBJ,
p. 5.

“Hounded”
:
Evans and Novak,
LBJ,
p. 428.

“Just a few feet”
;
“it struck me”
:
Johnson,
Vantage Point,
p. 73.

Hackett’s committee had been urging:
Lemann,
Promised Land,
pp. 128–33.
According to Busby:
Busby interview.
“I realized”
:
Johnson,
Vantage Point,
p. 75. Also see Matusow,
The Unraveling of America,
p. 123; Lemann,
Promised Land,
pp. 143–44.
Instead, there were orders:
For example, Capron to Heller, Jan. 4, 1964.
“Your preliminary”
:
Gordon and Heller, “Memorandum for Secretary of Agriculture, Secretary of Commerce …, Jan. 6, 1964,” “Ex We9 Poverty Program, Nov. 22, 1963–Feb. 28, 1964,” Box 25, WHCF, LBJL.

“State of the Union”; secretary was driven up
:
Sorensen interview;
NYT,
Jan. 9, 1964.
First draft contained:
TCS, “1964 State of the Union—First Draft, Desired Length: 2,500 words, length of this draft: 2,783 words, Jan. 1, 1964,” “Jan. 8, 1964, 1964 State of the Union—Folder II,” Box 92, Statements of Lyndon Baines Johnson, LBJL.
Those sentences remained unchanged:
All the drafts can be found in various folders in Box 92, Statements of Lyndon Baines Johnson, LBJL. Busby, Sorensen, Valenti interviews.
“It doesn’t sound”
:
Sorensen interview.
Kennedy had said it:
Schlesinger,
A Thousand Days,
p. 1005; Lemann,
Promised Land,
p. 145.

BOOK: The Passage of Power
7.25Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Hunting a Soul by Viola Grace
El hundimiento del Titán by Morgan Robertson
Hunter by Blaire Drake
Look at Me by Anita Brookner
aHunter4Trust by Cynthia A. Clement
White Lady by Bell, Jessica
The Healing by David Park
The Farmer's Daughter by Mary Nichols
Nowhere to Run by Franklin W. Dixon


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024