New major spending programs that addressed education, medical
care, urban problems, rural poverty, and transportation were launched
during this period. The program and its initiatives were subsequently
promoted by him and fellow Democrats in Congress in the 1960s and years following. The Great Society in scope and sweep resembled the New Deal domestic agenda of Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Some Great Society proposals were stalled initiatives from John F. Kennedy's New Frontier. Johnson's success depended on his skills of persuasion, coupled with the Democratic landslide in the 1964 election that brought in many new liberals to Congress, making the House of Representatives in 1965 the most liberal House since 1938.
Anti-war Democrats complained that spending on the Vietnam War choked off the Great Society. While some of the programs have been eliminated or had their funding reduced, many of them, including Medicare, Medicaid, the Older Americans Act and federal education funding, continue to the present. The Great Society's programs expanded under the administrations of Republican Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford.
Some Great Society proposals were stalled initiatives from John F. Kennedy's New Frontier. Johnson's success depended on his skills of persuasion, coupled with the Democratic landslide in the 1964 election that brought in many new liberals to Congress, making the House of Representatives in 1965 the most liberal House since 1938.
Anti-war Democrats complained that spending on the Vietnam War choked off the Great Society. While some of the programs have been eliminated or had their funding reduced, many of them, including Medicare, Medicaid, the Older Americans Act and federal education funding, continue to the present. The Great Society's programs expanded under the administrations of Republican Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford.
Economic and social conditions
Unlike the old New Deal,
which was a response to a severe financial and economic calamity, the
Great Society initiatives came during a period of rapid economic growth.
Kennedy proposed an across-the-board tax cut lowering the top marginal
income tax rate in the United States by 20%, from 91% to 71%, which was
enacted in February 1964, three months after Kennedy's assassination,
under Johnson. The tax cut also significantly reduced marginal rates in
the lower brackets as well as for corporations. The gross national product rose 10% in the first year of the tax cut, and economic growth averaged a rate of 4.5% from 1961 to 1968.
Johnson's tax cut measure triggered
what one historian described as "the greatest prosperity of the postwar
years." GNP increased by 7% in 1964, 8% in 1965, and 9% in 1966. The
unemployment rate fell below 5%, and by 1966 the number of families with
incomes of $7,000 a year or more had reached 55%, compared with 22% in
1950. In 1968, when John Kenneth Galbraith published a new edition of The Affluent Society, the average income of the American family stood at $8,000, double what it had been a decade earlier.
Johnson's speeches in Ohio and Michigan
Johnson's first public reference to the "Great Society" took place during a speech to students on May 7, 1964, at Ohio University in Athens, Ohio:
And with your courage and with your compassion and your desire, we will build a Great Society. It is a society where no child will go unfed, and no youngster will go unschooled.
He later formally presented his specific goals for the Great Society in another speech at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan, on May 22, 1964.
We are going to assemble the best thought and broadest knowledge from all over the world to find these answers. I intend to establish working groups to prepare a series of conferences and meetings—on the cities, on natural beauty, on the quality of education, and on other emerging challenges. From these studies, we will begin to set our course toward the Great Society.
Presidential task forces
Almost
immediately after the Ann Arbor speech, 14 separate task forces began
studying nearly all major aspects of United States society under the
guidance of presidential assistants Bill Moyers and Richard N. Goodwin.
In his use of task forces to provide expert advice on policy, Johnson
was following Kennedy's example, but unlike Kennedy, Johnson directed
his task forces to work in secret. His intent was to prevent his program from being derailed by public criticism of proposals that had not yet been reviewed. The average task force had five to seven members and generally was composed of governmental experts and academics.
After the task force reports were submitted to the White House,
Moyers began a second round of review. The recommendations were
circulated among the agencies concerned, and strategies were developed
for getting the proposed legislation through Congress. On January 4, 1965, Johnson announced much of his proposed program in his State of the Union Address.
The election of 1964
With the exception of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Great Society agenda was not a widely discussed issue during the 1964 presidential election
campaign. Johnson won the election with 61% of the vote, and he carried
all but six states. Democrats gained enough seats to control more than
two-thirds of each chamber in the Eighty-ninth Congress, with a 68–32 margin in the Senate and a 295–140 margin in the House of Representatives.
