Mayor Daley, Eleanor Daley, Lady Bird Johnson, and President Johnson in Chicago's Chinatown, 1966
1 2021-02-15T12:59:59-06:00 Dan Harper eff3db32ed95b3efe91d381826e2c10c145cd452 26 4 Mayor Richard J. Daley, Eleanor Daley, Colonel Jack Riley, Lady Bird Johnson, and President Lyndon B. Johnson in Chicago's Chinatown, May 17, 1966. RJD_04_01_0073_0001_009. Richard J. Daley collection, University of Illinois Chicago. plain 2021-04-29T17:31:33-05:00 RJD_04_01_0073_0001_009 1966 Dan Harper eff3db32ed95b3efe91d381826e2c10c145cd452This page is referenced by:
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Vietnam War
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From the 1950s through 1975, the United States sent and maintained military advisors and soldiers to South Vietnam to prevent a communist takeover in that country. As the war escalated, American involvement was extremely controversial. As the number of casualties mounted, opposition to the war became more organized and visible.
Newton Minow, former chair of the Federal Communications Commission, recalls Mayor Daley's private opposition to U.S. involvement in Vietnam:In those days, Vietnam was very controversial. And he knew that a lot of our friends were on either side. And he knew how hard it was. My brothers lost a very good friend. Jay McKeon was one of Michael’s best friends. He died in Vietnam. And he did not have to go. He should have been home. So it was a terrible war. It was not good on either side.
Mary Carol Vanecko, daughter of Richard J. Daley, interview excerpt, March 5, 2009[My father] recommended [to President Johnson], “You appoint a commission of five people….I’ll pick the three who would be against, you pick the two for it. It will go down three to two. It won’t be your decision. They’ll come back and say, “We recommend getting out.” But Johnson became very stubborn. The war machine was there with McNamara. A lot of Democrats were supporting this, the domino theory, and all of that.
Richard M. Daley, son of Richard J. Daley, interview excerpt, March 11, 2009People had the mistaken impression that Daley was in favor of the war. It was just his loyalty to Johnson, “I’m not going to undercut my president.” And I think his logic was pretty straightforward, “Why spend all of this money bombing another country when you can spend it building my city, and other ones?” He never said that in those words. But that’s what he figured. So he told Humphrey, “You’ve got to come out against the war.” And Humphrey said, “I can’t do that.” And Daley said, “Why not?” He said, “Lyndon wouldn’t like it.” And Daley said, “So what? You’re the nominee.”
Alex Seith, Illinois Senate Candidate, December 19, 2008