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Presidency of Jimmy Carter

Jimmy Carter's tenure as the 39th president of the United States began with his inauguration on January 20, 1977, and ended on January 20, 1981. A Democrat from Georgia, Carter took office after defeating incumbent Republican President Gerald Ford in the 1976 election. His presidency ended following his defeat in the 1980 election by Republican Ronald Reagan. Aged 98, he is the oldest living, longest-lived and longest-married president, and has the longest post-presidency. He is the third-oldest living former state leader.

Presidency of Jimmy Carter
January 20, 1977 – January 20, 1981
CabinetSee list
PartyDemocratic
Election1976
SeatWhite House
Library website

Carter took office during a period of "stagflation," as the economy experienced a combination of high inflation and slow economic growth. His budgetary policies centered on taming inflation by reducing deficits and government spending. Responding to energy concerns that had persisted through much of the 1970s, his administration enacted a national energy policy designed for long-term energy conservation and the development of alternative resources. In the short term the country was beset by an energy crisis in 1979 which was overlapped by a recession in 1980. Carter sought reforms to the country's welfare, health care, and tax systems, but was largely unsuccessful, partly due to poor relations with Democrats in Congress.

Carter reoriented U.S. foreign policy towards an emphasis on human rights. He continued the conciliatory late Cold War policies of his predecessors, normalizing relations with China and pursuing further Strategic Arms Limitation Talks with the Soviet Union. In an effort to end the Arab–Israeli conflict, he helped arrange the Camp David Accords between Israel and Egypt. Through the Torrijos–Carter Treaties, Carter guaranteed the eventual transfer of the Panama Canal to Panama. Denouncing the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, he reversed his conciliatory policies towards the Soviet Union and began a period of military build-up and diplomatic pressure such as pulling out of the Moscow Olympics.

The final fifteen months of Carter's presidential tenure were marked by several additional major crises, including the Iran hostage crisis and economic malaise. Ted Kennedy, a prominent liberal Democrat who protested Carter's opposition to a national health insurance system, challenged Carter in the 1980 Democratic primaries. Boosted by public support for his policies in late 1979 and early 1980, Carter rallied to defeat Kennedy and win re-nomination. He lost the 1980 presidential election in a landslide to Republican nominee Ronald Reagan. Polls of historians and political scientists generally rank Carter as a below-average president, although his post-presidential activities are viewed more favorably.

1976 election

 
Carter and President Gerald Ford debating at the Walnut Street Theatre in Philadelphia

Carter was elected as the Governor of Georgia in 1970, and during his four years in office he earned a reputation as a progressive, racially moderate Southern governor. Observing George McGovern's success in the 1972 Democratic primaries, Carter came to believe that he could win the 1976 Democratic presidential nomination by running as an outsider unconnected to establishment politicians in Washington.[1] Carter declared his candidacy for the 1976 Democratic presidential nomination in December 1974 and swore "to never lie to the American people."[2] As Democratic leaders such as 1968 nominee Hubert Humphrey, Senator Walter Mondale of Minnesota, and Senator Ted Kennedy of Massachusetts declined to enter the race, there was no clear favorite in the Democratic primaries. Mo Udall, Sargent Shriver, Birch Bayh, Fred R. Harris, Terry Sanford, Henry M. Jackson, Lloyd Bentsen, and George Wallace all sought the nomination, and many of these candidates were better known than Carter.[3]

Carter sought to appeal to various groups in the party; his advocacy for cutting defense spending and reining in the CIA appealed to liberals, while his emphasis on eliminating government waste appealed to conservatives.[4] Carter won the most votes of any candidate in the Iowa caucus, and he dominated media coverage in advance of the New Hampshire primary, which he also won.[5] Carter's subsequent defeat of Wallace in the Florida and North Carolina primaries eliminated Carter's main rival in the South.[6] With a victory over Jackson in the Pennsylvania primary, Carter established himself as the clear front-runner.[7] Despite the late entrance of Senator Frank Church and Governor Jerry Brown into the race, Carter clinched the nomination on the final day of the primaries.[8] The 1976 Democratic National Convention proceeded harmoniously and, after interviewing several candidates, Carter chose Mondale as his running mate. The selection of Mondale was well received by many liberal Democrats, many of whom had been skeptical of Carter.[9]

 
The electoral map of the 1976 election

The Republicans experienced a contested convention that ultimately nominated incumbent President Gerald Ford, who had succeeded to the presidency in 1974 after the resignation of Richard Nixon due to the latter's involvement in the Watergate scandal.[9] With the Republicans badly divided, and with Ford facing questions over his competence as president, polls taken in August 1976 showed Carter with a 15-point lead.[10] In the general election campaign, Carter continued to promote a centrist agenda, seeking to define new Democratic positions in the aftermath of the tumultuous 1960s. Above all, Carter attacked the political system, defining himself as an "outsider" who would reform Washington in the post-Watergate era.[11] In response, Ford attacked Carter's supposed "fuzziness", arguing that Carter had taken vague stances on major issues.[10] Carter and President Ford faced off in three televised debates during the 1976 election,[12] the first such debates since 1960.[12] Ford was generally viewed as the winner of the first debate, but he made a major gaffe in the second debate when he stated there was "no Soviet domination of Eastern Europe."[a] The gaffe put an end to Ford's late momentum, and Carter helped his own campaign with a strong performance in the third debate. Polls taken just before election day showed a very close race.[13]

