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OUT OF MANY A HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE Chapter 30 The Conservative Ascendancy 1974 - 1991 CHAPTER FOCUS QUESTIONS 2 What explains the weakness in the U.S. economy in the 1970s? What did Ford and Carter accomplish as presidents? How successful was the environmentalist movement of the 1970s? What are the factors behind the rise of the New Right? How did the Iran hostage crisis affect the election of 1980? What economic assumptions underlay “Reaganomics”? Why did the gap between rich and poor grow in the 1980s? How did the Cold War end? 3 THE OVEREXTENDED SOCIETY • The energy crisis was the most vivid sign of a troubled economy. • Dependence on imported oil had steadily grown and president Nixon ordered oil conservation measures. 4 Decline of U.S. Oil Consumption, 1975-81 Boycotts causing shortages and high prices spurred the reduction in oil consumption. However, in the 1980s consumption once again began to rise to reach record highs. © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 5 Source: Department of Energy, Monthly Energy Review, June 1982. Union Membership, 1940-90 After reaching a peak during World War II, union membership steadily declined. In the 1980s, overseas production took an especially big toll on industrial unions. © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 6 SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, in Mary Kupiec et al., eds., Encyclopedia of American Social History, Vol. II. New York: Scribner’s, 1993, p. 4188. SUNBELT/SNOWBELT COMMUNITIES Large-scale migration fueled Sunbelt population growth. Sunbelt prosperity was not evenly spread and a twotier class society developed. 7 Snowbelt cities like Philadelphia and New York faced urban decay. 8 Population Shifts, 1970–80 Industrial decline in the Northeast coincided with an economic boom in the Sunbelt, encouraging millions of Americans to head for warmer climates and better jobs. SOURCE: U.S. Bureau of the Census. 9 Growth of Sunbelt Cities, 1940-80 The old industrial cities in the Northeast and Midwest steadily lost population to the southern and western decentralized cities and their surrounding suburbs. THE ENDANGERED ENVIRONMENT The linking of cancer at Love Canal to toxic waste raised U.S. concern over pollution. Growing interest in the concept of ecology led Americans to lobby for renewable energy sources, protecting endangered species, and reducing pollution. 10 Despite public outcries, government officials frequently responded to other pressures. 11 The media attention given to Love Canal residents, who reported high incidents of birth defects and rates of cancer, led to the passage of a new federal law in 1980 regulating toxic waste disposal. This photograph shows one of the endangered children demonstrating during a neighborhood meeting. “LEAN YEARS PRESIDENTS” FORD AND CARTER 12 Gerald Ford succeeded to the presidency following Richard Nixon’s resignation. After pardoning Nixon, Ford lost the nation’s trust. Democrats turned to Georgia Governor Jimmy Carter. Carter narrowly defeated Ford, building on his moderate image, his outsider status, and his pledge to restore trust. Carter by and large supported conservative policies like deregulation and increased military spending. Inflation and interest rates soared, leading many to conclude that Carter could not turn the economy around. 13 The Election of 1976 Incumbent Gerald Ford could not prevail over the disgrace brought to the Republican Party by Richard Nixon. The lingering pall of the Watergate scandal, especially Ford’s pardon of Nixon, worked to the advantage of Jimmy Carter, who campaigned as an outsider to national politics. Although Carter and his running mate Walter Mondale won by only a narrow margin, the Democrats gained control of both the White House and Congress. THE NEW URBAN POLITICS Lieutenant Governor Mervyn Dymally and his family in California. Political mobilization during the 1970s frequently focused on community issues that cut across ideological lines. College students, along with African Americans and other minorities, mobilized and won power in numerous communities. Several major cities elected black mayors. The fiscal crisis of the 1970s frequently foiled their plans for reforms. 14 Ron Dellums, Oakland California. THE LIMITS OF GLOBAL POWER 15 Presidents Ford and Carter both believed that American power had been declining and that there should be no more Vietnams. DETENTE 16 June 18, 1979: U.S. President Jimmy Carter, left, and General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union Leonid Brezhnev shake hands while Soviet Foreign Minister Andrej Gromyko, center, applauds in the Vienna Imperial Hofburg Palace after Carter and Brezhnev signed the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT) II Treaty. (U.S. State Department Release) American diplomats sought a way to wind down the cold war by getting the Soviets to agree to respect human rights and by negotiating arms control agreements. FOREIGN POLICY AND “MORAL PRINCIPLES” Jimmy Carter pledged to put human rights at the center of his foreign policy. His greatest success came when he negotiated the Camp David Accord between Egypt and Israel, though the agreement did not bring stability to the region. 