Skip to main content

Outed

LBJ’s Confidant and the Arrest That Transformed a Presidency

Outed

LBJ’s Confidant and the Arrest That Transformed a Presidency

The story of the scandal in the LBJ administration that first brought queer life into the national political conversation in the 1960s.

In 1964, Lyndon B. Johnson’s longest-serving and most trusted advisor, Walter Jenkins, was arrested for soliciting sex in a YMCA bathroom near the White House. The scandal blasted across the front pages of major US newspapers, was dissected and analyzed by the FBI, and became a watershed in making straight America aware of queer life. In Outed, historian Timothy Stewart-Winter reveals that the effects of antigay policing were felt not only by the men but by their colleagues, families, and, in this case, the First Family.

Walter Jenkins’s political banishment had long-ranging effects, from how Johnson conducted the remainder of his presidency to how media coverage of political and sexual scandals became more explicit and salacious. Stewart-Winter reveals Jenkins’s influence and legacy, encompassing but also looking beyond the scandal. Jenkins had a significant impact on Johnson’s career and how it is remembered, including both his signal accomplishment—the programs and laws that constituted the Great Society—and his signal failure: his catastrophic judgment, after Jenkins’s exile, regarding the Vietnam War.

Drawing on Jenkins’s previously unexamined personal papers, including hundreds of letters he received in the aftermath from ordinary Americans and government officials alike, Stewart-Winter shows how antigay policies and the revelations around them continue to reverberate today.

Reviews

Timothy Stewart-Winter takes a deep dive into the arrest that nearly derailed Lyndon Johnson’s presidency in 1964. At the center of the story is Walter Jenkins, a top White House aide whose scandal Stewart-Winter uses to excavate the hidden world of homosexuality in Washington during the Cold War era and to reveal how Johnson survived the fallout. But Stewart-Winter goes further, arguing that the media and public response to the Jenkins affair marked an unlikely turning point: the moment when public attitudes toward homosexuality in American public life began, slowly and quietly, to shift. 
 

Julian E. Zelizer, author of 'The Fierce Urgency of Now: Lyndon B. Johnson, Congress, and the Battle for the Great Society'

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. Two Washingtons
2. The Best Man I’ve Got
3. No. 168287
4. West Wing, East Wing
5. The Columnists
6. The Mail
7. LBJ’s Loss
8. The Homosexual Citizen in the Great Society
Epilogue

Acknowledgments
Archives and Collections Consulted
Notes
Index

Be the first to know

Get the latest updates on new releases, special offers, and media highlights when you subscribe to our email lists!

Sign up here for updates about the Press