Senator West Virginia | Happy Birthday Lyndon B. Johnson!

Jay Wolfe 2008

Blog About Jay Wolfe 2008

Happy Birthday Lyndon B. Johnson!

Lyndon B. Johnson was the 36th president of the United States. As such, most people who are interested in the history of the United States would do well to learn some of the interesting Lyndon B. Johnson quiz points that exist, as he plays an important part in the history of the country.

 

Perhaps the most significant fact of Lyndon B. Johnson’s political career has to do with how he came to office. It was after one of the most devastating moments in American history, the assassination of JFK, that Johnson would become president, although he would go on to fairly win his own election after finishing Kennedy’s term.

 

Lyndon B. Johnson trivia buffs should know the years of his service in the variety of the political branches that he worked in. In addition to his years as vice president and as President, he also was a United States Representative (Texas) for 12 years, starting in 1937, and a Senator for another twelve, six of those spent as the Majority Leader in the Senate.

 

A Lyndon B. Johnson quiz is ultimately going to turn to the issue of Vietnam, easily the most controversial part of his presidency and his politics. Before Kennedy’s death, the mission had been planned to begin the withdrawal of troops from this troubled region. Instead, Johnson began to increase the American presence and involved them directly in the ground war. When Kennedy died, there had been 16,000 American soldiers in Vietnam, and by 1968 the number was over half a million.

 

An interesting point of Lyndon B. Johnson trivia is that despite the way the media has portrayed the reactions of America to the Vietnam War, it was not directly responsible for his decline in popularity and the polls. In fact, the divisive stance of his own party was as much to blame for his not being re-elected as anything else in that political climate.  It was the division in the party which caused him to ultimately withdraw his bid for being the party’s presidential candidate. However, the damage to his party had already been done. The events taking place internally within the Democratic Party at that time were thought by many to be responsible for the election of Richard Nixon in the 1968 election, as the party was far too divided and weak to mount an effective campaign against the Republican Party of the time.

 

No Comments »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment


Copyright 2009 Senator West Virginia