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  • from reading the newspapers that here was a big, gangly, wheeler-dealer politician, the type of which I knew so well in Oklahoma, which is the old courthouse politician. So I had a very negative impression of him as someone who was hard and cold
  • ] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh -5busted banks. The young New Dealers became very friendly with a great deal of interchange between the various departments. There was a great deal of mutual discovery
  • ; Texas Power & Light; transmission and distribution lines; cost of LCRA System; Pedernales Electric Cooperative; Bluebonnet Electric; pooling systems; Lake LBJ; Young "New Dealers"
  • sobered up from that FDR binge." L: (Laughter) That's the way he wrote to him. B: So apparently LBJ was perceived as much more conservative than he had been when he was a staunch New Dealer in the late 1930s and early 1940s. L: Yes, he had to do
  • felt down in the bottom of his heart that they didn't vote for him, they voted against Goldwater. And Lyndon was one of these guys who, being a wheeler-dealer in a sense that he was a compromiser, always had an idea that somehow the Kennedys would get
  • , some people used to refer to Lyndon as a wheeler and a dealer, and Lyndon was pretty sharp. But I'm not so sure that he would have ever set himself up cold turkey to tell a fellow member of the Senate, "You can't have this bill unless you vote
  • , and the press, and the young New Dealers who were the real excitement to me. End of Tape 1 of 1 and Interview XI 19 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More
  • Machinery. -1". BE 4/O INDUSTRY/O (open 6/73) Boxes 12, 18 Concerns oil industry: price stability and increases, oil production, National Petroleum Council, building new oil refineries, plight of independent gasoline dealers, and President's meeting
  • , and Duluth, Minnesota, grain dealers’ dispute/ LA 6/Aircraft STRIKES-WORK STOPPAGES/AIRCRAFT Processed. Material on 1967 settlement of AVCO-UAW dispute, and strikes against McDonnell Aircraft, Boeing, Douglas Aircraft Company, and Long Island Sperry
  • , and not the mail contracts. just as he has done many times betore, and other New Dealers. lie took it during all those -17bitter days ot the beginning damned him tor not ot the administration, th,1fi ♦Xag ant when Congressmen ot Jobs~ He took it whe
  • working at his job full-time and doing the best he knows how." If I were the same voter and saw th~ usual photograph we put out, I would say "There's old Johnson, trying to look like a plaster saint, when everybody knows 11 he's a wheeler-dealer politician
  • good, he could also be ruthless, Caro told the audience, as when he destroyed the ca­ reer of Leland Olds, "an idealistic Ne, Dealer. He had worked for Franklin Roosevelt all his life .... His field of ex­ pertise was public power; power from dams
  • and there's a recall of this, or that, or you get the notice in the mail from your auto dealer. In those days, those recalls were devastating. They were big; they were front-page news often. That was what we regarded as the real deterrent. We also had
  • Street Plan Hearings, Committee Reports, Bills: Urban Mass Transportation Act of 1963 Hearings, Committee Reports, Bills: Public Day Care Hearings, Committee Reports, Bills: Regulation of Automobile Dealers, D.C. Housing Code and Urban Renewal Development
  • in. If you find, you might say, a "wheeler-dealer" type, you are going to find a lot of borderline loans and investments in the bank. Sometimes they become too earnings-conscious. On the other hand, and this is somewhat of a criticism in and of itself, you
  • . In fact, I just know that to be the case and I think very cor­ rectly so, because he ran as a 100 per cent New Dealer in the Austin area about the time President Roosevelt was having some controversy with Senator Tom Connally about trying to pack
  • , [William S.] Knudsen was in charge of it, and the build-up, it was evident to even the most ardent New Dealers that we had to put all the muscle we could behind defense and pick up the crumbs, so to speak, for the domestic programs. I was always partial
  • -dealer as majority leader, someone who could always get together enough votes to pass a bill or defeat a bill. Did you observe him in that role? C: Oh yes, I saw him on the floor working on people, tugging on their lapels and so forth. He was just very
