Abstract

The Freedom Budget for All Americans, written under the supervision of Bayard Rustin and released in 1966 by the A. Philip Randolph Institute, was a well developed policy program to secure full economic citizenship for all Americans thanks to an unprecedented government investment. The program challenged the classic definition of civil rights and linked increased government spending to economic justice. It never earned traction and remained at the margins of historical memory by the end of the Johnson Presidency. The recent literature on the Freedom Budget focuses on its ideological milieu and political implications and identifies the strategic errors in coalition building as the main cause of the Freedom Budget defeat. This paper concentrates on a specific element of the plan, the notion of economic equality, and states that the disagreement between radicals and liberals on such a notion ultimately caused the undoing of the coalition.

Details

Title
Freedom Budget for all Americans and Economic Equality
Author
BELTRAMINI, Enrico
Pages
55-66
Section
Articles
Publication year
2017
Publication date
Mar 2017
Publisher
KSP Journals
ISSN
21490422
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1904513584
Copyright
Copyright KSP Journals Mar 2017