All week long, we marked the 50th anniversary of President John F. Kennedy’s assassination. On Saturday, we’ll mark the 50 years since Kennedy’s successor had his first full day as president.
Half a century later, so much of the legacy of Lyndon Baines Johnson, particularly his vision of “The Great Society” and method for getting Congress to work his way, is as relevant today as it was then. As America continued to mourn the loss of what could have been with Kennedy, President Johnson got to work passing legislation that would change the lives of millions of Americans for the better. Though JFK remains one of our most beloved presidents, it is LBJ who remains one of our most accomplished leaders.
On Saturday’s Melissa Harris-Perry, join us for a discussion on the legacy of LBJ and the lasting affect his legislative victories have had on this country from poverty to civil rights to the state of our current immigration system.









