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Saturday, September 10, 2011

Jacqueline Kennedy Reveals JFK Feared An LBJ Presidency

President John F. Kennedy was so "worried for the country" about the prospect that Vice President Lyndon Johnson might succeed him as president that he'd begun having private conversations about who should become the Democratic Party's standard-bearer in 1968, Jacqueline Kennedy recalled in a series of oral-history interviews recorded in early 1964.

She said her husband believed strongly that Johnson shouldn't become president and, in the months before his death in November 1963, he'd begun talking to his brother, Robert Kennedy, about ways to maneuver around Johnson in 1968.

"Bobby told me this later, and I know Jack said it to me sometimes. He said, 'Oh, God, can you ever imagine what would happen to the country if Lyndon was president?'" she said.

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1 comment:

lmclain said...

Looks like JFK's fears were well founded. Ever wonder LBJ was winking at on Air Force One (there's a photo of just that) on the way back to Washington, just hours after JKF's brutal assassination? Who winks at anyone in that situation? LBJ's "Great Society" put us on the path to the point we are at now as a country. Cities and ghettos FULL of welfare dependent and non-productive people who convinced they we OWE them something. Generational and ingrained dependency. Thanks, LBJ. Good job.