Carter won the election with 50.1% of the popular vote and 297 electoral votes, while Ford won 48% of the popular vote and 240 electoral votes. The 1976 presidential election represents the lone Democratic presidential election victory between the elections of 1964 and 1992. Carter fared particularly well in the Northeast and the South, while Ford swept the West and won much of the Midwest. In the concurrent congressional elections, Democrats increased their majorities in both the House and Senate.[14]

Transition

Preliminary planning for Carter's presidential transition had already been underway for months before his election.[15][16] Carter was the first presidential candidate to allot significant funds and a significant number of personnel to a pre-election transition planning effort, which subsequently would become standard practice.[17] Carter made an innovation with his presidential transition that would influence all subsequent presidential transitions, taking a methodical approach to his transition, and having a larger and more formal operation than past presidential transitions had.[17][16]

Inauguration

 
President Jimmy Carter and Rosalynn Carter walk down Pennsylvania Avenue during Inauguration.

In his inaugural address, Carter said, "We have learned that more is not necessarily better, that even our great nation has its recognized limits, and that we can neither answer all questions nor solve all problems."[18] Carter had campaigned on a promise to eliminate the trappings of the "Imperial Presidency," and began taking action according to that promise on Inauguration Day, breaking with recent history and security protocols by walking from the Capitol to the White House in his inaugural parade. His first steps in the White House went further in this direction: Carter cut the size of the 500-member White House staff by one-third and reduced the perks for the president and cabinet members.[19] He also fulfilled a campaign promise by issuing a "full complete and unconditional pardon" (amnesty) for Vietnam War-era draft evaders.[20]

Administration

The Carter cabinet
OfficeNameTerm
PresidentJimmy Carter1977–1981
Vice PresidentWalter Mondale1977–1981
Secretary of StateCyrus Vance1977–1980
Edmund Muskie1980–1981
Secretary of the TreasuryW. Michael Blumenthal1977–1979
G. William Miller1979–1981
Secretary of DefenseHarold Brown1977–1981
Attorney GeneralGriffin Bell1977–1979
Benjamin Civiletti1979–1981
Secretary of the InteriorCecil Andrus1977–1981
Secretary of AgricultureRobert Bergland1977–1981
Secretary of CommerceJuanita M. Kreps1977–1979
Philip Klutznick1980–1981
Secretary of LaborRay Marshall1977–1981
Secretary of Health,
Education, and Welfare
Joseph A. Califano Jr.1977–1979
Patricia Roberts Harris*1979–1980
Secretary of Health and
Human Services
Patricia Roberts Harris*1980–1981
Secretary of Housing and
Urban Development
Patricia Roberts Harris1977–1979
Maurice "Moon" Landrieu1979–1981
Secretary of TransportationBrock Adams1977–1979
Neil Goldschmidt1979–1981
Secretary of EnergyJames R. Schlesinger1977–1979
Charles Duncan Jr.1979–1981
Secretary of EducationShirley Hufstedler*1979–1981
Director of the Office of
Management and Budget
Bert Lance1977
James T. McIntyre1977–1981
United States Trade RepresentativeRobert S. Strauss1977–1979
Reubin Askew1979–1980
Ambassador to the United NationsAndrew Young1977–1979
Donald McHenry1979–1981
National Security AdvisorZbigniew Brzezinski1977–1981
Chair of the
Council of Economic Advisers
Charles Schultze1977–1981
*The Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) was renamed the
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) in 1980, when its education
functions were transferred to the newly created Department of Education under
the Department of Education Organization Act (1979).

Though Carter had campaigned against Washington insiders, many of his top appointees had served in previous presidential administrations.[21] Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, Secretary of Defense Harold Brown, and Secretary of the Treasury W. Michael Blumenthal had been high-ranking officials in the Kennedy and Johnson administrations.[22] Other notable appointments included Charles Schultze as Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, former Secretary of Defense James R. Schlesinger as a presidential assistant on energy issues, federal judge Griffin Bell as Attorney General, and Patricia Roberts Harris, the first African-American woman to serve in the cabinet,[23] as Secretary of Housing and Urban Development.[24]

Carter appointed several close associates from Georgia to staff the Executive Office of the President. He initially offered the position of White House Chief of Staff to two of his advisers, Hamilton Jordan and Charles Kirbo, but both declined. Carter decided not to have a chief of staff, instead implementing a system in which cabinet members would have more direct access to the president.[25] Bert Lance was selected to lead the Office of Management and Budget, while Jordan became a key aide and adviser. Other appointees from Georgia included Jody Powell as White House Press Secretary, Jack Watson as cabinet secretary, and Stuart E. Eizenstat as head of the Domestic Policy Staff.[26] To oversee the administration's foreign policy, Carter relied on several members of the Trilateral Commission, including Vance and National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski. Brzezinski emerged as one of Carter's closest advisers, and Carter made use of both the National Security Council and Vance's State Department in developing and implementing foreign policy.[27] The hawkish Brzezinski clashed frequently with Vance, who pushed for detente with the Soviet Union.[28][page needed]

Vice President Mondale served as a key adviser on both foreign and domestic issues.[29] First Lady Rosalynn Carter emerged as an important part of the administration, sitting in on several Cabinet meetings and serving as a sounding board, advisor, and surrogate for the president. She traveled abroad to negotiate foreign policy, and some polling found that she was tied with Mother Teresa as the most admired woman in the world.[30]

