Bobby Baker
(LBJ’s right hand man and bag man) told Don Reynolds on Inauguration Day 1/20/61
that the s.o.b. John Kennedy would never live out his term and that he would
die a violent death
Bobby Baker, one of Lyndon Johnson’s closest associates, said
this during the inauguration of John Kennedy
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/JFKbakerB.htm
(11) Edward Jay Epstein, Esquire Magazine (December, 1966)
QUOTE
In January of 1964 the Warren Commission learned that Don B. Reynolds,
insurance agent and close associate of Bobby Baker, had been heard to say the FBI
knew that Johnson was behind the assassination. When
interviewed by the FBI, he denied this. But he did recount an incident during the
swearing in of Kennedy in which Bobby Baker said words to the effect that the s.o.b.
would never live out his term and that he would die a violent death.
UNQUOTE
Lyndon
Johnson told Robert Novak in summer 1962 that the Kennedys were losing the cold
war against the Soviet Union, losing to conservatives in Congress and that Robert Kennedy was planning to dump
him off the 1964 Democratic ticket.
Robert Novak
later married Geraldine, a secretary to LBJ
Notice how
Johnson is telling Novak in the summer of 1962 how the Kennedy Administration
was "losing" the cold war to the Russians. This is before the fall,
1962 Cuban Missile Crisis. I imagine Johnson was using these same arguments
with the generals, the Texas oil men and the military intelligence in the lead
up to the JFK assassination.
Robert Novak:
QUOTE
"After a
Texas-style cookout, LBJ reclined, nearly prone, by the swimming pool. It was
just the two of us drinking Scotch, and he spoke with a candor he never
bestowed on me before or after. He felt the Kennedy administration was in
serious trouble, losing the cold war to the Soviet Union and losing the legislative
war to conservatives in Congress. He said that he had done everything the Kennedys
had wanted, including foreign missions that only guaranteed him bad publicity.
He was repaid with insults and
humiliation, especially from the attorney general. Johnson was sure Bobby Kennedy was plotting to dump him
in 1964. "But I'm going to fool them," he said. "I'm going to pack
it in after the term ends and go home to Texas." That would have
been a huge scoop, but I knew Johnson was just blowing off steam.
As for going back to Texas, the political environment there was hardly more congenial for LBJ than it was in Washington. Johnson's protege, John B. Connally, had just won the Democratic nomination for governor of Texas, which still all but guaranteed election in Texas. As secretary of the Navy, Connally had been the highest Kennedy administration official bearing the LBJ brand.
But campaigning for governor, Connally removed the brand. With JFK and LBJ both unpopular in Texas, Connally ran against the administration he had just left, and won. Talking about Big John in that summer evening in 1962 led Johnson into self-pity. "John has turned my picture to the wall," LBJ told me. "You know I would never turn his picture to the wall."
QUOTE
[Robert Novak, The Prince of Darkness, pp. 90-91]
David Lifton analysis of what Lyndon Johnson was telling Robert Novak
about his major bad blood with the Kennedys in summer, 1962.
David Lifton email to Robert Morrow on 2/18/2020
2/18/2020 - 8:20 AM CST
Robert,
I think you missed an important “data-point.”
By stating this to Novak, LBJ was creating a public record of his having no future political ambition(s). Rather, his intent is to “go home to Texas.” IMHO: This statement is his (somewhat weak) attempt to create the appearance that he has no future political ambition; thus, removing him as having a “personal motive” in the upcoming assassination of JFK. Think about it. . : The bank robber is outside the bank; a key person says, “I don’t know what you guys think you’re up to, but I’ve got to go to the bathroom. Is there a bathroom nearby? Oh well, I’m going down the street to that Texaco station. I think they have a toilet.” etc etc. So. . . He’s no longer at the scene of the crime; he’s not “in charge.” He was just there, but that’s of no consequence, because he left when he suddenly needed to go to the nearest bathroom, down the street.”
Lyndon Johnson told Robert Novak in summer,1962 that the
Kennedys were losing the cold war against the Soviet Union,
For Johnson to be saying this is
significant because (a) That would echo the sort of thing coming from a Curtis
Lemay, (and others of that ilk); and second: since when does a Vice President
take up a political position that is so completely different than his boss, the
President, who is pursuing reasonable compromise, so that the world is
peaceful, and things don’t escalate into a nuclear exchange? IMHO.
DSL
QUOTE
By the fall of 1963 talk was common in Washington that Johnson
would be dropped from the 1964 ticket because he had turned into a negative factor.
A Midwestern senator, who
traveled to Connecticut with the Vice President for a fund-raising affair for
the Vice President’s pal Senator Tom Dodd, reported to his Senate colleagues afterward
that Johnson had lugubriously remarked during their New England visit, “I’m going
to be out of it for a second term. Jack has another man in mind for Vice
President.” So concerned was Johnson over what he believed would be his political
doom that he developed severe stomach pains. But in this instance, the doctor’s
diagnosis found it a coincidence of timing, that he was suffering from an
oversupply of calcium and should eliminated milk from his diet.
[Alfred Steinberg, Sam Johnson’s Boy: A Close-Up of the President
from Texas, p. 589]
(LBJ’s “right
hand man” Bobby Baker had resigned as Secretary of the Senate on 10/7/63)
QUOTE
[Randall Woods, LBJ: Architect of American Ambition, p.
414, Leslie Carpenter oral history]
Thanks, I didn't know. In Eddie Fisher's bio he states at lunch with Curtis Lemay, in Los Angeles, after stating he was going to vote for Bobby Kennedy for president, LeMay told him not to bother, Robert Kennedy was going to be assassinated.
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