As would be any person who believes in not exceeding constitutional authority. FedZilla actually has no authority to implement these programs. Unfortunately for him, his principled opposition was portrayed by the Left-Wing media as blatant racism.
Thats what estranged black voters from the Republican party that election cycle, and Nixons Southern Strategy finished the job.
Black votes for Nixon more than doubled from Goldwater's election of 1964. It went from 6% to 15%.
The Great Society programs werent in place at that time, and in fact Goldwaters trouncing is what made their passage possible, not the other way around.
Johnson started the year out (on January 8, 1964) talking about the War on Poverty
The actual programs didn't have to be in place for them to have their effect. The mere promise of opening the coffers and sending money to help all the poor folk is enough to motivate people to vote for it to see if it happens. Back in those days, people believed the Government when it said it was going to do something.
This is exactly what doomed Greek Democracy. In fact, this is what always dooms Democracy.
For someone who is all about citing the Declaration of Independence, you're certainly quick to tell people who are being systematically excluded from having a voice in their government that they're out of luck. Maybe black citizens should have invoked self-evident truths, declared themselves to be a different country, and started shooting. Because that would have been a better way to resolve the problem than a federal voting rights act.
Black votes for Nixon more than doubled from Goldwater's election of 1964. It went from 6% to 15%.
Half what they were before 1964. Let me guess. Media's fault.