Lyndon Johnson was raised on a farm near Stonewall in the Hill Country of central Texas, he was said to always work hard for the things he believed and never gave up. Johnson was faced with many difficulties throughout his presidential carrier, one being the Civil Rights Act. At first Johnson did not directly oppose the bill, but later on he fully stood behind it, passing the bill. Was standing up for what he believed was right the reason Lyndon Johnson signed the Civil Rights Bill of 1964? In 1957 Johnson was a senator for the state of Texas, the 1957 Civil Rights Bill was brought to his attention. According to Document D, he did not directly oppose the bill; however, he did help push through a provision saying that anyone accused of violating the act would get a jury trial. Most Southerners during this time did not support federal civil rights laws, this left Johnson with no choice but to take the side of his state to get the votes he needed in his climb to political power. …show more content…
The poll asked, "Do you think the Johnson Administration is pushing integration too fast or not fast enough?", 39% said it was about right, 30% said it was too fast, 15% said not fast enough. Although a bigger majority of the people said they were pushing it too fast than fast enough, more than that said it was all just about right. April of 1964, three months before the Civil Rights Bill was passed, another poll asked "Do you approve or disapprove of the way Lyndon Johnson is handling the civil rights problem?" Over half, 57% approved of the way Johnson was handling the problem, 21% disapproved and 22% had no opinion (Document B). When Kennedy was in office and took the same poll, 50% said the Kennedy Administration is pushing integration too fast. Johnson is working hard to push this bill, but if he pushes too fast it is likely to mess up all the work he's put into passing