The Presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson
Vaughn Davis Bornet
xvi, 416 pages, 6 x 9
American Presidency Series
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-0237-7, $29.95
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0242-1, $17.95
This pioneering assessment of
all significant aspects of the Johnson presidency is the first
book-length appraisal by a professional historian to cover all
issues, decisions, and developments of consequence--from foreign
affairs, Vietnam, and the space race to the Great Society, civil
rights, and the war on poverty--during the span of Johnson's
five years in office. At a time when unflattering portraits of
Johnson's distinctive personal and governmental style prevail,
this volume presents a full, thoughtful, and balanced evaluation
of the administration's achievements and failures.
Vaughn Bornet draws a compelling picture of the dramatic period
from late 1963 to early 1969 based on a close examination of
memoirs, scholarly books and articles, manuscript materials in
the central White House files, and key oral histories. Many of
the sources of information have not been used before; only a
few of those who worked closely with Johnson during his 1,886
days in office will be familiar with all the details of this
comprehensive account.
Bornet documents that, at the very outset, Johnson ignored
or dismissed information from key advisors showing that our Vietnam
war efforts would fail without a major commitment. In his chapter
on the hostile relations between Johnson and the media, Bornet
blames both the President and the press for the so-called credibility
gap. He credits Johnson, rather than Kennedy, with the moon landing.
He shifts the focus from Johnson as a consummate politician to
give full attention and credit to the Presidents important and
talented team-- a group that included Bill Moyers, Joseph Califano,
Douglass Cater, Horace Busby, Walt Rostow, McGeorge Bundy, Lawrence
O'Brien, Dean Rusk, George Reedy, and Jack Valenti. And Bornet
is the first to argue that it was poor health, not political
pressure, that caused Johnson to decide against seeking reelection
in 1968.
"The most comprehensive and evenhanded work on the LBJ
presidency that we have. This is a book that no one with serious
interest in this critical administration can afford to ignore."--Alonzo
L. Hamby, author of Beyond the New Deal
"An important book that has to be on every 'must read'
list of the Johnson years. . . . A distinguished contribution
. . . [with] lively quotes and lively asides."--History:
Reviews of New Books
"Provides two sensitive and well-researched chapters
on Vietnam issues [and] an excellent chapter on the president's
relations with the media. . . . A sympathetic but balanced appraisal
reflecting a total mastery of an extraordinary variety and quantity
of literature."--Review of Politics
"Sympathy does not cloud the author's judgment. . . .
The tone and maturity of this book likely will infuence Johnson
studies for some time."--Journal of Southern History
VAUGHN DAVIS BORNET is emeritus professor of history
and social science at Southern Oregon State College.
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