The two sessions of the Eighty-Ninth Congress
The political realignment allowed House leaders to alter rules that had allowed Southern Democrats
to kill New Frontier and civil rights legislation in committee, which
aided efforts to pass Great Society legislation. In 1965, the first
session of the Eighty-Ninth Congress created the core of the Great
Society. It began by enacting long-stalled legislation such as Medicare
and federal aid to education and then moved into other areas, including
high-speed mass transit, rental supplements, truth in packaging,
environmental safety legislation, new provisions for mental health
facilities, the Teacher Corps, manpower training, the Head Start
program, aid to urban mass transit, a demonstration cities program, a
housing act that included rental subsidies, and an act for higher
education.
The Johnson Administration submitted 87 bills to Congress, and Johnson
signed 84, or 96%, arguably the most successful legislative agenda in US
congressional history.
The major policy areas
Privacy
The Naked Society is a 1964 book on privacy by Vance Packard.
The book argues that changes in technology are encroaching on privacy
and could create a society in the future with radically different
privacy standards. Packard criticized advertisers' unfettered use of
private information to create marketing schemes. He compared a recent
Great Society initiative by then-president Lyndon B. Johnson, the National Data Bank, to the use of information by advertisers and argued for increased data privacy measures to ensure that information did not find its way into the wrong hands. The essay led Congress to create the Special Subcommittee on the Invasion of Privacy and inspired privacy advocates such Neil Gallagher and Sam Ervin
to fight Johnson's flagrant disregard for consumer privacy. Ervin
criticized Johnson’s invasive domestic agenda and saw the unfiltered
database of consumers' information as a sign of presidential abuse of
power. Ervin warned that the “The computer never forgets”. Jerry M. Rosenberg dedicated a chapter of his 1969 book The Death of Privacy to the National Data Bank.
Civil rights
Historian Alan Brinkley has suggested that the most important
domestic achievement of the Great Society may have been its success in
translating some of the demands of the civil rights movement into law. Four civil rights acts were passed, including three laws in the first two years of Johnson's presidency. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 forbade job discrimination and the segregation of public accommodations.
The Voting Rights Act of 1965
assured minority registration and voting. It suspended use of literacy
or other voter-qualification tests that had sometimes served to keep African-Americans off voting lists and provided for federal court lawsuits to stop discriminatory poll taxes. It also reinforced the Civil Rights Act of 1964 by authorizing the appointment of federal voting examiners in areas that did not meet voter-participation requirements. The Immigration and Nationality Services Act of 1965 abolished the national-origin quotas in immigration law. The Civil Rights Act of 1968 banned housing discrimination and extended constitutional protections to Native Americans on reservations.
The "War On Poverty"
The most ambitious and controversial part of the Great Society was
its initiative to end poverty. The Kennedy Administration had been
contemplating a federal effort against poverty. Johnson, who, as a
teacher, had observed extreme poverty in Texas among Mexican-Americans,
launched an "unconditional war on poverty" in the first months of his
presidency with the goal of eliminating hunger, illiteracy, and
unemployment from American life. The centerpiece of the War on Poverty was the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964, which created an Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) to oversee a variety of community-based antipoverty programs.
Federal funds were provided for special education schemes in slum
areas, including help in paying for books and transport, while
financial aid was also provided for slum clearances and rebuilding city
areas. In addition, the Appalachian Regional Development Act of 1965
created jobs in one of the most impoverished regions of the country.
The Economic Opportunity Act of 1964 provided various methods through
which young people from poor homes could receive job training and higher
education.
The OEO reflected a fragile consensus among policymakers that the
best way to deal with poverty was not simply to raise the incomes of
the poor but to help them better themselves through education, job
training, and community development. Central to its mission was the idea
of "community action", the participation of the poor in framing and administering the programs designed to help them.
The programs
The
War on Poverty began with a $1 billion appropriation in 1964 and spent
another $2 billion in the following two years. It gave rise to dozens of
programs, among them the Job Corps, whose purpose was to help disadvantaged youth develop marketable skills; the Neighborhood Youth Corps, established to give poor urban youths work experience and to encourage them to stay in school; Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA), a domestic version of the Peace Corps, which placed concerned citizens with community-based agencies to work towards empowerment of the poor; the Model Cities Program for urban redevelopment; Upward Bound, which assisted poor high school students entering college; legal services for the poor; and the Food Stamp Act of 1964 (which expanded the federal food stamp program).
