Lyndon Johnson insisted that JFK’s wife Jackie Kennedy accompany him back to Washington on Air Force One just hours after her husband was assassinated and that she stand beside him in the famous photograph where he was sworn in as president, a new book reveals.
The famous photo of Mrs Kennedy, with JFK’s blood still on her clothes standing dazed beside Johnson as he took the oath, only occurred after Johnson insisted she be present so that Kennedy supporters accept his legitimacy as president.
Earlier in a scene fraught with tension, Jackie had arrived back at Air Force One thinking Johnson had already departed for Washington on Air Force Two. She entered her stateroom only to find Johnson inside, in one version sprawled on the bed, making plans for the transition.
Johnson and his wife Lady Byrd consoled Mrs Kennedy and she agreed that she should be present for his inauguration. Asked if she wanted to change out of her bloodstained clothes, she refused saying, “Let them see what they have done to him.”
The new book, by Johnson historian Robert Caro, titled 'The Years of Lyndon Johnson: The Passage of Power', will be released May 1.
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It shows how Johnson ignored the wishes of the Kennedy clan that he travel on Air Force Two and that Kennedy’s body arrived back on Air Force One with only family and friends on board as his symbolic last trip as president.
The book also details how Johnson called up JFK’s brother Bobby, then Attorney General, and demanded the legal advice on how to take the oath for president. He wanted Bobby’s approval for taking the oath on the plane, again to give the act legitimacy. Accounts differ on whether the distraught Bobby Kennedy agreed or not.
Johnson also grabbed two key Kennedy Irish mafia members, Kenny O’Donnell and Dave Powers on Air Force One and demanded they serve in his administration, stating he “needed them more than JFK ever did.” Both men were moved by the gesture.
The book portrays Johnson on the day of the assassination as a politician going nowhere, a former powerful Senate Majority Leader who had shrunk in his new job.
The purpose of the Kennedy trip to Texas had been to heal wounds between Senator Ralph Yarborough and Governor John Connolly who were both vital to Kennedy’s re-election prospects. Johnson however was unable to heal the rift between both men and Kennedy had to intervene.
Johnson was also keenly aware that JFK was likely to maneuver to have his brother Robert succeed him in 1968 and that Johnson might not even survive on the 1964 ticket as VP. However, the assassination changed everything.
Johnson heard the shots from the car he was in a few hundred yards behind the president. A secret service agent jumped on top of him and pinned him to the floor while the car was gunned to Parkland Hospital where Kennedy had been taken.
There Johnson was led to a secure room and kept there while the president fought for his life.
Caro describes a man transformed when the news that Kennedy had died reached him.
Both he and the Secret Service were fearful that the assassination was also an attempt to take out the top layer of the American government and that he too was in mortal danger. Johnson instanced the Lincoln assassination when attempts were made on the lives of key cabinet members also.
From being the fumbling, ineffectual Vice President, Johnson became immediately a figure of great authority and decisiveness Caro writes.
Secret service agents wanted to rush him to the plane but he insisted they wait for Mrs Kennedy and the president’s body.
That book details how the morning of November 22nd morning LBJ woke up as a deeply frustrated vice president but by nightfall was sworn in as the nation's 36 president, following JFK's murder in Johnson's home state of Texas.
'Even in this first hour after John F. Kennedy's death, Lyndon Johnson seems to have had feelings that would torment him for the rest of his life,' Caro writes. 'Feelings understandable in any man placed in the Presidency not through an election but through an assassin's bullet, and feelings exacerbated, in his case, by the contrast, and what he felt was the world's view of the contrast, between him and the President he was replacing; by the contempt in which he had been held by the people around the President; and by the stark geographical fact of where the act elevating him to office had taken place.'
Caro has been at work on his prize-winning LBJ biography for more than three decades. The website Politico summarized Caro's presentation of the JFK assassination as follows:
Caro presents a portrait of a man on the verge of transition. The day began for Johnson with the belief - the fear - that he might not be on the ticket with J.F.K. in the coming election. That very day, back in Washington, a witness was providing Senate Rules Committee staffers with evidence that he said linked Johnson to Robert G. (Bobby) Baker, the subject of a scandal that had been exploding in the capital, and Life magazine was mapping out an investigation into the sources of Johnson's wealth.
'The Vice-President's trip to Texas wasn't going well: he had failed to heal the bitter rift between two major Texas Democrats, Governor John B. Connally and Senator Ralph Yarborough; the previous day, in San Antonio, Yarborough had refused even to ride in the same car with Johnson. "Given what the President was seeing for himself in Texas - that Johnson was no longer a viable mediator between factions of his party in his home state - and what was happening at that very minute in the Old Senate Office Building, the President's assurances that he would be on the ticket might start to have a hollow ring,' Caro writes.
Johnson himself, Caro writes, believed that his political career was 'finished.' Caro then details the moments after the shots were fired - Johnson being flung to the floor of his car by a Secret Service agent who lay on top of him for protection, the tense moments at the Dallas hospital as Johnson awaited news of Kennedy's condition, and the mad rush to get Johnson aboard Air Force One amid fears that the assassination might be part of a conspiracy - during which an immediate change took place in Johnson.
