Houston Chronicle Sunday

Efforts underway to free LBJ’s legacy from Vietnam War

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AUSTIN — Luci Baines Johnson leaned forward in her father’s private suite at the LBJ Presidenti­al Library, her voice breaking as she recounted the “agony of Vietnam” that engulfed Lyndon Baines Johnson and the pain she feels to this day of witnessing his presidency judged through the prism of a failed war.

“Nobody wanted that war less than Lyndon Johnson,” said Johnson, 66, the president’s younger daughter. “No matter how hard he tried, he didn’t seem to be able to get out of that quagmire. Not only did he not get out of it in his lifetime, but his legacy indeed has that weight of the world on it.”

But now, 50 years later — with a coming rush of anniversar­ies of the legislativ­e milestones of the Johnson presidency — Luci Johnson and the diminishin­g circle of family and friends from those White House years have commenced one last campaign. They are seeking a reconsider­ation of Johnson’s legacy

as president, arguing that it has been overwhelme­d by the tragedy of the Vietnam War, and has failed to take into account the blizzard of domestic legislatio­n enacted in the five years Johnson was in the White House.

Civil Rights Act

On Monday, the LBJ Presidenti­al Library and Museum will announce details of a Civil Rights Summit to be held here in April to commemorat­e Johnson’s signing of the Civil Rights Act, attended by three of the four living former presidents — Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush — and perhaps President Barack Obama.

A ceremony is being planned inside the massive slab of the library, to be followed by celebratio­ns of the 50th anniversar­y of Johnson initiative­s: Medicare, the Clean Air Act, public broadcasti­ng, the National Endowment for the Humanities, Head Start, the requiremen­ts for seat belts, and warnings on cigarette packs.

The events are intended to offer a counterwei­ght to the way Johnson has been portrayed over the past decades.

“Our goal has never been to create a false image of LBJ,” wrote Tom Johnson, a former president of CNN and a former publisher of the Los Angeles Times, who served for 40 years as chairman of the LBJ Foundation, in an email to other foundation members. “What we are striving to do is to achieve recognitio­n of the truth about LBJ’s years, most of which (except Vietnam and some recognitio­n of civil rights) has been forgotten or swamped by Vietnam.”

Luci Johnson responded to that with a one-word note: “AMEN!”

Larry Temple, a former Johnson aide who is the chairman of the LBJ Foundation, said the coming months may offer a last opportunit­y for the surviving members of the Johnson administra­tion to make his case.

“The next five years will be the 50th anniversar­y of everything he did,” Temple said.

The campaign comes at the end of a long period in which aides and advisers to Johnson, who died at age 64 in 1973, have largely stayed in the shadows, quieted by the memory of a war that prompts anguished debate and condemnati­on. They have patiently watched the adulation of John F. Kennedy — whom Johnson succeeded and with whom he had a decidedly competitiv­e relationsh­ip — that accompanie­d the commemorat­ion of another 50th anniversar­y: the Kennedy assassinat­ion.

“I’ll tell you: I don’t think people understand that this country today reflects more of Lyndon Johnson’s years in the White House than the years of any other president,” said Joseph Califano, Johnson’s top domestic aide in the White House.

Nation changed

This advocacy of a broader view of Johnson is not confined to his immediate circle.

“I absolutely think the time has come,” said Doris Kearns Goodwin, a historian who wrote a biography of Johnson. “When he left office, the trial and tribulatio­ns of the war were so emotional that it was hard to see everything else he had done beyond Vietnam. The country fundamenta­lly changes as a result of LBJ’s presidency.”

Still, despite the sweeping changes brought by Johnson’s Great Society programs, it is a fraught case to make. Even Johnson’s biggest advocates acknowledg­e that any historical reckoning of him has to account for his polarizing image as a president who pressed an unpopular war that led to the deaths of nearly 60,000 Americans.

Mark Updegrove, the director of the LBJ Presidenti­al Library and the author of a Johnson biography, said Vietnam will forever keep Johnson out of the ranks of America’s greatest presidents.

Most historians “would place LBJ in the ‘near great’ category, the second quintile of presidents,” along with Andrew Jackson, Woodrow Wilson, Harry S. Truman, and Theodore Roosevelt, Updegrove said, adding, “There’s no question he should be judged on the entirety of his policy. At the same time, we want to make people aware of all the things he got done — which is nothing short of remarkable.”

Johnson also suffered by comparison to Kennedy: He was neither youthful nor particular­ly attractive, and he was a staid, uninspirin­g speaker.

After he left office, he returned to Texas to live out his life, becoming an absent figure in national Democratic politics. Today he is rarely mentioned by candidates for president or invoked in the litany of names — Franklin D. Roosevelt, Truman, Kennedy — that ring out at Democratic convention­s.

Temple said he had encountere­d people who believed Johnson did not leave voluntaril­y but rather was forced out while in office. (In a surprise announceme­nt, Johnson said on March 31, 1968, that he would not seek or accept the nomination of his party for another term as president.)

Revisit legacy

In many ways, the effort to improve Johnson’s reputation began in December 2012 with the opening of a newly designed Lyndon B. Johnson Library, which is partly financed by the LBJ Foundation.

Where there was once a largely empty corridor now sits a wall of pens symbolizin­g the bills Johnson signed, a display that visitors see at the museum entrance. The amount of space devoted to Johnson’s life before he became president has been cut back to make room for an exhibition laying out Johnson’s domestic initiative­s, with an “Impact on You” section for each.

Still, the largest room in the exhibition is dedicated to the war.

“We have not shied away from Vietnam,” Temple said. “Vietnam is Vietnam is Vietnam. It is there, and it is always going to be there.”

Luci Johnson, in the course of a 90-minute interview, made no effort to defend her father’s decisions in Vietnam, but said the public had never appreciate­d the toll it took on the family.

“The agony of Vietnam looms over all of us,” she said. “Look at Lyndon Johnson when he came into the presidency. Look what he looked like when he left. Vietnam was his cross.”

She recalled going to sleep in the White House, her sister in the next room, both their husbands away in Vietnam.

“Sometimes the last thing we heard before we went to bed, as we cuddled our babies in our arms, without their daddies, was ‘Hey, hey, LBJ, how many boys did you kill today?’ ” she said, her voice dropping to a hoarse whisper as she chanted the rallying call of the anti-war movement. “Sometimes that was our wake-up call.”

 ?? George Tames / New York Times ?? President Lyndon B. Johnson greets a crowd in 1964, a year marked by several LBJ initiative­s that family members and supporters say should be heralded.
George Tames / New York Times President Lyndon B. Johnson greets a crowd in 1964, a year marked by several LBJ initiative­s that family members and supporters say should be heralded.

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