Mansfield and Dirksen

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A01=Marc C. Johnson
American politics
Author_Marc C. Johnson
bipartisan
bipartisanship
Category=JPH
Category=JPVC
Category=NHK
civil rights
civil rights conflict
civil rights movement of the 1960s
democratic institutions
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Everett Dirksen
forthcoming
John F. Kennedy
Lyndon B. Johnson
Medicare
mid-twentieth century
Mike Mansfield
nuclear arms limitation treaty
political system
presidential history
social welfare
twentieth century
twentieth-century America
twentieth-century American politics
United States Senate
Vietnam War
voting rights

Product details

  • ISBN 9780806197500
  • Weight: 567g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Oct 2026
  • Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The U.S. Senate is so sharply polarized along partisan and ideological lines today that it’s easy to believe it was always this way. But in the turbulent 1960s, even as battles over civil rights and the war in Vietnam dominated American politics, bipartisanship often prevailed. One key reason: two remarkable leaders who remain giants of the Senate—Republican leader Everett Dirksen of Illinois and Democratic leader Mike Mansfield of Montana, the longest-serving majority leader in Senate history, so revered for his integrity, fairness, and modesty that the late Washington Post reporter David Broder called him “the greatest American I ever met.” The political and personal relationship of these party leaders, extraordinary by today’s standards, is the lens through which Marc C. Johnson examines the Senate in that tumultuous time.

Working together, with the Democrat often ceding public leadership to his Republican counterpart, Mansfield and Dirksen passed landmark civil rights and voting rights legislation, created Medicare, and helped bring about a foundational nuclear arms limitation treaty. The two leaders could not have been more different in personality and style: Mansfield, a laconic, soft-spoken, almost shy college history professor, and Dirksen, an aspiring actor known for his flamboyance and sense of humor, dubbed the “Wizard of Ooze” by reporters. Drawing on extensive Senate archives, Johnson explores the congressional careers of these iconic leaders, their intimate relationships with Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, and their own close professional friendship based on respect, candor, and mutual affection.

A study of politics but also an analysis of different approaches to leadership, this is a portrait of a U.S. Senate that no longer exists—one in which two leaders, while exercising partisan political responsibilities, could still come together to pass groundbreaking legislation—and a reminder of what is possible.
Marc C. Johnson is a Mansfield Fellow at the University of Montana’s Mansfield Center. He has worked as a broadcast journalist and communication and crisis management consultant and served as a top aide to Idaho’s longest-serving governor, Cecil D. Andrus. His writing on politics and history has been published in the New York Times, California Journal of Politics and Policy, and Montana The Magazine of Western History and appears regularly on the blog Many Things Considered.

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