Programs included the Community Action Program, which initiated local Community Action Agencies charged with helping the poor become self-sufficient; and Project Head Start,
which offered preschool education for poor children. In addition,
funding was provided for the establishment of community health centers
to expand access to health care, while major amendments were made to Social Security
in 1965 and 1967 which significantly increased benefits, expanded
coverage, and established new programs to combat poverty and raise
living standards. In addition, average AFDC payments were 35% higher in 1968 than in 1960, but remained insufficient and uneven.
Education
The most important educational component of the Great Society was the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, designed by Commissioner of Education Francis Keppel.
It was signed into law on April 11, 1965, less than three months after
it was introduced. It ended a long-standing political taboo by providing
significant federal aid to public education, initially allocating more
than $1 billion to help schools purchase materials and start special
education programs to schools with a high concentration of low-income
children. During its first year of operation, the Act authorized a $1.1
billion program of grants to states, for allocations to school districts
with large numbers of children of low income families, funds to use
community facilities for education within the entire community, funds to
improve educational research and to strengthen state departments of
education, and grants for purchase of books and library materials. The Act also established Head Start,
which had originally been started by the Office of Economic Opportunity
as an eight-week summer program, as a permanent program.
The Higher Education Facilities Act of 1963, which was signed into law by Johnson a month after becoming president,
authorized several times more college aid within a five-year period
than had been appropriated under the Land Grant College in a century. It
provided better college libraries, ten to twenty new graduate centers,
several new technical institutes, classrooms for several hundred
thousand students, and twenty-five to thirty new community colleges a
year.
This major piece of legislation was followed by the Higher Education Act of 1965,
which increased federal money given to universities, created
scholarships and low-interest loans for students, and established a
national Teacher Corps
to provide teachers to poverty-stricken areas of the United States. The
Act also began a transition from federally funded institutional
assistance to individual student aid.
In 1964, basic improvements in the National Defense Education Act
were achieved, and total funds available to educational institutions
were increased. The yearly limit on loans to graduate and professional
students was raised from $1,000 to $2,500, and the aggregate limit was
raised from $5,000 to $10,000. The program was extended to include
geography, history, reading, English, and civics, and guidance and
counselling programs were extended to elementary and public junior high
schools.
The Bilingual Education Act
of 1968 offered federal aid to local school districts in assisting them
to address the needs of children with limited English-speaking ability
until it expired in 2002.
The Great Society programs also provided support for postgraduate
clinical training for both nurses and physicians committed to work with
disadvantaged patients in rural and urban health clinics.
Health
Medicare
The Social Security Act of 1965 authorized Medicare and provided federal funding for many of the medical costs of older Americans. The legislation overcame the bitter resistance, particularly from the American Medical Association, to the idea of publicly funded health care or "socialized medicine"
by making its benefits available to everyone over sixty-five,
regardless of need, and by linking payments to the existing private
insurance system.
Medicaid
In 1966 welfare recipients of all ages received medical care through the Medicaid
program. Medicaid was created on July 30, 1965 under Title XIX of the
Social Security Act of 1965. Each state administers its own Medicaid
program while the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
(CMS) monitors the state-run programs and establishes requirements for
service delivery, quality, funding, and eligibility standards.
Welfare
A
number of improvements were made to the Social Security program in terms
of both coverage and adequacy of benefits. The Tax Adjustment Act of
1966 included a provision for special payments under the social security
program to certain uninsured individuals aged 72 and over. The Social
Security Amendments of 1965 included a 7% increase in cash benefits, a
liberalization of the definition of disability, a liberalization of the
amount a person can earn and still get full benefits (the so-called
retirement test), payment of benefits to eligible children aged 18–21
who are attending school, payment of benefits to widows at age 60 on an
actuarially reduced basis, coverage of self-employed physicians,
coverage of tips as wages, liberalization of insured-status requirements
for persons already aged 72 or over, an increase to $6,600 the amount
of earnings counted for contribution and benefit purposes (the
contribution and benefit base), and an increase in the contribution rate
schedule.
The Social Security Amendments of 1967 included a 13% increase in
old-age, survivors, and disability insurance benefits, with a minimum
monthly benefit of $55 for a person retiring at or after age-65 (or
receiving disability benefits), an increase from $35 to $40 in the
special age-72 payments, an increase from $1,500 to $1,680 in the amount
a person may earn in a year and still get full benefits for that year,
monthly cash benefits for disabled widows and disabled dependent
widowers at age 50 at reduced rates, a liberalization of the eligibility
requirements for benefits for dependents and Survivors of women
workers, and an alternative insured-status test for workers disabled
before age 31.
