HomeTwo Suns of the Southwest: Lyndon Johnson Barry Goldwater and the 1964 Battle between Liberalism and Conservatism (American Presidential Elections)
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Two Suns of the Southwest: Lyndon Johnson Barry Goldwater and the 1964 Battle between Liberalism and Conservatism (American Presidential Elections)

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Over time the presidential election of 1964 has come to be seen as a generational shift a defining moment in which Americans deliberated between two distinctly different visions for the future. In its juxtaposition of these divergent visions Two Suns of the Southwest is the first full account of this critical election and its legacy for US politics. The 1964 election in Nancy Beck Youngs telling was a contest between two men of the Southwest each with a very different idea of what the Southwest was and what America should be. Barry Goldwater the Republican senator from Arizona came to represent a nostalgic idealized past a preservation of traditional order while Lyndon B. Johnson the Democratic incumbent from Texas looked boldly and hopefully toward an expansive liberal future of increased opportunity. Thus as we see in Two Suns of the Southwest the election was also a showdown between liberalism and conservatism an election whose outcome would echo throughout the rest of the century. Young explores how demographics namely the rise of the Sunbelt factored into the framing and reception of these competing ideas. Her work situates Johnsons Sunbelt liberalism as universalist designed to create space for all Americans; Goldwaters Sunbelt conservatism was far more restrictive at least with regard to what the federal government should do. In this respect the election became a debate about individual rights versus legislated equality as priorities of the federal government. Young explores all the cultural and political elements and events that figured in this narrative allowing Johnson to unite disaffected Republicans with independents and Democrats in a winning coalition. On a final note Young connects the 1964 election to the current state of our democracy explaining the irony whereby the winning candidates vision has grown stale while the losing candidates has become much more central to American politics.