chapter 33: the conservative tide

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Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide Section 33.1- 2/26 A Conservative Movement Emerges Section 33.2- 2/28 Conservative Policies Under Reagan and Bush Section 33.3- 3/4 American Society in a Conservative Age Section 33.4- 3/7 Changes in America’s Foreign Policy UNIT TEST ON MARCH 12 “In this present crisis, government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem.” -Ronald Reagan, 1 st Inaugural address

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Section 33.1- 2/26 A Conservative Movement Emerges Section 33.2- 2/28 Conservative Policies Under Reagan and Bush Section 33.3- 3/4 American Society in a Conservative Age Section 33.4- 3/7 Changes in America’s Foreign Policy UNIT TEST ON MARCH 12. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide

Chapter 33: The Conservative TideSection 33.1- 2/26A Conservative Movement Emerges

Section 33.2- 2/28Conservative Policies Under Reagan and Bush

Section 33.3- 3/4 American Society in a Conservative Age

Section 33.4- 3/7Changes in America’s Foreign Policy

UNIT TEST ON MARCH 12

“In this present crisis, government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem.”-Ronald Reagan, 1st Inaugural address

Page 2: Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide

33. 1-A Conservative Movement Emerges • Lesson Objective:– To understand the conservative movement from 1964 to

1980 and how it led to the elections of presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush

Essential Question:How did the conservative movement coalesce and propel Republicans and Ronald Reagan into power in 1980??

Page 3: Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide

Key Terms

• Ronald Reagan• Entitlement Programs• New Right• Reverse Discrimination• Conservative Coalition• Moral Majority• George Bush

Page 4: Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide

The Movement Builds

• 1980 had perfect storm of conditions for a conservative emergence– Jimmy Carter was very unpopular– Inflation neared 15%– 1/3 of household were receiving government assistance

through – Entitlement programs– Taxes were high

• Many feared that they would not be able to provide for their children or themselves

Page 5: Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide

Conservative Backlash

• During the 1970s – Formation of the New Right

• Define

• Conservative special interest groups began pushing back against cultural, social, and moral issues– School bussing– Gun control– Prayer in public schools– Abortion– ERA– Affirmative Action or Reverse Discrimination

• Define

Page 6: Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide

The Conservative Coalition• Made up of:– Intellectuals, business leaders, middle-class voters,

disenchanted democrats, and fundamentalist Christians• Brought together by what?– Opposition to• “big government” and entitlements• Return to traditional social and moral values

• Advanced policies through publications such as the Wall Street Journal and “think-tanks” such as the Heritage Foundation and the American Enterprise Institute

Page 7: Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide

William F. Buckley Jr.

Page 8: Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide

The Moral Majority• Made up of various fundamentalist and evangelical

Christian groups– Guided by televangelists- Jerry Falwell and Pat Robinson – Literal interpretation of the Bible and absolute right and

wrong– Wanted to bring back traditional American values

• “Our nation’s internal problems are the direct result of her spiritual condition…Right living must be reestablished as an American way of life…Now is the time to begin calling America back to God, back to the bible, back to morality.”– Jerry Falwell

Page 9: Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide

Jerry Falwell

Page 10: Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide

The Moral Majority

Page 11: Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide

Social Economic Foreign Policy

Page 12: Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide

The New Right The Moral Majority

Page 13: Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide

Conservatives Win Political Power• Conservatives generally aligned themselves with the

republican party through three main issues:– Economics- shrinking government spending/ power and

reducing regulation and taxes for businesses– Moral/ Social- advocates for a return to traditional moral

values– Defense- advocates for a strong national defense

• In 1980 conservatives got their chance to win political power

Page 14: Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide

Ronald Reagan

• Former actor and spokesman for General Electric• Was originally a Democrat- even head of SAG– “I didn’t leave the Democratic party; it left me.”

• First gained political notoriety for giving speech at 1964 Republican Convention nominating Barry Goldwater

• Governor of California from 1966-1974• Loses Republican nomination to Gerald Ford in 1976– Wins Republican nomination in 1980 over George H.W.

Bush- picks him for his Vice President

Page 15: Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide
Page 16: Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide
Page 17: Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide

George H.W. Bush

Page 18: Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide

Election of 1980• Reagan vs Carter– How did the conditions in 1980 help Republicans?

• Aging and shifting population helps Republicans– Move to the sunbelt

• Reagan with background in acting is dubbed “The Great Communicator” – Funny and affable- Carter in comparison was tense and

uncomfortable• “A recession is when your neighbor loses his job. A

depression is when you lose your job. A recovery is when Jimmy Carter loses his.”

• Reagan wins 51% of popular vote, but support is spread out over the country and wins 489 electoral votes

Page 19: Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide
Page 20: Chapter 33: The Conservative Tide

Quiz 33.1

1. __________ was made up of conservative special interest groups.

2. __________ was Ronald Reagans Vice President.3. __________ was a coalition of fundamentalist

Christians who helped elect Ronald Reagan.4. Ronald Reagan defeated ________ in the election

of 1980.5. Ronald Reagan made a name for himself in what

industry?