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The term New Frontier was used by John F. Kennedy in his acceptance speech in the 1960 United States presidential election to the Democratic National Convention at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum as the Democratic slogan to inspire America to support him. The phrase developed into a label for his administration's domestic and foreign programs.

[W]e stand today on the edge of a New Frontier -— the frontier of the 1960's, the frontier of unknown opportunities and perils, the frontier of unfilled hopes and unfilled threats. ... Beyond that frontier are uncharted areas of science and space, unsolved problems of peace and war, unconquered problems of ignorance and prejudice, unanswered questions of poverty and surplus.[1]

In the words of Robert D. Marcus: “Kennedy entered office with ambitions to eradicate poverty and to raise America’s eyes to the stars through the space program".[2]

Amongst the legislation passed by Congress during the Kennedy administration, unemployment benefits were expanded, aid was provided to cities to improve housing and transportation, funds were allocated to continue the construction of a national highway system started under Eisenhower, a water pollution control act was passed to protect the country’s rivers and streams, and an agricultural act to raise farmers’ incomes was made law.[3] A significant amount of anti-poverty legislation was passed by Congress, including increases in social security benefits and in the minimum wage, several housing bills, and aid to economically distressed areas. A few antirecession public works packages,[4] together with a number of measures designed to assist farmers,[5] were introduced. Major expansions and improvements were made in Social Security (including retirement at 62 for men), hospital construction, library services, family farm assistance and reclamation.[6] Food stamps for low-income Americans were reintroduced, food distribution to the poor was increased, and there was an expansion in school milk and school lunch distribution.[7] The most comprehensive farm legislation since 1938 was carried out, with expansions in rural electrification, soil conservation, crop insurance, farm credit, and marketing orders.[8]

According to Theodore White, under John F. Kennedy, more new legislation was actually approved and passed into law than at any other time since the Thirties.[9] When Congress recessed in the latter part of 1961, 33 out of 53 bills that Kennedy had submitted to Congress were enacted. A year later, 40 out of 54 bills that the Kennedy Administration had proposed were passed by Congress, and in 1963 35 out of 58 “must” bills were enacted. As noted by Larry O’Brien,

“A myth had arisen that he (Kennedy) was uninterested in Congress, or that he “failed” with Congress. The facts, I believe, are otherwise. Kennedy’s legislative record in 1961-63 was the best of any President since Roosevelt’s first term”.[10]

Legislation and programs

Economy

(1.) The addition of a temporary thirteen-week supplement to jobless benefits,

(2.) The extension of aid to the children of unemployed workers,

(3.) The redevelopment of distressed areas,

(4.) An increase in Social Security payments and the encouragement of earlier retirement,

(5.) An increase in the minimum wage and an extension in coverage,

(6.) The provision of emergency relief to feed grain farmers, and

(7.) The financing of a comprehensive home-building and slum clearance program.[12]

The following month, the first of these seven measures became law, and the remaining six measures had been signed by the end of June. Altogether, the economic stimulus program provided an estimated 420,000 construction jobs under a new Housing Act, $175 million in higher wages for those below the new minimum, over $400 million in aid to over 1,000 distressed counties, over $200 million in extra welfare payments to 750,000 children and their parents, and nearly $800 million in extended unemployment benefits for nearly three million unemployed Americans.[13]

According to Kennedy’s friend and biographer, Theodore Sorensen, the measure to extend aid to the children of unemployment workers (which was made permanent in 1962) was “the bill by which Kennedy was best known in the darkest corners of despair in this country”.[14]

Labor

Education

Welfare

Civil rights

Housing

The bill also promised to make the Federal Housing Administration a full partner in urban renewal program by authorizing mortgage loans to finance rehabilitation of homes and urban renewal Committee on housing combined programs for housing, mass transportation, and open space land bills into a single bill.

