Thanks for the info, but you failed to answer my question: was LBJ expected to leave the limo?
RE open limo, pretty stupid plotters as they could have eliminated both JFK and LBJ in Dealey Plaza and taken a year off in '64.
Like hitting two birds with one stone, considering the amount of effort it must have taken to plan and control the cover-up.
(Unless, of cause, LBJ was in on it from the get-go)
I assume LBJ was expected to get out of the limo at one of the scheduled stops on Saturday, October 31, 1964. That would be the only way they could assassinate him.
Killing him at the same time they killed JFK on November 22, 1963, was contrary to their plan.
The 25th Amendment to the Constitution, providing for Presidential succession and the appointment of a new Vice President, did not become part of the Constitution until 1967.
There was no Vice President on Saturday, October 31, 1964.
The first person in line for the Presidency was John W. McCormack, a Representative from Massachusetts who had been elected Speaker of the House in January 1962 following the death of House Speaker Sam Rayburn. President Johnson’s death would have catapulted Congressman McCormack into the Presidency on Saturday, October 31, 1964, after serving as Speaker of the House for less than three years.
The United States would be into the third day of a McCormack Presidency on Tuesday, November 3, 1964, when the American people voted in an election pitting the late President Lyndon Johnson against CIA officer and KGB asset Barry Goldwater.
With Johnson dead, the Southern states, including the electoral prizes of Texas and Florida, would definitely not be going to the liberal “Vice Presidential candidate,” Hubert Humphrey, nor would the mountain states, where conservatism flourished in 1964.
As for the electoral prize of California, it already had one Republican Senator going into the 1964 election, and a second Republican Senator was elected in 1964. San Francisco, which hosted the Republican National Convention in 1964, had a Republican Mayor at the time and had nothing but Republican Mayors from 1912 to 1964, and California was conservative enough to elect staunch Goldwater supporter Ronald Reagan as its Governor in 1966.
Goldwater’s running mate was Representative William Miller of New York, Chairman of the Republican National Committee. Going into the 1964 election, the electoral prize of New York had two Republican Senators and a Republican Governor, and more than half of New York’s forty-one Congressional Representatives were Republicans.
Efforts to block Senator Barry Goldwater’s election to the Presidency would be totally devoid of the political capital garnered by the late Presidents Kennedy and Johnson among liberals, moderates, independents, and conservatives. Even with fellow Southerner Lyndon Johnson alive and running as the incumbent President, the electoral prize of Florida gave 49 percent of its vote to Goldwater.
People who were determined to stop Goldwater from being elected to the Presidency would have to figure out who, if anyone, they were trying to elect as President.
Were they now trying to elect Johnson’s running mate, Senator Hubert Humphrey, to the Presidency, or were they trying to elect President John W. McCormack to a four-year term?
Were they trying to elect President McCormack to a four-year term while electing Vice Presidential candidate Hubert Humphrey to the Office of Vice President?
Or were they trying to elect one of them to the Office of President while not electing anyone to the Office of Vice President?
Devout opponents of Barry Goldwater would have to tune in to the news, read the newspapers on Sunday and Monday, and try to find out from polling officials just who and what they were voting for as they futilely tried to prevent Goldwater from being elected President.
According to the Twentieth Amendment to the Constitution, if the Johnson-Humphrey ticket prevailed on election day with President Johnson dead, Vice Presidential candidate Hubert Humphrey would become the “Vice President-elect,” while no one would be elected to the Presidency. Humphrey would then “become President” at the “beginning of the term of the President” on January 20, 1965, and the Vice Presidency, which had been vacant for fourteen months, would remain vacant for another four years.
John W. McCormack would relinquish the Presidency and most likely return to his position as Speaker of the House, where the Massachusetts Representative would again be first in line for the Presidency should anything happen to “President Humphrey.”
Few people would realize that their only choice would be to elect Hubert Humphrey to the Office of Vice President and that Vice President-elect Humphrey would “become President” at the “beginning of the term of the President.”
A 1964 CIA memorandum states that the “Disinformation Department” of the KGB has “covert propaganda campaigns aimed at the creation of confusion and panic in Western countries.”
In the end, the confused 1964 election would pit a liberal Senator from Minnesota, who had done no campaigning for President and who, as the Vice Presidential candidate, had no running mate, against the well-traveled, high-profile Republican nominee, Senator Barry Goldwater, and his running mate, Representative William Miller of New York, Chairman of the Republican National Committee.KGB officers inside the CIA would have easily realized their goal of having Barry Goldwater elected to the Presidency in 1964. Robert Babcock’s story about a bet with “barroom acquaintances” would not have helped him any more than a letter to “President Goldwater” stating, as a very upset Lee Harvey Oswald once said, “I emphatically deny these charges.”
Once they knew their plan to kill President Johnson had gone awry, certain individuals in the “Secret Service” made sure that Robert Babcock was only “charged with disorderly conduct and jailed for the night.”
Maybe you should just read the book -->
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07V9JT65Y