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The Rise of the American Right. . THE NEW RIGHT . Conservative Resurgence. . The Sunbelt and Its Politics. THE NEW RIGHT The Sunbelt and Its Politics. Demographic Change = Increased population in: SoutheastFlorida SouthwestTexas California The Sagebrush Rebellion" was a fiercely anti-Wash
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1. The 80s: REAGAN1981-1989 Domestic Policy
2. The Rise of the American Right
3. THE NEW RIGHT Conservative Resurgence
4. The Sunbelt and Its Politics
5. THE NEW RIGHT The Sunbelt and Its Politics Demographic Change = Increased population in:
Southeast
Florida
Southwest
Texas
California
The “Sagebrush Rebellion” was a fiercely anti-Washington movement that had sprung up to protest federal control over rich mineral and timber resources in the western states
6. THE NEW RIGHT The Sunbelt and Its Politics The conservative populists of the Southeast and Southwest that rose to prominence in the late 1970s and early 1980s supported these political concepts
opposition to the growth of government
resentment of the proliferating environmental laws
support of the virtues of rugged individual
7. Religious Revivalism
8. THE NEW RIGHTReligious Revivalism Many “new right” activists were most concerned about cultural or social issues including
pornography
homosexuality
abortion
affirmative action
Evangelical Christians
spearheaded the “new right” movement that helped to elect Ronald Reagan
Well-known evangelical Christians of the 1970s and 1980s included
Billy Graham
Oral Roberts
Jimmy Carter
9. The Emergence of the New Right
10. NEW RIGHT In the 1980s, the New Left of the 1960s and 1970s did not disappear, but it did fade, because
its radical leaders became disillusioned
many of the students who had fought its battles grew up , left school and entered conventional careers
Marxist social criticism seemed dated and irrelevant, particularly as Marxist regimes collapsed in disrepute
Modern conservatism springs from a disapproval of priorities and strategies from the Great Society
the “New Right” of the 1980s imitated the tactics and approaches of the “New Left” of the 1960s by
“making the personal political”
practicing “identity politics”
using small group sessions to “raise consciousness”
engaging in tactics of street protest and civil disobedience
11. As the New Right developed in the 1970s and 1980s, it opposed the activities of men such as Gerald Ford
Ag. Ford’s support of Nixon-Kissinger policies of détente with the Soviet Union
NEW RIGHT
12. Early 50s = began to abandon his liberal New Deal political philosophy and to espouse a conservative, anti-government line when he became a spokesman for General Electric
1964 Presidential Election = support Goldwater
1966 = Governor of CA
1976 Presidential Election = alternative to Ford (“old right”)
NEW RIGHTEmergence of Ronald Reagan
13. The Tax Revolt
14. THE NEW RIGHT The conservative resurgence of the late 1970s was strongest in the state of California
In the battle over Proposition 13 during the late 1970s, California conservatives discovered the effective new political tactic of attacking taxes
15. The Campaign of 1980
16. 1980 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION In the 1980 national elections, Edward Kennedy challenged incumbent President Carter for the nomination of the Democratic party
Liberal Democrats complained that Carter had removed regulatory controls from major industries
Edward Kennedy lost in the primaries and did not appear on the ballot in the fall election
His campaign was handicapped by lingering suspicions about his involvement in an automobile accident in which a young woman was killed
17. The Reagan Revolution
18. The Reagan Revolution The Reagan Coalition
19. The Reagan Coalition Ronald Reagan’s election to the presidency = change in American politics
also evident in Republican control of the Senate
The Reagan coalition of the early 1980s included
1. wealthy Americans who opposed anti-business government regulation = free market capitalists = fewer government restraints on the economy
2. neo-conservative intellectuals who opposed destructive radicalism = anti-communist
3. populist right-wingers who opposed centralized government power = strengthening the white working class
20. The 80s: REAGAN 1981-1989
DOMESTIC POLICY
21. Ronald Reagan
was similar to FDR in that both men championed the “common man” against vast , impersonal menaces
differed from FDR in that Roosevelt branded big business as the enemy of the common man, while Reagan depicted big government as the foe
22. The Reagan Revolution Reagan and the White House
23. Reagan and the White House President Reagan came to be labeled the “Teflon president” because he seemed always able to avoid blame for failed policies
During his years as president, Ronald Reagan exhibited these traits
a vigorous and resilient person who bounced back quickly from disease and injury
an excellent public speaker who was a master of television
an overall leader who decided general policy, but stayed out of the day-to day operations of government
24. The Reagan Revolution “Supply-Side” Economics
25. Reaganomics
Reagan’s highest political objective was the containment of the welfare state
major goal = reduce size of the federal government by
shrinking the federal budget
lowering taxes
True to his campaign promises Reagan cut taxes
“boll weevils” = Conservative Democrats who helped Reagan to pass his budget and tax-cutting legislation The Reagan Revolution “Supply-Side” Economics
26. “Reaganomics,” or “supply-side” economics, operated from the assumption that the woes of the American economy were largely the result of excessive taxation
“supply side” economic advisors believed that the combination of budgetary discipline and tax reduction would
stimulate new investment
boost productivity
foster dramatic economic growth
balance the budget The Reagan Revolution “Supply-Side” Economics
27. Deregulation
Secretary of Interior James Watt
Opened public lands & water to development
Reduced
Federal environmental laws & regulations (weakened the EPA)
Enforcement of Civil Rights laws (weakened the Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department)
Auto emissions & safety standards (dept of transportation)
During the 1980s, Congress cooperated with the Reagan Administration by reducing regulatory controls over troubled savings and loan banks
