Otherwise known as The Moynihan Report after its author, then assistant
labor secretary Daniel Patrick Moynihan, the report identified a rising percentage of black children being raised in households headed by unmarried mothers.
Not exact matches
The severity of this shift in the liberal outlook was displayed most vividly in the reaction to the 1965 report on the black family, issued by the Department of
Labor and written by
Daniel Patrick Moynihan when he was an assistant
secretary there.
U.S. Government Officials: former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, former
Secretary of
Labor Robert Reich, former Senator
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, former
Secretary of Defense Les Aspin
In late 1964,
Daniel Patrick «Pat» Moynihan was a largely unknown 37 - year - old assistant
secretary of
labor in the administration of President Lyndon B. Johnson.
The report was written at the instigation of an assistant
secretary for
labor,
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, who became a close adviser to both President Lyndon Johnson and President Richard Nixon and eventually one of the 20th century's most distinguished members of the U.S. Senate.
In 1965, Assistant
Secretary of
Labor Daniel Patrick Moynihan wrote a highly controversial report, titled The Negro Family: The Case for National Action, that blamed «the deterioration of the fabric of Negro society» on a weak family structure.