Carter shook up the White House staff in mid-1978, bringing in advertising executive Gerald Rafshoon to serve as the White House Communications Director and Anne Wexler to lead the Office of Public Liaison.[31] Carter implemented broad personnel changes in the White House and cabinet in mid-1979. Five cabinet secretaries left office, including Blumenthal, Bell, and Joseph Califano, the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare. Jordan was selected as the president's first chief of staff, while Alonzo L. McDonald, formerly of McKinsey & Company, became the White House staff director. Federal Reserve Chairman G. William Miller replaced Blumenthal as Secretary of the Treasury, Benjamin Civiletti took office as Attorney General, and Charles Duncan Jr. became Secretary of Energy.[32] After Vance resigned in 1980, Carter appointed Edmund Muskie, a well-respected Senator with whom Carter had developed friendly relations, to serve as Secretary of State.[33]

Judicial appointments

Among presidents who served at least one full term, Carter is the only one who never made an appointment to the Supreme Court.[34] Carter appointed 56 judges to the United States Courts of Appeals, and 203 judges to the United States district courts. Two of his circuit court appointees – Stephen Breyer and Ruth Bader Ginsburg – were later appointed to the Supreme Court by Bill Clinton. Carter was the first president to make demographic diversity a key priority in the selection of judicial nominees.[35] During Carter's presidency, the number of female circuit court judges increased from one to twelve, the number of non-white male circuit judges increased from six to thirteen, the number of female district court judges increased from four to 32, and the number of non-white male district court judges increased from 23 to 55. Carter appointed the first female African-American circuit court judge, Amalya Lyle Kearse, the first Hispanic circuit court judge, Reynaldo Guerra Garza, and the first female Hispanic district court judge, Carmen Consuelo Cerezo.[36] Federal Judicial Center data shows that Carter appointed more women (41) and people of color (57) than had been appointed by all past presidents combined (10 women and 35 people of color).[37]

Domestic affairs

 
Robert Templeton's portrait of President Carter, displayed in the National Portrait Gallery, Washington, D.C.

President Carter was not a product of the New Deal traditions of liberal Northern Democrats. Instead he traced his ideological background to the Progressive Era. He was thus much more conservative than the dominant liberal wing of the party could accept.[38] British historian Iwan Morgan argues:

Carter traced his political values to early twentieth-century southern progressivism with its concern for economy and efficiency in government and compassion for the poor. He described himself as a fiscal conservative, but liberal on matters like civil rights, the environment, and "helping people to overcome handicaps to lead fruitful lives," an ideological construct that appeared to make him the legatee of Dwight D. Eisenhower rather than Franklin D. Roosevelt.[39]

Relations with Congress

Carter successfully campaigned as a Washington "outsider" critical of both President Gerald Ford and the Democratic Congress; as president, he continued this theme. This refusal to play by the rules of Washington contributed to the Carter administration's difficult relationship with Congress. After the election, the President demanded the power to reorganize the executive branch, alienating powerful Democrats like Speaker Tip O'Neill and Jack Brooks. During the Nixon administration, Congress had passed a series of reforms that removed power from the president, and most members of Congress were unwilling to restore that power even with a Democrat now in office.[40][b] Unreturned phone calls, verbal insults, and an unwillingness to trade political favors soured many on Capitol Hill and affected the president's ability to enact his agenda.[42] In many cases, these failures of communication stemmed not from intentional neglect, but rather from poor organization of the administration's congressional liaison functions.[43] President Carter attempted to woo O'Neill, Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd, and other members of Congress through personal engagement, but he was generally unable to rally support for his programs through these meetings.[44] Carter also erred in focusing on too many priorities at once, especially in the first months of his presidency.[45] Democrats in Congress were displeased with his moralistic, executive-oriented, rational approach to decision-making and his reluctance to accept standard congressional methods of compromise, patronage, and log-rolling.[46]

A few months after his term started, Carter issued a "hit list" of 19 projects that he claimed were "pork barrel" spending. He said that he would veto any legislation that contained projects on this list.[47] Congress responded by passing a bill that combined several of the projects that Carter objected to with economic stimulus measures that Carter favored. Carter chose to sign the bill, but his criticism of the alleged "pork barrel" projects cost him support in Congress.[48] These struggles set a pattern for Carter's presidency, and he would frequently clash with Congress for the remainder of his tenure.[49]

Budget policies

 
Jimmy Carter and his cabinet in 1978

On taking office, Carter proposed an economic stimulus package that would give each citizen a $50 tax rebate, cut corporate taxes by $900 million, and increase spending on public works. The limited spending involved in the package reflected Carter's fiscal conservatism, as he was more concerned with avoiding inflation and balancing the budget than addressing unemployment. Carter's resistance to higher federal spending drew attacks from many members of his own party, who wanted to lower the unemployment rate through federal public works projects. Carter signed several measures designed to address unemployment in 1977, including an extension of the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act, but he continued to focus primarily on reducing deficits and inflation. In November 1978, Carter signed the Revenue Act of 1978, an $19 billion tax cut.[50]

Federal budget deficits throughout Carter's term remained at around the $70 billion level reached in 1976, but as a percentage of GDP the deficits fell from 4% when he took office to 2.5% in the 1980–81 fiscal year.[51] The national debt of the United States increased by about $280 billion, from $620 billion in early 1977 to $900 billion in late 1980.[52] However, because economic growth outpaced the growth in nominal debt, the federal government's debt as a percentage of gross domestic product decreased slightly, from 33.6% in early 1977 to 31.8% in late 1980.[53]

