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Great Society

noun

  1. the goal of the Democratic Party under the leadership of President Lyndon B. Johnson, chiefly to enact domestic programs to improve education, provide medical care for the aged, and eliminate poverty.


Great Society

  1. The name President Lyndon Johnson gave to his aims in domestic policy. The programs of the Great Society had several goals, including clean air and water, expanded educational opportunities, and the lessening of poverty and disease in the United States. ( See War on Poverty .)
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Example Sentences

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It was something that folks, particularly the Department of Justice, discussed because Reagan was coming in at a time that was post–New Deal, post–Great Society.

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Johnson also used Sequoia to discuss Vietnam strategy and to convince lawmakers to support his Great Society reforms.

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Pound for pound, dollar for dollar, no Democratic president measured up to the Biden-Harris administration’s progressive street cred since LBJ’s Great Society.

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Caro’s suspicion of the government’s ability to do good is another product of its post-Watergate, post-Vietnam, post–Great Society moment, argues Jacob Anbinder, a historian and fellow at Cornell University working on a book about the origins of the housing affordability crisis.

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“How can our great society tolerate the continued brutalization of its citizens by crazed misfits?” he went on.

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