Los Angeles Times

Daughters christen stealthy Navy ship named for LBJ

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BATH, Maine — Former President Lyndon B. Johnson’s daughters christened a stealthy warship bearing his name on Saturday, smacking Champagne bottles against a metal star symbolizin­g Texas as a crowd roared in approval.

The bubbly liquid sprayed into the air when Lynda Bird Johnson Robb and Luci Baines Johnson simultaneo­usly smashed their bottles as they stood on the ship’s bow. Afterward, red, white and blue streamers shot skyward.

Robb said her Texasborn father would be honored to have his name on the futuristic ship because he always looked to the future.

“Daddy would be proud to have a stealthy ship that’s looking forward, not backward at past things that have happened, but forward for the great things” to come, Robb said Saturday.

The warship’s no-nonsense namesake was praised for his efforts to help the poor and to fight for equality in the civil rights era. Johnson signed the landmark Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act and designed the Great Society domestic programs that included federally sponsored social welfare programs.

But his presidency was dogged by the Vietnam War. He died in 1973.

Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine), who attended with her state’s congressio­nal delegation and other dignitarie­s, noted that Johnson, a Navy veteran, was thrust into the presidency “in one of our darkest hours” after the assassinat­ion of President Kennedy in 1963. The Civil Rights Act, she said, “changed America and helped our nation realize its ideals of justice and equality for all.”

Robb said her father, the nation’s 36th president, would be “thrilled” that the warship’s crest contains a nod to three of his greatest accomplish­ments: the Great Society, civil rights and NASA.

Outside the shipyard, police made several arrests when activists blocked a road while calling on the federal government to spend money to fight climate change instead of building warships.

The 610-foot warship is the last in a class of three ships that are the largest and most technologi­cally sophistica­ted destroyers built for the Navy.

The destroyers feature wave-piercing hulls, an angular shape that reduces their radar signature, and electric propulsion. Automation has halved the crew size compared with other destroyers.

Unlike its sister ships, the Zumwalt and the Monsoor, the Lyndon B. Johnson will have a deckhouse that’s made of steel, not composite materials, to save money. The program, once envisioned at 32 ships, was so costly that the Navy truncated the program to just the three ships.

The LBJ will undergo further outfitting and sea trials before it’s commission­ed into service.

 ?? Robert F. Bukaty Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT Lyndon B. Johnson’s daughters, Luci Baines Johnson, left, and Lynda Bird Johnson Robb, after christenin­g a high-tech Navy destroyer named for their father at Bath Iron Works in Maine.
Robert F. Bukaty Associated Press PRESIDENT Lyndon B. Johnson’s daughters, Luci Baines Johnson, left, and Lynda Bird Johnson Robb, after christenin­g a high-tech Navy destroyer named for their father at Bath Iron Works in Maine.

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