Additionally, new guidelines for determining eligibility for
disability insurance benefits, additional non-contributory wage credits
for servicemen, broadened coverage of clergy and members of religious
orders who have not taken a vow of poverty, and an increase in the
contribution and benefit base from $6,600 to $7,800, beginning in 1968.
In addition, the Social Security Amendments of 1967 provided the first
major amendments of Medicare. These social security amendments extended
the coverage of the program to include certain services previously
excluded, simplified reimbursement procedures under both the hospital
and medical insurance plans, and facilitated the administrative
procedures concerning general enrollment periods.
The Food Stamp Act of 1964 made the program permanent, while the
Social Security Amendments of 1967 specified that at least 6% of monies
for maternal and child health should be spent on family planning. By
1967, the federal government began requiring state health departments to
make contraceptives available to all adults who were poor. Meal
programs for low-income senior citizens began in 1965, with the federal
government providing funding for "congregate meals" and "home-delivered
meals."
The Child Nutrition Act, passed in 1966, made improvements to
nutritional assistance to children such as in the introduction of the
School Breakfast Program.
The arts and cultural institutions
National endowments for the arts and the humanities
In September 1965, Johnson signed the National Foundation on the Arts and Humanities Act into law, creating both the National Endowment for the Arts and National Endowment for the Humanities
as separate, independent agencies. Lobbying for federally funded arts
and humanities support began during the Kennedy Administration. In 1963
three scholarly and educational organizations—the American Council of
Learned Societies (ACLS), the Council of Graduate Schools in America,
and the United Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa—joined
together to establish the National Commission on the Humanities. In
June 1964, the commission released a report that suggested that the
emphasis placed on science endangered the study of the humanities from
elementary schools through postgraduate programs. In order to correct
the balance, it recommended "the establishment by the President and the
Congress of the United States of a National Humanities Foundation."
In August 1964, Representative William S. Moorhead
of Pennsylvania proposed legislation to implement the commission's
recommendations. Support from the White House followed in September,
when Johnson lent his endorsement during a speech at Brown University. In March 1965, the White House
proposed the establishment of a National Foundation on the Arts and
Humanities and requested $20 million in start-up funds. The commission's
report had generated other proposals, but the White House's approach
eclipsed them. The administration's plan, which called for the creation
of two separate agencies each advised by a governing body, was the
version that the Congress approved. Richard Nixon dramatically expanded funding for NEH and NEA.
Public broadcasting
After the First National Conference on Long-Range Financing of
Educational Television Stations in December 1964 called for a study of
the role of noncommercial education television in society, the Carnegie Corporation agreed to finance the work of a 15-member national commission. Its landmark report, Public Television: A Program for Action,
published on January 26, 1967, popularized the phrase "public
television" and assisted the legislative campaign for federal aid. The Public Broadcasting Act of 1967, enacted less than 10 months later, chartered the Corporation for Public Broadcasting as a private, non-profit corporation.
The law initiated federal aid through the CPB for the operation,
as opposed to the funding of capital facilities, of public broadcasting.
The CPB initially collaborated with the pre-existing National Educational Television system, but in 1969 decided to start the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). A public radio study commissioned by the CPB and the Ford Foundation and conducted from 1968 to 1969 led to the establishment of National Public Radio, a public radio system under the terms of the amended Public Broadcasting Act.
Cultural centers
Two
long-planned national cultural and arts facilities received federal
funding that would allow for their completion through Great Society
legislation. A National Cultural Center, suggested during the Franklin Roosevelt Administration and created by a bipartisan law signed by Dwight Eisenhower, was transformed into the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts,
a living memorial to the assassinated president. Fundraising for the
original cultural center had been poor prior to legislation creating the
Kennedy Center, which passed two months after the president's death and
provided $23 million for construction. The Kennedy Center opened in
1971.
In the late 1930s the U.S. Congress mandated a Smithsonian Institution art museum for the National Mall, and a design by Eliel Saarinen was unveiled in 1939, but plans were shelved during World War II. A 1966 act of the U.S. Congress established the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden as part of the Smithsonian Institution with a focus on modern art, in contrast to the existing National Art Gallery. The museum was primarily federally funded, although New York financier Joseph Hirshhorn later contributed $1 million toward building construction, which began in 1969. The Hirshhorn opened in 1974.
Transportation
Transportation
initiatives started during President Johnson's term in office included
the consolidation of transportation agencies into a cabinet-level
position under the Department of Transportation.
