1964 Johnson VS. Goldwater

"Dowager"

Transcript

Museum of the Moving IMage
The Living Room Candidate - Transcript
"Dowager," Goldwater, 1964

GARBY: I'm Mrs. Garby. I'm sick and tired of my husband working his head off to pay high taxes, while the men in Washington are using their big political jobs to get rich at our expense. I know some people say that we have to have corruption in government, but I want to know what Barry Goldwater can do about this.

GOLDWATER: Americans everywhere are indignant about the moral decay in Washington, and nobody should accept corruption in positions of public trust as a way of life. All it takes to clean it up is an administration that really wants it cleaned up, and one that has the moral courage to fire the influence-peddlers and graft-takers, no matter who they may be. All it takes when you come right down to it, is a real confidence that free Americans can and should run their own lives.

Announcer: In your heart, you know he's right. Vote for Barry Goldwater and put conscience back in government.

Credits

"Dowager," Republican National Committee, 1964

Maker: Interpublic: Erwin Wasey, Ruthrauff and Ryan, Inc.

Video courtesy of the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library.

From Museum of the Moving Image, The Living Room Candidate: Presidential Campaign Commercials 1952-2012.
www.livingroomcandidate.org/commercials/1964/dowager (accessed March 28, 2025).

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1964 Johnson Goldwater Results

President Lyndon B. Johnson, who took office following John F. Kennedy’s assassination in November 1963, enhanced his image as a tough legislator by winning a hard-fought battle to pass the landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964, which guaranteed African-Americans access to all public facilities, and banned discrimination by race, religion, or sex. The Vietnam War was escalating, but had yet to become a real liability for Johnson.

The margin of Johnson’s landslide victory in 1964 was partly a repudiation of Barry Goldwater’s extreme right-wing views. Goldwater, an Arizona senator and author of the best-selling book The Conscience of a Conservative, won the Republican nomination after a bitter primary campaign against moderate New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller. In his acceptance speech, Goldwater made the infamous statement, "Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice. Moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue." The assertion, meant as a defense of conservatism, merged in the public consciousness with statements in which Goldwater advocated the use of tactical nuclear weapons in Vietnam and argued that Social Security be made voluntary.

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