Energy

National Energy Act

 
Carter at Three Mile Island nuclear accident April 1, 1979

In 1973, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), based in the Middle East, had reduced output to raise world prices and to hurt Israel and its allies, including the United States.[54] This sparked the 1973 Oil Crisis, a period of high oil prices, which in turn forced higher prices throughout the American economy and slowed economic growth.[55] The United States continued to face energy issues in the following years, and during the winter of 1976–1977 natural gas shortages forced the closure of many schools and factories, leading to the temporary layoffs of hundreds of thousands of workers.[56] By 1977, energy policy was one of the greatest challenges facing the United States. Oil imports had increased 65% annually since 1973, and the U.S. consumed over twice as much energy, per capita, as other developed countries.[49]

Upon taking office, Carter asked James Schlesinger to develop a plan to address the energy crisis.[57] In an address to the nation of April 18, 1977, Carter called the energy crisis as, apart from preventing war, "the greatest challenge that our country will face during our lifetime." He called for energy conservation, increased use of U.S. coal reserves, and carefully controlled expansion of nuclear power. His chief goals were to limit the growth of energy demand to an increase of two percent a year, cut oil imports in half, and establish a new strategic petroleum reserve containing a six-month supply.[58] Carter won congressional approval for the creation of the Department of Energy, and he named Schlesinger as the first head of that department. Schlesinger presented an energy plan that contained 113 provisions, the most important of which were taxes on domestic oil production and gasoline consumption. The plan also provided for tax credits for energy conservation, taxes on automobiles with low fuel efficiency, and mandates to convert from oil or natural gas to coal power.[59] The House approved much of Carter's plan in August 1977, but the Senate passed a series of watered-down energy bills that included few of Carter's proposals. Negotiations with Congress dragged on into 1978, but Carter signed the National Energy Act in November 1978. Many of Carter's original proposals were not included in the legislation, but the act deregulated natural gas and encouraged energy conservation and the development of renewable energy through tax credits.[60]

1979 energy crisis

Another energy shortage hit the United States in 1979, forcing millions of frustrated motorists into long waits at gasoline stations. In response, Carter asked Congress to deregulate the price of domestic oil. At the time, domestic oil prices were not set by the world market, but rather by the complex price controls of the 1975 Energy Policy and Conservation Act (EPCA). Oil companies strongly favored the deregulation of prices, since it would increase their profits, but some members of Congress worried that deregulation would contribute to inflation. In late April and early May the Gallup poll found only 14 percent of the public believed that America was in an actual energy shortage. The other 77 percent believed that this was brought on by oil companies just to make a profit.[61] Carter paired the deregulation proposal with a windfall profits tax, which would return about half of the new profits of the oil companies to the federal government. Carter used a provision of EPCA to phase in oil controls, but Congress balked at implementing the proposed tax.[62][63]

I want to talk to you right now about a fundamental threat to American democracy... I do not refer to the outward strength of America, a nation that is at peace tonight everywhere in the world, with unmatched economic power and military might. The threat is nearly invisible in ordinary ways. It is a crisis of confidence. It is a crisis that strikes at the very heart and soul and spirit of our national will. We can see this crisis in the growing doubt about the meaning of our own lives and in the loss of a unity of purpose for our nation...

Jimmy Carter[64]

In July 1979, as the energy crisis continued, Carter met with a series of business, government, labor, academic, and religious leaders in an effort to overhaul his administration's policies.[65] His pollster, Pat Caddell, told him that the American people faced a crisis of confidence stemming from the assassinations of major leaders in the 1960s, the Vietnam War, and the Watergate scandal.[66] Though most of his other top advisers urged him to continue to focus on inflation and the energy crisis, Carter seized on Caddell's notion that the major crisis facing the country was a crisis of confidence. On July 15, Carter delivered a nationally televised speech in which he called for long-term limits on oil imports and the development of synthetic fuels. But he also stated, "all the legislation in the world can't fix what's wrong with America. What is lacking is confidence and a sense of community."[67] The speech, named A Crisis of Confidence,[64] came to be known as his "malaise" speech, although Carter never used the word in the speech.[68][69]

The initial reaction to Carter's speech was generally positive, but Carter erred by forcing out several cabinet members, including Secretary of Energy Schlesinger, later in July.[70] Nonetheless, Congress approved a $227 billion windfall profits tax and passed the Energy Security Act. The Energy Security Act established the Synthetic Fuels Corporation, which was charged with developing alternative energy sources.[71] Despite those legislative victories, in 1980 Congress rescinded Carter's imposition of a surcharge on imported oil,[c] and rejected his proposed Energy Mobilization Board, a government body that was designed to facilitate the construction of power plants.[73] Nonetheless, Kaufman and Kaufman write that policies enacted under Carter represented the "most sweeping energy legislation in the nation's history."[71] Carter's policies contributed to a decrease in per capita energy consumption, which dropped by 10 percent from 1979 to 1983.[74] Oil imports, which had reached a record 2.4 billion barrels in 1977 (50% of supply), declined by half from 1979 to 1983.[51]

Economy

Federal finances and GDP during Carter's presidency[75]
Fiscal
Year
Receipts Outlays Surplus/
Deficit
GDP Debt as a %
of GDP[76]
1977 355.6 409.2 −53.7 2,024.3 27.1
1978 399.6 458.7 −59.2 2,273.5 26.7
1979 463.3 504.0 −40.7 2,565.6 25.0
1980 517.1 590.9 −73.8 2,791.9 25.5
1981 599.3 678.2 −79.0 3,133.2 25.2
Ref. [77] [78] [79]