17 Carter reformed the CIA and returned the Canal Zone to Panama. 18 President Carter signs the Middle East Peace Treaty with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin, in Washington, DC, March 1979. President Carter had invited both leaders to Camp David, the presidential retreat in Maryland, where for two weeks he mediated between them on territorial rights to the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Considered Carter’s greatest achievement in foreign policy, the negotiations, known as the Camp David Peace Accords, resulted in not only the historic peace treaty but the Nobel Peace Prize for Begin and Sadat. (MIS)HANDLING THE UNEXPECTED Carter received contradictory advice urging him to be both tough on and conciliatory toward the Soviets. His Third World efforts received mixed support for both authoritarian and revolutionary governments. 1970’s Present 19 He reacted strongly to a Soviet intervention in Afghanistan. THE IRAN HOSTAGE CRISIS Carter’s decision to allow the deposed shah of Iran to enter the country for medical treatment backfired. Iranian students seized the American embassy and held its personnel hostage. 20 He tried diplomacy and at the same time an ill-fated rescue operation. Both failed. © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 21 Iranians demonstrate outside the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, raising a poster with a caricature of President Carter. The Iran hostage crisis, which began November 8, 1979, when a mob of Iranians seized the U.S. embassy in Tehran, contributed to Carter’s defeat at the polls the following year. Fifty-two embassy employees were held hostage for 444 days. 22 THE NEW RIGHT © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. NEOCONSERVATISM 23 A variety of forces converged to turn back the great society and form the New Right such as conservative centers like the Heritage Foundation. THE RELIGIOUS RIGHT The New Right promoted its agenda through televangelists. 24 Protestant ministers were determined to roll back liberalism. 25 Christian televangelists Jim and Tammy Bakker hosted the popular “PTL Club” and capitalized on their success to build the PTL Network and Heritage USA,” which grew to become one of the largest and best attended theme parks in the United States. This photograph, taken in 1986, shows the couple shortly before reports of financial irregularities and a sex scandal forced Jim Bakker to resign from his PTL ministry. They divorced in 1992 following Jim Bakker’s conviction on federal charges of fraud and racketeering. THE PRO-FAMILY MOVEMENT 26 The New Right successfully blocked ratification of the ERA and rallied support for efforts to make abortions illegal. THE ELECTION OF 1980 27 As the election of 1980 approached, an unenthusiastic Democratic convention endorsed him. The Republicans nominated Ronald Reagan, who asked voters, “Are you better off now than you were four years ago?” Reagan won 50.9 percent of the vote but an overwhelming majority in the electoral college. © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 28 The Election of 1980 Ronald Reagan won a landslide victory over incumbent Jimmy Carter, who managed to carry only six states and the District of Columbia. Reagan attracted millions of traditionally Democratic voters to the Republican camp. © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 29 Seeing History The Presidential Inauguration of Ronald Reagan. 30 THE REAGAN REVOLUTION THE GREAT COMMUNICATOR Ronald Reagan credited his political success to his earlier acting career. 31 He interpreted the 1980 election as a popular mandate for conservatives. 32 Ronald Reagan, the fortieth president of the United States, was known for his ability to articulate broad principles of government in a clear fashion. The most popular president since Dwight Eisenhower, he built a strong coalition of supporters from long-term Republicans, disillusioned Democrats, and evangelical Protestants. REAGANOMICS 33 Reaganomics is based on a supply-side economic theory: Essentially, a successful economy depended upon the proliferation of the rich. The Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981: the largest tax cut in the nation’s history. The Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1981: a comprehensive program of federal spending cuts. While decreasing spending on domestic programs, Reagan greatly increased defense budget. THE ELECTION OF 1984 In the 1984 election, Walter Mondale won the Democratic nomination by concentrating on the traditional Democratic constituencies. Reagan countered Mondale’s criticisms by claiming that the nation was strong, united, and prosperous. 34 Reagan won in one of history’s biggest landslides. RECESSION, RECOVERY, FISCAL CRISIS A recession gripped the economy during the early 1980s. By the mid-1980s the economy grew and inflation was under control. Enormous budget deficits grew to an unprecedented $2.7 trillion as the U.S. became the world’s leading debtor. © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 35 The fiscal crisis was made worse by scandals in the securities industry. In 1987, the stock market crashed, ending the bull market of the 1980s. SOURCE: Statistical abstract of the United States, in Nash et al., The American People, 5th ed., p. 988. 