The Reagan Revolution “Supply-Side” Economics
28. 1982 = worst recession since the 1930s
= failure of Reagan Economic Program by critics
High Interest Rates (to reduce inflation)
= hard to borrow for
Investment
Consumer purchases
= stronger US dollar = Am. Products more expensive abroad
= decrease in exports
= increase in trade deficit
1982 = 25 bill surplus
1984 = 111bill deficit
The immediate consequence of President Regan’s new economic policies was a rise in the value of the dollar
The Reagan Revolution “Supply-Side” Economics
29. 1982 = worst recession since the 1930s
Plant closures = increase unemployment
1982 11% unemployment = highest in 40 years
1983 = beginning of recovery
Inflation & unemployment decreased
Causes of 1983 Recovery
decrease in rate of inflation
Interest rates decreased in response to recession
Temporary energy glut & collapse of OPEC
a sharp drop in oil prices
Federal BUDGET DEFICITS = government spending (helping recession; hurting balanced budget)
Some economists believe that the economic upturn in the 1980s was the result of massive military expenditures
massive federal deficits , always over $100 billion
The Reagan Revolution “Supply-Side” Economics
30. The Reagan Revolution The Fiscal Crisis
31. Economic Recovery
Downside = High Federal Deficits
Reagan had promised a balanced budget in 4 years
The greatest increase in the national debt occurred during Reagan’s eight year in office
= highest ever budget deficits
= increase in national debt The Reagan RevolutionThe Fiscal Crisis
32. Cause of high deficits
Cost of entitlement programs (Social Security & Medicare)
Aging population = A new demographic profile of the American population emerged during the 1970s and 1980s as the proportion of elderly citizens grew markedly
Increased health care costs
Tax cuts (1981)
Eroded revenue base
Increase in military spending
Added more military spending than domestic cuts The Reagan RevolutionThe Fiscal Crisis
33. Consequence of the deficit = not able to reduce interest on the massive (and growing) debt
Reagan Response
Would NOT
Raise taxes (except SS tax)
Cut military spending
Cut domestic programs
Reagan Response to high deficits
deficit reduction by lowering “discretionary” domestic spending
Aimed at the poorest & politically weakest
Food stamps
federal Subsidies for low income housing = Increase in HOMELESS
Student loans
School lunches
Educational spending
Results
Did NOT end the rising deficit The Reagan RevolutionThe Fiscal Crisis
34. Gramm-Rudman Bill
Mandated deficit reduction through AUTOMATIC cuts if deficit not reduced by a certain date
In 1986 Congress passed legislation mandating a balanced budget by 1991
Deficit did DECLINE
But NOT due to Gramm-Rudman
due to tax increases on Social Security
Created a surplus
Fiscal Conservatives called for a constitutional amendment = mandatory balanced budget
The Reagan RevolutionThe Fiscal Crisis
35. the American economy faced
an energy crisis
foreign economic challenges
a declining rate of economic growth The Reagan Revolution “Supply-Side” Economics
36. the American social structure faced
a climbing poverty rate
rapidly rising health costs
an increasingly unequal distribution of wealth
for the first time in the twentieth century, income gaps widened between the richest and the poorest Americans
The gap between rich and poor widened in the 1980s and 1990s because of
intensifying global economic competition
the decline of unions
the growth of part-time and temporary work
the greater economic rewards for education The Reagan RevolutionThe Fiscal Crisis
37. the use of illegal drugs helped to spread the new disease of AIDS In the 1980s…
38. socioeconomic conditions of black Americans changed
affirmative action programs frequently were not aggressively enforced
the black population of the U.S.
was nearly one-third middle class
much of the black middle class significantly improved its economic status
had more than one-third its number living in poverty
saw more than half its children born into single-parent homes
black households headed by single females increased greatly
AFRICAN AMERICANS In the 1980s…
39. In terms of immigration patterns, the 1980s and 1990s witnessed the heaviest influx of immigrants in America’s experience
The New Immigrants of the 1980s and 1990s came to America primarily in search of jobs and economic opportunity
The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 attempted to penalize employers for hiring illegal immigrants
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most striking change in immigration patterns was the increase in the numbers of Hispanics and Asians
The Hispanic immigrant population maintained their language and culture better than most previous immigrant groups because of their large numbers and geographic concentration
IMMIGRATION
40. Modern environmentalists base their ideas on the field of ecology and they view all components of the environment as being intimately linked together
Rachel Carson began her career as an environmentalist by attacking the menace of pesticides
ENVIRONMENTALISTS
41. 1984 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
42. 1984 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION In 1984, the major contenders for the Democratic nomination for president included
Walter Mondale
Gary Hart
Jesse Jackson
The first woman to receive the vice-presidential nomination of a major political party was Geraldine Ferraro
43. Sandra Day O’Connor The first woman appointed to the United States Supreme Court
Appointed by Ronald Reagan
44. 1988 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
45. 1988 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION Among the Democrats whom Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis defeated for the party’s nomination to run against George Bush in 1988 were Gary Hart and Jesse Jackson
The Democrats’ hopes for the 1988 election rose sharply because of major scandals in the Reagan administration involving the Iran-Contra affair and savings – and – loan banks
46. 1988 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION During the presidential campaign of 1988, George Bush was far behind at the start of the campaign, but came on strong at the end to achieve as substantial victory
George Bush defeated Michael Dukakis in the 1988 presidential election by identifying him with all of the unpopular social and cultural stances Americans identified with liberals
47. THE 80’S