Unemployment

Medical

Equal rights for women

The President’s Commission on the Status of Women was an advisory commission established on December 14, 1961, by Kennedy to investigate questions regarding women's equality in education, in the workplace, and under the law.[70] The commission, chaired by Eleanor Roosevelt until her death in 1962, was composed of 26 members including legislators and philanthropists who were active in women's rights issues. The main purpose of the committee was to document and examine employment policies in place for women. The commission's final report, American Woman (also known as the Peterson Report after the Commission's second chair, Esther Peterson), was issued in October 1963 and documented widespread discrimination against women in the workplace. Among the practices addressed by the group were labor laws pertaining to hours and wages, the quality of legal representation for women, the lack of education and counseling for working women, and federal insurance and tax laws that affected women's incomes. Recommendations included affordable child care for all income levels, hiring practices that promoted equal opportunity for women, and paid maternity leave.[71]

In early 1960s, full-time working women were paid on average 59 percent of the earnings of their male counterparts. In order to eliminate some forms of sex-based pay discrimination, Kennedy signed the Equal Pay Act into law on June 10, 1963.[72] During the law's first ten years, 171,000 employees received back pay worth $84 million dollars.[73]

Environment

Crime

Defense

The Kennedy administration with its new Secretary of Defense, Robert S. McNamara, gave a strong priority to countering communist political subversion and guerrilla tactics in the so-called "wars of national liberation," in the rapidly decolonising Third World. As well as fighting and winning a nuclear war, the American military was also trained and equipped for counterinsurgency operations. Though the U.S. Army Special Forces had been created in 1952, Kennedy visited the Fort Bragg U.S. Army Special Warfare Center in a blaze of publicity and gave his permission for the Special Forces to adopt the green beret. The other services launched their own counterinsurgency forces in 1961; the U.S. Air Force created the 1st Air Commando Group and the U.S. Navy created the Navy Seals.

The U.S. Military increased in size and faced possible confrontation with the Soviets in Berlin Wall escalation of tensions in 1961 and with the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962. American troops were sent to Laos and South Vietnam in increasing numbers. The United States provided a clandestine operation to supply military aid and support to Cuban exiles in the disastrous Bay of Pigs Invasion.