Jack Valenti said that, 'even in that instant, there was a new demeanor' in the new President. 'Whatever emotions or passions he had in him, he had put them under a strict discipline so that he was very quiet and seemingly very much in command of himself." There had been, in Valenti's words, 'a transformation.'
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Switch to the desktop site to post a comment.seanomelb | Mar 29, 2012, 07:24 PM EDT
Which colour to you like to watch Murph!!!
markincorsicana | Mar 29, 2012, 04:12 AM EDT
It is not just "old news". The people that had JFK assassinated still run the U.S. Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it.
manhattan | Mar 28, 2012, 01:39 PM EDT
Please,Please let JFK rest in peace. That was such a painful time when he was murdered then Bobby then Martin Luther King plus Vietnam. That is one time I wish my mind was blank.
Buffalobrave | Mar 28, 2012, 09:43 AM EDT
Murph46: Watching paint dry is probably all your 'pea-brain' could handle. Anything else would be over your head!
NickOHara | Mar 28, 2012, 12:46 AM EDT
. Except for the fact that I was not there ... I believe that this story involves more than a bit of biased B---S---. Fact. At the instant of JFK's incapacitation LBJ was president. period. AirForce 1 is the President's plane. The President is in charge, responsible, for the functioning of the country. Yes, I believe Jackie, dazed (as anyone living through the experience -as did I- remains to this day) said: "Let them see..." Whatever else anyone has to say about the personal stature of LBJ is irrelevant to the immediate sequence of events in the hours after the loss. Not to defend Johnson in any way ... but I believe that any fair exchange would have to evaluate the can of worms, VietNam, he inherited from JFK, who -inturn- inherited it on a rope from Eisenhower; who inherited it as a thread from Harry Truman. Check y'alls history of U.S. "advisors", and who was who and where through the escalation and routing out of Amerikanistas after the French had the 'grace' to accept their IndoChina escapade just "not being worth it".
sirpeter | Mar 27, 2012, 10:38 PM EDT
Murph46.You came to this article twice.Thought you said you would rather watch paint dry?Only for Seano and Bythebay's comments on Irelands rates of company tax.It would have been a waste of a click.
Murph46 | Mar 27, 2012, 09:16 PM EDT
Seano come back to planet earth-this is about Kennedy swearing in you and by by needs your meds.
seanomelb | Mar 27, 2012, 06:56 PM EDT
There are three rates of company tax in Ireland,trading income 12.5%,non trading income 25% and manufacturing 10%. The Shannon free zone (no corporate tax)ended in 2003.Ireland has always pursued its own independent tax structure regardless of the EU.
Murph46 | Mar 27, 2012, 01:56 PM EDT
Jaysus! Anything to get the Kennedy name in print! I'd rather watch paint dry!
elfrisby | Mar 27, 2012, 12:35 PM EDT
This is all old news. After this revealation Johnson was under suspicion of being behind Kennedy's death. Which I believed to be true years ago. Why is Robert Cato cashing in on old news. Isn't there enough trash written about Kennedy's death. Time to move on and be original Mr. Cato.
PhlutiePhan | Mar 27, 2012, 10:52 AM EDT
The "transformation" had already been done. "What you do. Do it quickly". Jackie stated about her bloodied clothing, "let them see what 'they' have done". She knew. The entire "Irish mafia" knew. LBJ was already ready to "jump in the pool". He then took over Air Force One and Jackie came back to the plane and found him laying in her stateroom. What greater message do you need?
faberm1 | Mar 27, 2012, 10:43 AM EDT
Jacqueline Kennedy was always a class act (even though she was married to a lecherous, unfaithful hypocrite). Lyndon Johnson was always without class. As a Texan we were/ and still are somewhat embarrassed by the power hungry base Johnson. He had hillbilly roots and he never got passed them. Jackie was not forced to do this and it was reassuring to the world. Again.....she was a class act
jamieLM | Mar 27, 2012, 10:22 AM EDT
Very old news. Time to move on.
ariagirl | Mar 27, 2012, 10:11 AM EDT
This is not new news.....
righton | Mar 27, 2012, 09:49 AM EDT
The swearing-in of the vice president did not need to be legitimized by the wife of the President. It's the law. It was symbolic, of course, to have the widow standing by. . .not to "legitimize" the transition. . .It was,however, symbolic, which I thought at the time - an outstanding gesture on Mrs. Kennedy's part. Do not denigrate this awful time in our nation's history with legitimizing the author's view that Mrs. Kennedy was "forced" to do something she did not want to do. She was a major history buff and would have understood the significance, i.e, the entire funeral was planned by Mrs. Kennedy with history in mind. Lastly, this is the U.S. not Great Britain, the presidency is not a birthright,and there is no need for "approval" from the deceased president's family or anyone else. The writer misinterprets -- Mrs. Kennedy deserves credit and honor for standing beside Lyndon Johnson at the worst of times.