Carter took office during a period of "stagflation", as the economy experienced both high inflation and low economic growth.[80] The U.S. had recovered from the 1973–75 recession, but the economy, and especially inflation, continued to be a top concern for many Americans in 1977 and 1978.[81] The economy had grown by 5% in 1976, and it continued to grow at a similar pace during 1977 and 1978.[82] Unemployment declined from 7.5% in January 1977 to 5.6% by May 1979, with over 9 million net new jobs created during that interim,[83] and real median household income grew by 5% from 1976 to 1978.[84] In October 1978, responding to worsening inflation, Carter announced the beginning of "phase two" of his anti-inflation campaign on national television. He appointed Alfred E. Kahn as the Chairman of the Council on Wage and Price Stability (COWPS), and COWPS announced price targets for industries and implemented other policies designed to lower inflation.[85]

The 1979 energy crisis ended a period of growth; both inflation and interest rates rose, while economic growth, job creation, and consumer confidence declined sharply.[86] The relatively loose monetary policy adopted by Federal Reserve Board Chairman G. William Miller, had already contributed to somewhat higher inflation,[87] rising from 5.8% in 1976 to 7.7% in 1978. The sudden doubling of crude oil prices by OPEC[88] forced inflation to double-digit levels, averaging 11.3% in 1979 and 13.5% in 1980.[51]

Following a mid-1979 cabinet shake-up, Carter named Paul Volcker as Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board.[89] Volcker pursued a tight monetary policy to bring down inflation, but this policy also had the effect of slowing economic growth even further.[90] Author Ivan Eland points out that this came during a long trend of inflation, saying, "Easy money and cheap credit during the 1970s, had caused rampant inflation, which topped out at 13 percent in 1979."[91] Carter enacted an austerity program by executive order, justifying these measures by observing that inflation had reached a "crisis stage"; both inflation and short-term interest rates reached 18 percent in February and March 1980.[92] In March, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell to its lowest level since mid-1976, and the following month unemployment rose to seven percent.[93] The economy entered into another recession, its fourth in little more than a decade,[91] and unemployment quickly rose to 7.8 percent.[94] This "V-shaped recession" and the malaise accompanying it coincided with Carter's 1980 re-election campaign, and contributed to his unexpectedly severe loss to Ronald Reagan.[95] Not until March 1981 did GDP and employment totals regain pre-recession levels.[82][83]

Health care

 
Carter in office, February 1977

During the 1976 presidential campaign, Carter proposed a health care reform plan that included key features of a bipartisan bill, sponsored by Senator Ted Kennedy, that provided for the establishment of a universal national health insurance (NHI) system.[96] Though most Americans had health insurance through Medicare, Medicaid, or private plans, approximately ten percent of the population did not have coverage in 1977. The establishment of an NHI plan was the top priority of organized labor and many liberal Democrats, but Carter had concerns about cost, as well as the inflationary impact, of such a system. He delayed consideration of health care through 1977, and ultimately decided that he would not support Kennedy's proposal to establish an NHI system that covered all Americans. Kennedy met repeatedly with Carter and White House staffers in an attempt to forge a compromise health care plan, but negotiations broke down in July 1978. Though Kennedy and Carter had previously been on good terms, differences over health insurance led to an open break between the two Democratic leaders.[97]

In June 1979, Carter proposed more limited health insurance reform—an employer mandate to provide private catastrophic health insurance. The plan would also extend Medicaid to the very poor without dependent minor children, and would add catastrophic coverage to Medicare.[98] Kennedy rejected the plan as insufficient.[99] In November 1979, Senator Russell B. Long led a bipartisan conservative majority of the Senate Finance Committee to support an employer mandate to provide catastrophic coverage and the addition of catastrophic coverage to Medicare.[98] These efforts were abandoned in 1980 due to budget constraints.[100]

Welfare and tax reform proposals

Carter sought a comprehensive overhaul of welfare programs in order to provide more cost-effective aid; Congress rejected almost all of his proposals.[101] Proposals contemplated by the Carter administration include a guaranteed minimum income, a federal job guarantee for the unemployed, a negative income tax, and direct cash payments to aid recipients. In early 1977, Secretary Califano presented Carter with several options for welfare reform, all of which Carter rejected because they increased government spending. In August 1977, Carter proposed a major jobs program for welfare recipients capable of working and a "decent income" to those who were incapable of working.[102] Carter was unable to win support for his welfare reform proposals, and they never received a vote in Congress.[103] In October 1978, Carter helped convince the Senate to pass the Humphrey–Hawkins Full Employment Act, which committed the federal government to the goals of low inflation and low unemployment. To the disappointment of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) and organized labor, the final act did not include a provision authorizing the federal government to act as an employer of last resort in order to provide for full employment.[104]

Carter also sought tax reform in order to create a simpler, more progressive taxation system. He proposed taxing capital gains as ordinary income, eliminating tax shelters, limiting itemized tax deductions, and increasing the standard deduction.[105] Carter's taxation proposals were rejected by Congress, and no major tax reform bill was passed during Carter's presidency.[106] Amid growing public fear that the social security system was in danger of bankruptcy within a few years, Carter signed the Social Security Financing Amendments Act in December 1977, which corrected a flaw that had been introduced into the benefit formula by earlier legislation in 1972, raised Social Security taxes and reduced Social Security benefits. "Now this legislation", the president remarked, "will guarantee that from 1980 to the year 2030, the social security funds will be sound".[107][108]