The department was authorized by Congress on October 15, 1966 and began
operations on April 1, 1967. Congress passed a variety of legislation
to support improvements in transportation including The Urban Mass Transportation Act of 1964
which provided $375 million for large-scale urban public or private
rail projects in the form of matching funds to cities and states and
created the Urban Mass Transit Administration (now the Federal Transit Administration), High Speed Ground Transportation Act of 1965 which resulted in the creation of high-speed rail between New York and Washington, and the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966—a bill largely taken credit for by Ralph Nader, whose book Unsafe at Any Speed he claims helped inspire the legislation.
Consumer protection
In 1964, Johnson named Assistant Secretary of Labor Esther Peterson to be the first presidential assistant for consumer affairs.
The Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act of 1965 required packages to carry warning labels. The Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966 set standards through creation of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. The Fair Packaging and Labeling Act requires products identify manufacturer, address, clearly mark quantity and servings. The statute also authorized the HEW and the FTC
to establish and define voluntary standard sizes. The original would
have mandated uniform standards of size and weight for comparison
shopping, but the final law only outlawed exaggerated size claims.
The Child Safety Act of 1966 prohibited any chemical so dangerous
that no warning can make it safe. The Flammable Fabrics Act of 1967 set
standards for children's sleepwear, but not baby blankets.
The Wholesome Meat Act of 1967 required inspection of meat which must meet federal standards. The Truth-in-Lending Act
of 1968 required lenders and credit providers to disclose the full cost
of finance charges in both dollars and annual percentage rates, on
installment loan and sales. The Wholesome Poultry Products Act of 1968
required inspection of poultry which must meet federal standards. The
Land Sales Disclosure Act of 1968 provided safeguards against fraudulent
practices in the sale of land. The Radiation Safety Act of 1968
provided standards and recalls for defective electronic products.
The environment
Joseph A. Califano, Jr.
has suggested that the Great Society's main contribution to the
environment was an extension of protections beyond those aimed at the
conservation of untouched resources. In a message he transmitted to Congress, President Johnson said:
The air we breathe, our water, our soil and wildlife, are being blighted by poisons and chemicals which are the by-products of technology and industry. The society that receives the rewards of technology, must, as a cooperating whole, take responsibility for [their] control. To deal with these new problems will require a new conservation. We must not only protect the countryside and save it from destruction, we must restore what has been destroyed and salvage the beauty and charm of our cities. Our conservation must be not just the classic conservation of protection [against] development, but a creative conservation of restoration and innovation.
— Special Message to the Congress on Conservation and Restoration of Natural Beauty; February 8, 1965
At the behest of Secretary of the Interior Stewart Udall,
the Great Society included several new environmental laws to protect
air and water. Environmental legislation enacted included:
- Water Quality Act of 1965
- Clean Air Act of 1963
- Wilderness Act of 1964
- Endangered Species Preservation Act of 1966
- National Trails System Act of 1968
- Wild and Scenic Rivers Act of 1968
- Land and Water Conservation Fund Act of 1965
- Solid Waste Disposal Act of 1965
- Motor Vehicle Air Pollution Control Act of 1965
- National Historic Preservation Act of 1966
- Aircraft Noise Abatement Act of 1968
- National Environmental Policy Act of 1969
Housing
In
1964, the quality of the housing program was improved by requiring
minimum standards of code enforcement, providing assistance to
dislocated families and small businesses and authorizing below market
interest loans for rehabilitating housing in urban renewal areas.
The Housing and Urban Development Act of 1965 included important
elements such as rent subsidies for low-income families, rehabilitation
grants to enable low-income homeowners in urban renewal areas to improve
their homes instead of relocating elsewhere, and improved and extended
benefits for relocation payments.
The Demonstration Cities Act of 1966 established a new program for
comprehensive neighborhood renewal, with an emphasis on strategic
investments in housing renovation, urban services, neighborhood
facilities, and job creation activities.
Rural development
A
number of measures were introduced to improve socio-economic conditions
in rural areas. Under Title III of the 1964 Economic Opportunity Act,
Special Programs to Combat Rural Poverty, the Office for Economic
Opportunity was authorized to act as a lender of last resort for rural
families who needed money to help them permanently increase their
earning capacity. Loans could be made to purchase land, improve the
operation of family farms, allow participation in cooperative ventures,
and finance non-agricultural business enterprises, while local
cooperatives which served low-income rural families could apply for
another category of loans for similar purposes.
