to end poverty and racial injustice in America
Lyndon Johnson
President Nixon was generally critical of Lyndon Johnson's Great Society program, viewing it as overly ambitious and costly. He believed that while some social welfare initiatives were necessary, the expansive government spending and intervention associated with the Great Society were ineffective and fostered dependency rather than empowerment. Nixon aimed to shift focus toward a more conservative approach, promoting his "New Federalism" which sought to decentralize power and give more authority to state and local governments.
Lyndon Baines Johnson (LBJ)
There were two Presidents named Johnson. The 17th President of the United States was Andrew Johnson from April 15, 1865 to March 4, 1869. The 36th President of the United States was Lyndon B. Johnson November 22, 1963 January 20, 1969
to end poverty and racial injustice in the U.S.
to end poverty and racial injustice in america
Great Society
to end poverty and racial injustice in America
to end poverty and racial injustice in America
to end poverty and racial injustice in America
to end poverty and racial injustice in america
to end poverty and racial injustice in America
to end poverty and racial injustice in America
Andrew Johnson-Tenessee Lyndon B. Johnson-Texas
The Great Society was a set of social reforms initiated primarily by President Lyndon Johnson aimed at the elimination of poverty and racial injustice and thus the creation of a Great Society.
Lyndon Johnson was the President who started the Great Society progams.
About 50 people were in Lyndon B. Johnson's family.