Environment

Carter supported many of the goals of the environmentalist movement, and appointed prominent environmentalists to high positions. As president his rhetoric strongly supported environmentalism, with a certain softness regarding his acceptance of nuclear energy – he had been trained in nuclear energy with atomic submarines in the Navy.[109] He signed several significant bills to protect the environment, such as the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977, which regulates strip mining.[110] In 1980 Carter signed into law a bill that established Superfund, a federal program designed to clean up mining or factory sites contaminated with hazardous substances.[111] Other environmental laws signed by Carter addressed energy conservation, federal mine safety standards, and control of pesticides.[112] Secretary of the Interior Cecil Andrus convinced Carter to withdraw over 100 million acres of public domain land in Alaska from commercial use by designating the land as conservation areas. The 1980 Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act doubled the amount of public land set aside for national parks and wildlife refuges.[113][114] Business and conservative interests complained that economic growth would be hurt by these conservation efforts.[115]

Education

Early in his term, Carter worked to fulfill a campaign promise to teachers' unions to create a cabinet-level Department of Education. Carter argued that the establishment of the department would increase efficiency and equal opportunity, but opponents in both parties criticized it as an additional layer of bureaucracy that would reduce local control and local support of education.[116] In October 1979, Carter signed the Department of Education Organization Act, establishing the United States Department of Education. Carter appointed Shirley Mount Hufstedler, a liberal judge from California, as the first Secretary of Education.[117] Carter also expanded the Head Start program with the addition of 43,000 children and families.[118] During his tenure, education spending as a share of federal, non-defense spending was doubled.[119] Carter opposed tax breaks for Protestant schools in the South, a position that alienated some on the Religious Right.[120] He also helped defeat the Moynihan-Packwood Bill, which called for tuition tax credits for parents to use for nonpublic school education.[121]

Other initiatives

Carter took a stance in support of decriminalization of cannabis, citing the legislation passed in Oregon in 1973.[122] In a 1977 address to Congress, Carter submitted that penalties for cannabis use should not outweigh the actual harms of cannabis consumption. Carter retained pro-decriminalization advisor Robert Du Pont, and appointed pro-decriminalization British physician Peter Bourne as his drug advisor (or "drug czar") to head up his newly formed Office of Drug Abuse Policy.[123][124] However, law enforcement, conservative politicians, and grassroots parents' groups opposed this measure, and the War on Drugs continued.[123][125] At the same time, cannabis consumption in the United States reached historically high levels.[126]

Carter was the first president to address the topic of gay rights, and his administration was the first to meet with a group of gay rights activists.[127][128] Carter opposed the Briggs Initiative, a California ballot measure that would have banned gays and supporters of gay rights from being public school teachers.[128] Carter supported the policy of affirmative action, and his administration submitted an amicus curiae brief to the Supreme Court while it heard the case of Regents of the Univ. of Cal. v. Bakke. The Supreme Court's holding, delivered in 1978, upheld the constitutionality of affirmative action but prohibited the use of racial quotas in college admissions.[129] First Lady Rosalynn Carter publicly campaigned for the ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment, and the president supported the extension of the ratification period for that amendment.[130]

Carter presided over the deregulation of several industries, which proponents hoped would help revive the sluggish economy. The Airline Deregulation Act (1978) abolished the Civil Aeronautics Board over six years, provided for the free entry of airlines into new routes, and opened air fares up to competition.[131] Carter also signed the Motor Carrier Act (1980), which gradually withdrew the government from controlling access, rates, and routes in the trucking industry; the Staggers Rail Act (1980), which loosened railroad regulations by allowing railroad executives to negotiate mergers with barge and truck lines;[132] and the Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act (1980), which removed ceilings on interest rates and permitted savings and commercial banks to write home mortgages, extend business loans, and underwrite securities issues.[131]

The Housing and Community Development Act of 1977 set up Urban Development Action Grants, extended handicapped and elderly provisions, and established the Community Reinvestment Act,[133] which sought to prevent banks from denying credit and loans to poor communities.[134] The Child Nutrition Amendments of 1978 introduced a national income standard for program eligibility based on income standards prescribed for reduced-price school lunches. The Act also strengthened the nutrition education component of the WIC program by requiring the provision of nutritional education to all program participants.[135] Urban development Action grants supplied nearly $5 million for some 3,300 projects in declining cities,[136] and a Fair Debt Collection Practices Act was passed with the aim of prohibiting "abusive and unfair techniques of debt collection."[137] The Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977 was passed with the intention of enabling the coal industry to develop coal resources without damaging other natural resources in the process,[138] while the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977 was aimed at safeguarding mineworkers from harm in the workplace.[139] Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) programs and women's programs were also strengthened, and "common sense priorities" led to focus on major health problems.[140] The Pregnancy Discrimination Act, passed in 1978, prohibited companies or organizations from discriminating against pregnant employees while providing protection in the areas of childbirth and medical conditions related to pregnancy or childbirth.[141] The National Consumer Cooperative Bank Act of 1978 sought to put funds aside for low-interest loans to start cooperatives.[142] Minimum wage coverage was extended to farmworkers, and the Age Discrimination in Employment Act Amendments of 1978 increased the upper age limit on coverage against age discrimination in non-federal employment and in the private sector from 65 to 70 as a means of extending safeguards against age discrimination.[143] In addition, the purchase requirement for food stamps was abolished[144] and the first-ever national youth employment law was enacted.[145]

In 1979 Carter opened the first White House Conference on Library and Information Services stating that "libraries must be strengthened and the public made more aware of their potential: Libraries can be community resources for the consumer and small business on matters such as energy and marketing and technological innovation." [146] The White House Conference on Library and Information Services was a project of the National Commission on Libraries and Information Science.