Title III also made loans and grants available to local groups to
improve housing, education, and child care services for migrant farm
workers, while Titles I and II also included potentially important
programs for rural development. Title I established the Job Corps which
enrolled school dropouts in community service projects: 40% of the
corpsmen were to work in a Youth Conservation Corps to carry out
resource conservation, beautification, and development projects in the
National Forests and countryside. Arguably more important for rural
areas were the Community Action Programs authorized by Title II. Federal
money was allocated to States according to their needs for job
training, housing, health, and welfare assistance, and the States were
then to distribute their shares of the Community Action grants on the
basis of proposals from local public or non-profit private groups.
The Public Works and Economic Development Act of 1965 reorganized the Areas Redevelopment Administration (ARA) into the Economic Development Administration
(EDA), and authorized $3.3 billion over 5 years while specifying seven
criteria for eligibility. The list included low median family income,
but the 6% or higher unemployment applied to the greatest number of
areas, while the Act also mentioned outmigration from rural areas as a
criterion. In an attempt to go beyond what one writer described as
"ARA's failed scattershot approach" of providing aid to individual
counties and inspired by the European model of regional development, the
EDA encouraged counties to form Economic Development Districts (EDDs)
as it was recognized that individual distressed counties (called RAs or
Redevelopment Areas) lacked sufficient resources for their own
development.
EDDs encompassed from 5 to 15 counties and both planned and
implemented development with EDA funding and technical assistance, and
each EDD had a "growth center" (another concept borrowed from Europe)
called a redevelopment center if it was located in an RA or development
center if in another county. With the exception of the growth centers,
EDD counties were ineligible for assistance unless they were RAs, but
they were all expected to benefit from "coordinated districtwide
development planning."
Labor
The Amendments made to the 1931 Davis-Bacon Act in 1964 extended the prevailing wage provisions to cover fringe benefits, while several increases were made to the federal minimum wage.
The Service Contract Act of 1965 provided for minimum wages and fringe
benefits as well as other conditions of work for contractors under
certain types of service contracts. A comprehensive minimum rate hike was also signed into law that extended the coverage of the Fair Labor Standards Act to about 9.1 million additional workers.
Conservative opposition
Despite conservatives who attacked Johnson's Great Society making major gains in Congress in the 1966 midterm elections,
and with anger and frustration mounting over the Vietnam War, Johnson
was still able to secure the passage of additional programs during his
last two years in office. Laws were passed to extend the Food Stamp
Program, to expand consumer protection, to improve safety standards, to
train health professionals, to assist handicapped Americans, and to
further urban programs.
In 1968, a new Fair Housing Act was passed, which banned racial discrimination in housing and subsidized the construction or rehabilitation of low-income housing units.
That same year, a new program for federally funded job retraining for
the hardcore unemployed in fifty cities was introduced, together with
the strongest federal gun control bill (relating to the transportation
of guns across State lines) in American history up until that point.
By the end of the Johnson Administration,
226 out of 252 major legislative requests (over a four-year period) had
been met, federal aid to the poor had risen from $9.9 billion in 1960
to $30 billion by 1968, one million Americans had been retrained under
previously non-existent federal programs, and two million children had
participated in the Head Start program.
Legacy
Interpretations of the War on Poverty remain controversial. The Office of Economic Opportunity was dismantled by the Nixon and Ford administrations, largely by transferring poverty programs to other government departments. Funding for many of these programs were further cut in President Ronald Reagan's Gramm-Latta Budget in 1981.
Alan Brinkley
has suggested that "the gap between the expansive intentions of the War
on Poverty and its relatively modest achievements fueled later
conservative arguments that government is not an appropriate vehicle for
solving social problems." One of Johnson's aides, Joseph A. Califano, Jr., has countered that "from 1963 when Lyndon Johnson
took office until 1970 as the impact of his Great Society programs were
felt, the portion of Americans living below the poverty line dropped
from 22.2 percent to 12.6 percent, the most dramatic decline over such a
brief period in this century."
The percentage of African Americans below the poverty line dropped from 55 percent in 1960 to 27 percent in 1968.
From 1964 to 1967, federal expenditures on education rose from $4
billion to $12 billion, while spending on health rose from $5 billion to
$16 billion. By that time, the federal government was spending $4,000
per annum on each poor family of four, four times as much as in 1961.