Mr. Social Security
The Life of Wilbur J. Cohen
Edward D. Berkowitz
Foreword by Joseph A. Califano
416 pages, 22 photographs, 6 x 9
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-0707-5, $34.95
JFK tagged him "Mr. Social
Security." LBJ praised him as the "planner, architect,
builder and repairman on every major piece of social legislation
[since 1935]." The New York Times called him "one
of the country's foremost technicians in public welfare."
Time portrayed him as a man of "boundless energy,
infectious enthusiasm, and a drive for action." His name
was Wilbur Cohen.
For half a century from the New Deal through the Great Society,
Cohen (1913-1987) was one of the key players in the creation
and expansion of the American welfare state. From the Social
Security Act of 1935 through the establishment of disability
insurance in 1956 and the creation of Medicare in 1965, he was
a leading articulator and advocate of an expanding Social Security
system. He played that role so well that he prompted Senator
Paul Douglas's wry comment that "an expert on Social Security
is a person who knows Wilbur Cohen's telephone number."
The son of Jewish immigrants, Cohen left his Milwaukee home
in the early 1930s to attend the University of Wisconsin and
never looked back. Filled with a great thirst for knowledge and
wider horizons, he followed his mentors Edwin Witte and Arthur
Altmeyer to Washington, D.C., and began a career that would eventually
land him a top position in LBJ's cabinet as Secretary of Health,
Education, and Welfare.
Variously described as a practical visionary, an action intellectual,
a consummate bureaucrat, and a relentless incrementalist, Cohen
was a master behind-the-scenes player who turned legislative
compromise into an art form. He inhabited a world in which the
passage of legislation was the ultimate reward. Driven by his
progressive vision, he time and again persuaded legislators on
both sides of the aisle to introduce and support expansive social
programs. Like a shuttle in a loom he moved invisibly back and
forth, back and forth, until the finely woven legislative cloth
emerged before the public's eye.
Nearly a decade after his death, Cohen and his legacy continue
to shadow the debates over social welfare and health care reform.
While Congress swings with the prevailing winds in these debates,
Social Security's prominence in American life remains vitally
intact. And Wilbur Cohen is largely responsible for that.
"Wilbur Cohen was present and active at the defining
points through which an initially fragile Social Security system
became the central core of America's welfare state. In this marvelously
rich volume Berkowitz not only captures the complexities of Cohen's
personality, outlook, and administrative style but also uses
him to illuminate the changing role of the bureaucratic consensus
builder in America. A major achievement."--Ellis W. Hawley,
author of The New Deal and the Problem of Monopoly
"The life of Wilbur Cohen, as Berkowitz admirably shows,
provides a window on the entire process of statebuilding for
Social Security in America. This is a major contribution to American
political history."--Theda Skocpol, author of Protecting
Soldiers and Mothers: The Political Origins of Social Policy
in the United States
"A fascinating portrait of one of the giants of twentieth-century
American public life. A triumph of sound and imaginative scholarship."--Theodore
Marmor, author of Understanding Health Care Reform
and The Politics of Medicare
"No one worked longer, harder, or more effectively to
build the American welfare state than Wilbur Cohen. He is the
perfect subject for giving policy history a human face."--Martha
Derthick, author of Policymaking for Social Security
"Must reading for anyone who wants to understand our
Social Security program by seeing how it developed from the start.
An enchanting read about an intensely brilliant person."--Robert
J. Myers, author of Social Security and former Chief
Actuary, Social Security Administration
"Essential reading for those who wish to understand the
incremental politics that characterized policymaking in the U.S.
from the Progressive era through the Reagan years."--W.
Andrew Achenbaum, author of Social Security: Visions and
Revisions
"Will be as indispensable to those who applaud the collapse
of liberalism as it will be to those who hope to revive the ideology
that Cohen personified."--Louis Galambos, editor
of The New American State: Federal Bureaucracies and Policies
since World War II
EDWARD D. BERKOWITZ, chair of the Department of History
at George Washington University, is the author of America's
Welfare State: From Roosevelt to Reagan and Disabled Policy:
America's Programs for the Handicapped and coauthor of Creating the Welfare State: The Political
Economy of Twentieth-Century Reform.
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