See also

Notes

Constructs such as ibid., loc. cit. and idem are discouraged by Wikipedia's style guide for footnotes, as they are easily broken. Please improve this article by replacing them with named references (quick guide), or an abbreviated title. (September 2010) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
  1. ^ [1]
  2. ^ A Brief History of the United States since 1945 by Robert D. Marcus
  3. ^ An Unfinished Life: John F. Kennedy, 1917-1963 by Robert Dallek
  4. ^ A Brief History of the United States since 1945 by Robert D. Marcus
  5. ^ From Prairie Farmer to Entrepreneur: The Transformation of Midwestern Agriculture by Dennis Sven Nordin and Roy Vernon Scott
  6. ^ Kennedy by Theodore C. Sorensen
  7. ^ ibid
  8. ^ Kennedy by Theodore C. Sorensen
  9. ^ The making of the President, 1964 by Theodore Harold White
  10. ^ Promises Kept: John F.Kennedy's New Frontier by Irving Bernstein
  11. ^ Kennedy by Theodore C. Sorensen
  12. ^ ibid
  13. ^ ibid
  14. ^ ibid
  15. ^ Kennedy by Theodore C. Sorensen
  16. ^ Promises Kept: John F.Kennedy's New Frontier by Irving Bernstein
  17. ^ Kennedy by Theodore C. Sorensen
  18. ^ A Brief History of the United States since 1945 by Robert D. Marcus
  19. ^ Kennedy by Theodore C. Sorensen
  20. ^ Executive Order 11075
  21. ^ http://www.jfklink.com/speeches/jfk/
  22. ^ Public personnel policy: the politics of civil service by David H. Rosenbloom
  23. ^ Governments, Parties, and Public Sector Employees: Canada, United States, Britain, and France" by Andre Blais, Stephane Dion, and Donald E. Blake
  24. ^ Emerging Labor Market Institutions for the Twenty-First Century by Richard B. Freeman, Joni Hersch, and Lawrence Mishel
  25. ^ ibid
  26. ^ ibid
  27. ^ The guide to United States popular culture by Pat Browne
  28. ^ Promises Kept: John F.Kennedy's New Frontier by Irving Bernstein
  29. ^ Children and youth in America: a documentary history: Volume 3, Part 1 by Robert Hamlett Bremner
  30. ^ Kennedy by Theodore C. Sorensen
  31. ^ Class in America: A-G by Robert E. Weir
  32. ^ A new deal for social security By Peter J. Ferrara and Michael Tanner
  33. ^ http://www.ssa.gov/history/1960.html
  34. ^ The dynamics of social welfare policy by Joel Blau and Mimi Abramovitz
  35. ^ From Prairie Farmer to Entrepreneur: The Transformation of Midwestern Agriculture by Dennis Sven Nordin and Roy Vernon Scott
  36. ^ Debating the Kennedy presidency by James N. Giglio and Stephen G. Rabe
  37. ^ ibid
  38. ^ Western welfare in decline: globalization and women's poverty by Catherine Pélissier Kingfisher
  39. ^ Debating the Kennedy presidency by James N. Giglio and Stephen G. Rabe
  40. ^ Kennedy by Theodore C. Sorensen
  41. ^ ibid
  42. ^ ibid
  43. ^ http://www.fns.usda.gov/fdd/aboutfd/history.htm
  44. ^ Class in America: A-G by Robert E. Weir
  45. ^ http://www.ssa.gov/history/1960.html
  46. ^ ibid
  47. ^ A history of child welfare by Eve P. Smith and Lisa A. Merkel-Holguín
  48. ^ http://www.ssa.gov/history/1960.html
  49. ^ Promises Kept: John F.Kennedy's New Frontier by Irving Bernstein
  50. ^ Promises Kept: John F.Kennedy's New Frontier by Irving Bernstein
  51. ^ ibid
  52. ^ ibid
  53. ^ Kennedy by Theodore C. Sorensen
  54. ^ Class in America: A-G by Robert E. Weir
  55. ^ http://www.rurdev.usda.gov/rd/70th/History%20of%20Farmers%20Home.pdf
  56. ^ http://www.rurdev.usda.gov/rd/70th/History%20of%20Farmers%20Home.pdf
  57. ^ Kennedy by Theodore C. Sorensen
  58. ^ ibid
  59. ^ ibid
  60. ^ http://www.brook.edu/gs/cps/50ge/endeavors/job.htm
  61. ^ NIH - The NIH Almanac - NIMH
  62. ^ The changing federal role in U.S. health care policy By Jennie J. Kronenfeld
  63. ^ ibid
  64. ^ Kennedy by Theodore C. Sorensen
  65. ^ The changing federal role in U.S. health care policy By Jennie J. Kronenfeld
  66. ^ Issues in health care policy by John B. McKinlay
  67. ^ Case management in health care by Peggy Rossi
  68. ^ http://disability.law.uiowa.edu/csadp_docs/APPENDIX_2_APR.txt
  69. ^ ibid
  70. ^ Executive Order 10980
  71. ^ http://www.lexisnexis.com/academic/2upa/Aph/pcmStatusWomen.asp University Publications of America :: International Studies
  72. ^ The Equal Pay Act Turns 40
  73. ^ Freeman, Jo. The Politics of Women's Liberation: A Case Study of an Emerging Social Movement and Its Relation to the Policy Process, New York, David Mckay, 1975, 174-177.
  74. ^ Kennedy by Theodore C. Sorensen
  75. ^ ibid
  76. ^ Kennedy by Theodore C. Sorensen

http://www.jfklibrary.org/Historical+Resources/Archives/Reference+Desk/Speeches/JFK/JFK+Pre-Pres/1960/Address+of+Senator+John+F.+Kennedy+Accepting+the+Democratic+Party+Nomination+for+the+Presidency+of+t.htm — Full text of the New Frontier speech