Foreign affairs

Although foreign policy was not his highest priority at first, a series of worsening crises made it increasingly the focus of attention regarding the Soviet Union, Afghanistan, Iran, and the global energy crisis.[147] His handling of the Iranian Revolution and hostage crisis made him very unpopular at home and lowered his historical stature as measured by historians.[148]

Cold War

 
A map of the geopolitical situation in 1980

Carter took office during the Cold War, a sustained period of geopolitical tension between the United States and the Soviet Union. During the late 1960s and early 1970s, relations between the two superpowers had improved through a policy known as detente. In a reflection of the waning importance of the Cold War, some of Carter's contemporaries labeled him as the first post-Cold War president, but relations with the Soviet Union would continue to be an important factor in American foreign policy in the late 1970s and the 1980s. Many of the leading officials in the Carter administration, including Carter himself, were members of the Trilateral Commission, which de-emphasized the Cold War. The Trilateral Commission instead advocated a foreign policy focused on aid to Third World countries and improved relations with Western Europe and Japan. The central tension of the Carter administration's foreign policy was reflected in the division between Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, who sought improved relations with the Soviet Union and the Third World, and National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski, who favored confrontation with the Soviet Union on a range of issues.[149] After the disappointment of the Vietnam war a re-focus of the US Army on the Warsaw Pact problem found that technology and teamwork both were in dire need to be upgraded. Guided by General Donn A. Starry and the concept that was to become AirLand Battle, Carter and his administration approved the initial outlays for the A-10, AH-64, HIMARS, Bradley IFV, M109 Paladin, Patriot missile, M1 Abrams,[150] and the Lockheed F-117 Nighthawk.[151]

Human rights

 
Carter meeting with Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet, in Washington, September 6, 1977

Carter believed that previous administrations had erred in allowing the Cold War concerns and Realpolitik to dominate foreign policy. His administration placed a new emphasis on human rights, democratic values, nuclear proliferation, and global poverty.[152][153] The Carter administration's human rights emphasis was part of a broader, worldwide focus on human rights in the 1970s, as non-governmental organizations such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch became increasingly prominent. Carter nominated civil rights activist Patricia M. Derian as Coordinator for Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs, and in August 1977, had the post elevated to that of Assistant Secretary of State. Derian established the United States' Country Reports on Human Rights Practices, published annually since 1977.[154]

Latin America was central to Carter's new focus on human rights.[155] The Carter administration ended support to the historically U.S.-backed Somoza regime in Nicaragua and directed aid to the new Sandinista National Liberation Front government that assumed power after Somoza's overthrow. Carter also cut back or terminated military aid to Augusto Pinochet of Chile, Ernesto Geisel of Brazil, and Jorge Rafael Videla of Argentina, all of whom he criticized for human rights violations.[156]

Carter's ambassador to the United Nations, Andrew Young, was the first African-American to hold a high-level diplomatic post. Along with Carter, he sought to change U.S. policy towards Africa, emphasizing human rights concerns over Cold War issues.[157] In 1978, Carter became the first sitting president to make an official state visit to Sub-Saharan Africa,[158] a reflection of the region's new importance under the Carter administration's foreign policy.[159] Unlike his predecessors, Carter took a strong stance against white minority rule in Rhodesia and South Africa. With Carter's support, the United Nations passed Resolution 418, which placed an arms embargo on South Africa. Carter won the repeal of the Byrd Amendment, which had undercut international sanctions on the Rhodesian government of Ian Smith. He also pressured Smith to hold elections, leading to the 1979 Rhodesia elections and the eventual creation of Zimbabwe.[160]

The more assertive human rights policy championed by Derian and State Department Policy Planning Director Anthony Lake was somewhat blunted by the opposition of Brzezinski. Policy disputes reached their most contentious point during the 1979 fall of Pol Pot's genocidal regime of Democratic Kampuchea following the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia, when Brzezinski prevailed in having the administration refuse to recognize the new Cambodian government due to its support by the Soviet Union.[161] Despite human rights concerns, Carter continued U.S. support for Joseph Mobutu of Zaire, who defeated Angolan-backed insurgents in conflicts known as Shaba I and Shaba II.[162] His administration also generally refrained from criticizing human rights abuses in the Philippines, Indonesia, South Korea, Iran, Israel, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and North Yemen.[163][164]

SALT II

 
President Jimmy Carter and Soviet general secretary Leonid Brezhnev sign the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT II) treaty, June 18, 1979, in Vienna

Ford and Nixon had sought to reach agreement on a second round of the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT), which had set upper limits on the number of nuclear weapons possessed by both the United States and the Soviet Union.[165] Carter hoped to extend these talks by reaching an agreement to reduce, rather than merely set upper limits on, the nuclear arsenals of both countries.[166] At the same time, he criticized the Soviet Union's record with regard to human rights, partly because he believed the public would not support negotiations with the Soviets if the president seemed too willing to accommodate the Soviets. Carter and Soviet Leader Leonid Brezhnev reached an agreement in June 1979 in the form of SALT II, but Carter's waning popularity and the opposition of Republicans and neoconservative Democrats made ratification difficult.[167] The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan severely damaged U.S.-Soviet relations and ended any hope of ratifying SALT II.