36 FIGURE 30.4 Federal Budget Deficit and National Debt, 1970-98 Tax cuts combined with huge increases in defense spending created a sharp increase in the budget deficit during the Republican administrations. 37 After the Dow Jones reached an all-time high at the end of August, stocks began to slide and then crashed. On October 19, 1987—“Black Monday”—traders at the New York Stock Exchange panicked, selling off stocks at such a rate that the market lost almost twentythree percent of its value, marking the end of a five-year bull market. The market soon bounced back, and by September 1989 the Dow Jones had made up all its losses. © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 38 BEST OF TIMES, WORST OF TIMES While the 1980s celebrated wealth and moneymaking, the gap between rich and poor widened. Race sharply defined the gap between rich and poor. 39 A TWO-TIERED SOCIETY 40 41 42 43 44 45 THE FEMINIZATION OF POVERTY Women experienced declining earning power during this period. Divorce contributed significantly to female poverty—new no-fault divorce laws. 46 A sharp rise in teenage pregnancy also contributed. EPIDEMICS: DRUGS, AIDS, HOMELESSNESS The 1980s saw new epidemics erupt. Cocaine and inner-city crack use spiraled, unleashing a crime wave. • The Reagan administration declared a war on drugs, but concentrated its resources on the overseas supply and did little to control demand at home. In 1981, doctors identified a puzzling disease initially found among gay men—AIDS. 47 An epidemic of homelessness grew during the decade. One-third were mental patients discharged from psychiatric hospitals. 48 In May 1987, members of the Lesbian and Gay Community Services in downtown Manhattan organized ACT-UP. Protesting what they perceived to be the Reagan administration’s mismanagement of the AIDs crisis, they used nonviolent direct action, which often took the form of dramatic acts of civil disobedience. ACTUP grew to more than seventy chapters in the United States and the world. 49 TOWARD A NEW WORLD ORDER THE EVIL EMPIRE Reagan made anti-communism the centerpiece of his foreign policy, calling the Soviet Union an “evil empire.” He called for a space-based “Star Wars” missile defense system that many saw as an effort to achieve a first-strike capability. 50 Attempts at meaningful arms control stalled. THE REAGAN DOCTRINE AND CENTRAL AMERICA The Reagan Doctrine pursued anti-communist activity in Central America. 51 Reagan intervened in Grenada, E1 Salvador, and waged a covert war against the revolutionary government of Nicaragua. THE MIDDLE EAST AND THE IRAN-CONTRA SCANDAL © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 52 The volatility of the Middle East influenced U. S. foreign policy. In 1986, news broke of how the United States traded arms to Iran in return for their assistance in freeing hostages held by terrorist groups. The money from the arms sales was used to fund the Contras in Nicaragua. Oliver North, who ran the enterprise, acknowledged that he had told a web of lies and destroyed evidence, all in the name of patriotism. An investigating commission concluded that Reagan had allowed a small, unsupervised group to run the operation. In 1992, outgoing President George Bush, whose involvement had been the target of much speculation, pardoned several officials who were scheduled to be tried. 53 The United States in the Middle East in the 1980s The volatile combination of ancient religious and ethnic rivalries, oil, and emerging Islamic fundamentalism made peace and stability elusive in the Middle East. 54 Lt. Col. Oliver North, who once described the scheme to sell arms to Iran to help the Contras as a “neat idea,” is shown testifying in July 1987 before a joint Congressional committee formed to investigate the IranContra affair. THE COLLAPSE OF COMMUNISM In 1985, Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in the Soviet Union and instituted a series of political and economic reforms. The Soviet Union dissolved in 1991. 55 This ended the great superpower rivalry. 56 In August 1961, the border between East and West Berlin was closed, and the Berlin Wall was built to divide the city into two sections. After twenty-eight years, on November 9, 1989, the government in East Germany lifted travel restrictions. This photograph shows demonstrators defiantly tearing down the Berlin Wall, which for three decades had embodied the political divisions of the cold war. 57 “A KINDER, GENTLER NATION” REAGAN’S SUCCESSOR: GEORGE H. W. BUSH Bush carried over several policies from Reagan’s administration. 58 Bush described himself as a “compassionate” Republican. THE PERSIAN GULF WAR 59 As the old geopolitical order disappeared, ideological rivalry shifted to the Middle East. Iraq seized oil fields in Kuwait and the U.S. responded swiftly. U.S. air strikes lasted 42 days, the ground war 100 hours and victory was swift. The war, however, intensified Muslim hatred of the United States. THE ECONOMY AND THE ELECTION OF 1992 The Persian Gulf War swelled Bush’s popularity, however the economy soon pushed to drop his performance rating to just 51 percent. He faced a formidable opponent in Bill Clinton. 60 Clinton adopted many conservative themes and took 43 percent of the popular vote and carried 32 states. 61