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THE NEW FRONTIER AND THE GREAT SOCIETY

THE NEW FRONTIER AND THE GREAT SOCIETY. KENNEDY AND JOHNSON LEAD AMERICA IN THE 1960S. The Emergence of J.F.K. The Democratic nominee for president in 1960 was a young Massachusetts senator named John Kennedy He promised to “get America moving again”

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THE NEW FRONTIER AND THE GREAT SOCIETY

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  1. THE NEW FRONTIER AND THE GREAT SOCIETY KENNEDY AND JOHNSON LEAD AMERICA IN THE 1960S

  2. The Emergence of J.F.K. • The Democratic nominee for president in 1960 was a young Massachusetts senator named John Kennedy • He promised to “get America moving again” • Kennedy had a well-organized campaign and was handsome and charismatic Senator Kennedy, 1958

  3. REPUBLICAN OPPONENT: RICHARD NIXON • The Republicans nominated Richard Nixon, Ike’s Vice-President • The candidates agreed on many domestic and foreign policy issues • Two factors helped put Kennedy over the top: T.V. and Civil Rights Nixon hoped to ride the coattails of the popular President

  4. TELEVISED DEBATE AFFECTS VOTE • On September 26, 1960, Kennedy and Nixon took part in the first televised debate between presidential candidates • Kennedy looked and spoke better than Nixon • Journalist Russell Baker said, “That night, image replaced the printed word as the national language of politics”

  5. JFK: CONFIDENT, AT EASE DURING DEBATES • Television had become so central to people's lives that many observers blamed Nixon's loss to John F. Kennedy on his poor appearance in the televised presidential debates • JFK looked cool, collected, presidential • Nixon, according to one observer, resembled a "sinister chipmunk"

  6. JFK’S OTHER EDGE: CIVIL RIGHTS • A second major event of the campaign took place in October, 1960 • Police arrested Martin Luther King for conducting a “Sit-In” at a lunch counter in Georgia • King was sentenced to hard labor Sit-Ins were non-violent protests over the policy of whites-only lunch counters in the South

  7. JFK, NIXON REACT DIFFERENTLY TO KING ARREST • While the Eisenhower Administration refused to intervene, JFK phoned King’s wife and his brother, Robert Kennedy, worked for King’s release • The incident captured the attention of the African-American community, whose votes JFK would carry in key states King Kennedy

  8. KENNEDY WINS CLOSE ELECTION

  9. CLOSEST ELECTION SINCE 1884 • Kennedy won the election by fewer than 119,000 votes • Nixon dominated the west, while Kennedy won the south and the east coast RMN JFK

  10. “ASK NOT . . .” In his inaugural address, JFK uttered this famous challenge: “Ask not what your country can do for you --- ask what you can do for your country” Delivered Friday, January 20, 1961

  11. THE CAMELOT YEARS • During his term in office, JFK and his beautiful young wife, Jacqueline, invited many artists and celebrities to the White House • The press loved the Kennedy charm and JFK appeared frequently on T.V. • The Kennedys were considered American “Royalty” (hence “Camelot” reference)

  12. THE KENNEDY MYSTIQUE • The first family fascinated the American public • For example, after learning that JFK could read 1,600 words a minute, thousands enrolled in speed-reading courses • Jackie, too, captivated the nation with her eye for fashion and culture

  13. THE BEST AND THE BRIGHTEST • JFK surrounded himself with what one journalist described as the “best and the brightest” available talent • Of all of his elite advisors who filled Kennedy’s inner circle, he relied most on his 35-year-old brother Robert, whom he appointed attorney general RFK was John’s closest friend and advisor

  14. J.F.K.’s Flexible Response Doctrine • From the beginning of his term in early 1961, JFK focused on the Cold War (Soviet relations) • JFK tripled our nuclear capability, increased troops, ships and artillery, and created the Green Berets (Special Forces)

  15. Cuba Libre! • Fidel Castro and his revolutionary army overthrow the government of Cuba in Jan. 1959 • Castro turns Cuba into a socialist nation. • He quickly nationalizes all US property in Cuba. At the time, 75% of all agricultural land in Cuba is owned by Americans or American companies. • The US responds in 1960 with a trade embargo, still in effect today. • As a result of the embargo, Cuba turned to the Soviet Union for support.