  • was the last of the New Dealers, do you think that stands up, or do you think he carved his own direction? E: I think he carved his own record. I think Lyndon was--there are a lo.t of things that I didn't agree with, of course, but I think Lyndon made
  • particularly qualified for one committee or another. But although he did these things that were so correct and so good and so proper, he frequently did them in a way that got people annoyed and gave him the image of being a wheeler-dealer. B: Did any of his
  • . What the Kaisers had done, I think quite foolishly, is wired all of their automobile dealers in New Hampshire to work against Bridges. Had you heard about that? Well, Bridges naturally was not pleased. What else? G: Well-- B: Let me tell you
  • days everybody didn't have a radio set and the dealers would put one out on the street for World Series games and big speeches--Roosevelt was making a big speech, and he was giving the malefactors of great wealth hell in his way. o~m superior And two
  • per adult. And the liquor dealers in some of these areas were quite upset by this. M: So you lowered the actual amount on certain items? J: Just on liquor. M: Just on liquor? J: However, this did have an effect; I mean, it reduced the-- M
  • of the Supreme Court, which I believed in firmly in the light of the way the then members of the Court had been throwing practically all the best New Deal measures out the window. I was very, very much a New Dealer at heart and took it very seriously
  • that? How did he get Molly [George W.] Malone to We had to in those days. vote with him? M: Well, because Lyndon worked with them on some things. Lyndon, although some critics say he was nothing but a New Dealer, was actually a moderate. the times. been
  • -- of course, that was right after the depression. And there were more people sympathetic to the New Deal than claimed to be New Dealers. And here was a young fellow who had come along, and was carrying it out, so they went for him. I would say generally
  • the day down at her father's store after her mother passed away, is this right? P: She did. On occasion they would bring her there. She loved coming to the store. Mr. Taylor was truly a dealer in everything. He also had coffins upstairs where they kept
  • with [George] Humphrey, because Humphrey thought he was smarter than Eisenhower and he was domineering. The staff didn't like Humphrey, because he was arrogant with his wealth and he was always a self-dealer. Anderson did not have those characteristics
  • club, so I didn't get to know him there . Lyndon was not But my impres­ sion of Lyndon was that he was a kind of wheeler-dealer . what Lyndon thought nor where he stood . I never knew And I think he learned many of his political skills when he
  • to scene of major events (f) · see firearms (g) rumors that police (h) obtain dealers there copies and pawnbrokers are Negro corpses hidden of Lomax speech before by NAACP (i) Tie in speeches giveµ in area before, during, after, etc. I . (j
  • hus­ bands and thirteen children, for I had told him often enough." Mrs. Johnson recalled her father's country store, and its sign over the door: "T. J. Taylor, Dealer in Everything.'' '·Jgrew up listening to the wind in the pine trees of the East Texas
  • we are pr iding a :upp m r gr m for drug dealers and liqu r tore'. If we nly had a ten-perc nt succ rat in trcat­ in0 prison r , th co ·t f treating all f them would b rec up d \\·ithin a year. "And the impact on our crime problem would be enormous
  • ,'· "arm-I wisting," "wheeler-dealer: .. -When Senator Richard Russell declined to serve on the Warren 01111111s1011. LBJ retorted, ··y u're my man on that commission! And you're gem' do it! I can't arrest ou, and f'm not going to put th FBI on you
  • Johnson was big about was having no scandal. He just didn't want any scandal. He was very conscious of the wheeler-dealer problem. Indeed, I don't think we had a single scandal. The Bobby Baker thing occurred in the Senate. He used to say it occurred
  • Dealers make me sick, because where would you be if you could not get people like me elected to Congress?" That was a ve ry characte ristic thing for him to say. He was always cons cious of the Texas electorate breathing down his neck. I have a poor