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Explanation how President Lyndon B. Johnson interviewed Hubert H. Humphrey for the job of Vice President. Also refer to recent history, politics, campaign, Democrats, Republicans, Kennedy, McGovern, Nixon, Agnew, Ron Kurtus, School for Champions. Copyright © Restrictions

When President Johnson Grilled Hubert Humphrey

by Ron Kurtus (revised 15 September 2001)

The selection process of the United States Vice President follows different courses. At one time, the Vice President was selected as the person who came in second in the presidential election. In other cases--such as how Lyndon B. Johnson was selected as Vice President to John F. Kennedy--it is done through back-room politics where party regulars try to pick someone who will most likely help the ticket.

Another method is when the candidate selects the best person for the job. This is what Lyndon Johnson did when he picked Hubert H. Humphrey as his running mate in the 1964 elections. Johnson was very thorough in his interview of Humphrey for the job. Other choices were done with less thought.

Questions you may have include:

This less will answer those questions. There is a mini-quiz near the end of the lesson.

Johnson checks Humphrey

Lyndon B. Johnson went about the selection of a vice presidential running-mate for the upcoming elections the same way an employer would go about in hiring an important company manager. He had a background check, looked over a resume of qualifications, and held a personal interview.

Asked pointed questions

During the interview with Senator Hubert H. Humphrey, President Johnson grilled the candidate. He asked him personal questions. Johnson wanted to know if Humphrey had a drinking problem, if he had an extra-marital affairs, or if he had any "skeletons in the closet."

Humphrey incensed

Humphrey was incensed at the idea of Johnson suspecting him of any wrong doings or hanky-panky. He told Johnson something to the effect of, "Mr. President. I have been a leader in the Senate for years. I resent these types of questions."

Johnson got up close to Humphrey and said quietly, "Hubert. This is the big time. If there is anything... anything that you have hidden, the press will find out about it and make it an issue."

Johnson failed elsewhere

President Johnson was a professional politician and a realist. It is a shame that he did not apply those traits in handling the Vietnam War. Apparently, his landslide victory distorted his vision.

Other Vice Presidential selections

Compare President Johnson's astute handling of the selection of a Vice President to how careless other presidential candidates picked their running mates.

Senator McGovern goofs

Senator George McGovern picked Missouri Senator Eagleton as his running mate without really checking into Eagleton's background. Shortly afterwards, the press discovered Eagleton had a drinking problem and had a nervous breakdown. McGovern was forced to pick someone else to run with him.

Nixon picks a crook

Richard Nixon picked Spiro Agnew as his Vice President without knowing that Agnew had been involved in illegal payoffs as Governor or Maryland. Agnew continued getting payoffs while Vice President and was later forced to resign in disgrace.

Summary

Lyndon B. Johnson was very thorough in interviewing Hubert H. Humphrey before selecting him as his running mate. Meanwhile George McGovern and Richard Nixon were somewhat careless in their selections.

Lessons we can learn from this are:

Can you think of any others?

Reader questions and feedback


Be honest and of good character


Resources

The following are some resources on this topic.

Websites

Biography of Lyndon B. Johnson - from White House website

LBJ Library and Museum

Hubert H. Humphrey Biography - from U.S. Congress website

History Resources

Books

Johnson

Top-rated books on Lyndon Johnson

Humphrey

Top-rated books on Hubert Humphrey


Mini-quiz to check your understanding

1. Why was Johnson so thorough in checking out Humphrey?

Johnson was a consummate politician who knew what was required to win

Johnson loved to find out facts about people that he could use against them

Johnson was suspicious that Humphrey may know too much

2. What is wrong if a candidate used to have a drinking problem?

There is always the change he might show up for work drunk

The competition could use that fact to raise doubts about the person

It shows that he can't hold his liquor and is not suitable for politics

3. What is a view on why President Johnson did a poor job later?

A landslide victory clouded his common sense

Humphrey undermined him for asking the embarrassing questions

He asked too many people embarrassing questions

If you got all three correct, you are on your way to becoming a Champion in History. If you had problems, you had better look over the material again.


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