  16. BAY OF PIGS • In March 1960, Eisenhower gave the CIA permission to secretly train Cuban exiles for an invasion of Cuba • Kennedy learned of the plan only nine days into his presidency • JFK approved the mission • It turned out to be a disaster when in April, 1961, 1,200 Cuban exiles met 25,000 Cuban troops backed by Soviet tanks and were soundly defeated “We looked like fools to our friends, rascals to our enemies and incompetents to the rest” Quote from U.S. Commentator

  17. Image from US Spy Plane

  18. U2 spy plane photographs

  19. BLOCKADE!

  20. Soviet ships turned back at the last minute

  21. The Compromise Members of ExComm and JFK planning a compromise • Soviet missiles removed from Cuba • U.S. promises not to invade Cuba • U.S. removed missiles from Italy and Turkey

  22. End The Embargo? • 67% of Americans said the US should reestablish diplomatic ties with Cuba. • 57% called for an end to the travel ban. • 51% say end the embargo • (Angus Reid Public Opinion Poll- January 2012)

  23. CRISIS OVER BERLIN • In 1961, Berlin, Germany was a city in great turmoil • In the 11 years since the Berlin Airlift, almost 3 million East Germans (Soviet side) had fled into West Berlin (U.S. controlled) to flee communist rule

  24. SOVIETS SEEK TO STOP EXODUS • The Soviets did not like the fact that East Berliners were fleeing their city for the democratic west • Their departure hurt the economy and the prestige of the USSR • Just after midnight on August 13, 1961 the Soviets began construction of a 90-mile wall separating East and West Berlin East Germany begins construction on the Berlin Wall, which becomes a primary symbol of the Cold War and Soviet oppression

  25. Berlin, Checkpoint CharlieView from West to East Berlin, 1961

  26. Standoff between US and Soviet tanks at Checkpoint Charlie, 1961.

  27. Checkpoint CharlieBerlin, April 1963

  28. In the last phase of the wall's development, the "death strip" between fence and concrete wall.

  29. The Berlin Wall-1985

  30. In 1989 the Berlin Wall came DOWN!!

  31. Potsdamer Platz has been restored. They have kept a section of the Wall.

  32. Checkpoint Charlie today.

  33. Checkpoint Charlie today.

  34. EASING TENSIONS • After the Cuban Missile Crisis, Khrushchev and Kennedy began searching for ways to ease the enormous tension between the two superpowers • In 1963 they established a hot line between the White House and the Kremlin • Later that year, the superpowers signed a Limited Test Ban Treaty that served to ban nuclear testing in the atmosphere

  35. THE NEW FRONTIER • Kennedy initiated his vision in a program he called “The New Frontier” • The economy, education, medical care for the elderly and the poor, and space exploration were all part of his vision

  36. THE PEACE CORPS • One of the first programs launched by JFK was the Peace Corps • The Peace Corps is a volunteer program to assist developing nations in Asia, Africa and Latin America • The Peace Corps has become a huge success

  37. RACE TO THE MOON • On April 12, 1961, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the first human in space • Meanwhile, America’s space agency (NASA) began construction on new launch facilities in Cape Canaveral, Florida and a mission control center in Houston, Texas

  38. A MAN ON THE MOON Armstrong • Finally, on July 20, 1969, the U.S. would achieve its goal • An excited nation watched as U.S. astronaut Neil Armstrong took the first steps on the moon “One small step for man, one giant leap for mankind”

  39. KENNEDY ADDRESSES INNER CITY BLIGHT AND RACISM • In 1963, Kennedy called for “a national assault on the causes of poverty” • He also ordered his brother, Attorney General Robert Kennedy to investigate racial injustice in the South • Finally, he presented Congress with a sweeping civil rights bill and a sweeping tax cut bill to spur the economy

  40. TRAGEDY IN DALLAS • On a sunny day on November 22,1963, Air Force One landed in Dallas with JFK and Jackie • JFK received warm applause from the crowd that lined the downtown streets of Dallas as he rode in the back seat of an open-air limousine

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