
Lyndon B. Johnson's War on Poverty
Proposal for A Nationwide
War On The Sources of Poverty
Lyndon B. Johnson's Special Message to Congress,
March 16, 1964
 |
Because it is right, because it is
wise, and because, for the first time in our history,
it is possible to conquer poverty, I submit, for the
consideration of the Congress and the country, the
Economic Opportunity Act of 1964.
The Act does not merely expand old programs
or improve what is already being done.
It charts a new course. |
It strikes at the causes, not just the consequences
of poverty.
It can be a milestone in our one-hundred eighty
year search for a better life for our people.
This Act provides five basic opportunities.
It will give almost half a million underprivileged
young Americans the opportunity to develop skills, continue
education, and find useful work.
It will give every American community the opportunity to
develop a comprehensive plan to fight its own poverty-and
help them to carry out their plans.
It will give dedicated Americans the opportunity
to enlist as volunteers in the war against poverty.
It will give many workers and farmers the
opportunity to break through particular barriers which bar
their escape from poverty.
It will give the entire nation the opportunity
for a concerted attack on poverty through the establishment,
tinder my direction, of the Office of Economic Opportunity,
a national headquarters for the war against poverty.
This is how we propose to create these opportunities.
First we will give high priority to helping
young Americans who lack skills, who have not completed
their education or who cannot complete it because they arc
too poor...
I therefore recommend the creation of a job
Corps, a Work-Training Program, and a Work Study Program.
A new national job Corps will build toward
an enlistment of 100,000 young men. They will be drawn from
those whose background, health and education make them least
fit for useful work...
Half of these young men will work, in the
first year, on special conservation projects to give them
education, useful work experience and to enrich the natural
resources of the country.
Half of these young men will receive, in the
first year, a blend of training, basic education and work
experience in job Training Centers. . .
A new national Work-Training Program operated
by the Department of Labor will provide work and training
for 200,000 American men and women between the ages of 16
and 21. This will be developed through state and local governments
and non-profit agencies...
A new national Work-Study Program operated
by the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare will
provide federal funds for part-time jobs for 140,000 young
Americans who do not go to college because they cannot afford
it.
There is no more senseless waste than the
waste of the brainpower and skill of those who are kept
from college by economic circumstance. Under this program
they will, in a great American tradition, be able to work
their way through school...
Second, through a new Community Action program
we intend to strike at poverty at its source - in the streets
of our cities and on the farms of our countryside among
the very young and the impoverished old.
This program asks men and women throughout
the country to prepare long-range plans for the attack on
poverty in their own local communities...
Third, I ask for the authority to recruit
and train skilled volunteers for the war against poverty.
Thousands of Americans have volunteered to
serve the needs of other lands.
Thousands more want the chance to serve the
needs of their own land.
hey should have that chance.
Among older people who have retired, as well
as among the young, among women as \vell as men, there are
many Americans who are ready to enlist in our war against
poverty.
They have skills and dedication. They are
badly needed...
Fourth, we intend to create new opportunities
for certain hard-hit groups to break out of the pattern
of poverty.
Through a new program of loans and guarantees
we can provide incentives to those who will employ the unemployed.
Through programs of work and retraining for
unemployed fathers and mothers we can help them support
their families in dignity while preparing themselves for
new work.
Through funds to purchase needed land, organize
cooperatives, and create new and adequate family farms we
can help those whose life on the land has been a struggle
without hope.
Fifth, I do not intend that the war against
poverty become a series of uncoordinated and unrelated efforts
- that it perish for lack of leadership and direction.
Therefore this bill creates, in the Executive
Office of the President, a new Office of Economic Opportunity.
Its Director will be my personal Chief of Staff for the
War against poverty. I intend to appoint Sargent Shriver
to this post...
What you are being asked to consider is not
a simple or an easy program. But poverty is not a simple
or an easy enemy.
It cannot be driven from the land by a single
attack on a single front. Were this so we would have conquered
poverty long ago.
Nor can it be conquered by government alone...
Today, for the first time in our history,
we have the power to strike away the barriers to full participation
in our society. Having the power, we have the duty...
We are fully aware that this program will
not eliminate all the poverty in America in a few months
or a few years. Poverty is deeply rooted and its causes
are many.
But this program will show the way to new
opportunities for millions of our fellow citizens.
It will provide a lever with which we can
begin to open the door to our prosperity for those who have
been kept outside.
It will also give us the chance to test our
weapons, to try our energy and ideas and imagination for
the many battles yet to come. As conditions change, and
as experience illuminates our difficulties, we will be prepared
to modify our strategy.
And this program is much more than a beginning.
Rather it is a commitment. It is a total commitment
by this President, and this Congress, and this nation, to
pursue victory over the most ancient of mankind's enemies.
Source:
from Public Papers of U.S. Presidents,
Lyndon B. Johnson, 1963-1964 (Washington: G.P.O.,
1965), 1, pp. 375-380.
Additional Related Information:
-- About Community
Action Partnership
-- CAP Board of Trustees
-- Agency Funding
-- 2003 Needs Assessment
-- Links to sites related
to CAP
|