Yemen

In 1979, the Soviets intervened in the Second Yemenite War. The Soviet backing of South Yemen constituted a "smaller shock", in tandem with the Iranian Revolution. This played a role in shifting Carter's viewpoint on the Soviet Union to a more assertive one, a shift that finalized with the Soviet-Afghan War.[168]

Afghanistan

Afghanistan had been non-aligned during the early stages of the Cold War.[169] In 1978, Communists under the leadership of Nur Muhammad Taraki seized power.[170] The new regime—which was divided between Taraki's extremist Khalq faction and the more moderate Parcham—signed a treaty of friendship with the Soviet Union in December 1978.[170][171] Taraki's efforts to improve secular education and redistribute land were accompanied by mass executions and political oppression unprecedented in Afghan history, igniting a revolt by Afghan mujahideen rebels.[170] Following a general uprising in April 1979, Taraki was deposed by Khalq rival Hafizullah Amin in September.[170][171] Soviet leaders feared that an Islamist government in Afghanistan would threaten the control of Soviet Central Asia, and, as the unrest continued, they deployed 30,000 soldiers to the Soviet–Afghan border.[172] Historian George C. Herring states Carter and Brzezinski both saw Afghanistan as a potential "trap" that could expend Soviet resources in a fruitless war, and the U.S. began sending aid to the mujahideen rebels in mid-1979.[173] However, a 2020 review of declassified U.S. documents by Conor Tobin in the journal Diplomatic History found that "a Soviet military intervention was neither sought nor desired by the Carter administration ... The small-scale covert program that developed in response to the increasing Soviet influence was part of a contingency plan if the Soviets did intervene militarily, as Washington would be in a better position to make it difficult for them to consolidate their position, but not designed to induce an intervention."[174] By December, Amin's government had lost control of much of the country, prompting the Soviet Union to invade Afghanistan, execute Amin, and install Parcham leader Babrak Karmal as president.[170][171]

Carter was surprised by the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, as the consensus of the U.S. intelligence community during 1978 and 1979 was that Moscow would not forcefully intervene.[175] CIA officials had tracked the deployment of Soviet soldiers to the Afghan border, but they had not expected the Soviets to launch a full-fledged invasion.[176] Carter believed that the Soviet conquest of Afghanistan would present a grave threat to the Persian Gulf region, and he vigorously responded to what he considered a dangerous provocation.[177] In a televised speech, Carter announced sanctions on the Soviet Union, promised renewed aid to Pakistan, and articulated the Carter doctrine, which stated that the U.S. would repel any attempt to gain control of the Persian Gulf.[178][179] Pakistani leader Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq had previously had poor relations with Carter due to Pakistan's nuclear program and the execution of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, but the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and instability in Iran reinvigorated the traditional Pakistan–United States alliance.[175] In cooperation with Saudi Arabia and Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), Carter increased aid to the mujahideen through the CIA's Operation Cyclone.[179] Carter also later announced a U.S. boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, which was joined by 65 other nations,[180][181][182] and imposed an embargo on shipping American wheat to the Soviet Union. The embargo ultimately hurt American farmers more than it did the Soviet economy, and the United States lifted the embargo after Carter left office.[183]

The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan brought a significant change in Carter's foreign policy and ended the period of detente that had begun in the mid-1960s.[184] Returning to a policy of containment, the United States reconciled with Cold War allies and increased the defense budget, leading to a new arms race with the Soviet Union.[185] U.S. support for the mujahideen in Afghanistan would continue until the Soviet Union withdrew from Afghanistan in 1989. The USSR collapsed two years later.[186][175]

Middle East

Camp David Accords

 
Anwar Sadat, Jimmy Carter and Menachem Begin meet at Camp David on September 6, 1978.
 
Sadat, Carter and Begin shaking hands after signing Peace treaty between Egypt and Israel in the White House, March 27, 1979

On taking office, Carter decided to attempt to mediate the long-running Arab–Israeli conflict.[187][188] He sought a comprehensive settlement between Israel and its neighbors through a reconvening of the 1973 Geneva Conference, but these efforts had collapsed by the end of 1977.[189] Carter did convince Egyptian leader Anwar Sadat to visit Israel in 1978. Sadat's visit drew the condemnation of other Arab League countries, but Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin each expressed an openness to bilateral talks. Begin sought security guarantees; Sadat sought the withdrawal of Israeli forces from the Sinai Peninsula and home rule for the West Bank and Gaza, Israeli-occupied territories that were largely populated by Palestinian Arabs. Israel had taken control of the West Bank and Gaza in the 1967 Six-Day War, while the Sinai had been occupied by Israel since the end of the 1973 Yom Kippur War.[190]

Seeking to further negotiations, Carter invited Begin and Sadat to the presidential retreat of Camp David in September 1978. Because direct negotiations between Sadat and Begin proved unproductive, Carter began meeting with the two leaders individually.[191] While Begin was willing to withdraw from the Sinai Peninsula, he refused to agree to the establishment of a Palestinian state. Israel had begun constructing settlements in the West Bank, which emerged as an important barrier to a peace agreement. Unable to come to definitive settlement over an Israeli withdrawal, the two sides reached an agreement in which Israel promised to allow the creation of an elected government in the West Bank and Gaza. In return, Egypt became the first Arab state to recognize Israel's right to exist. The Camp David Accords were the subject of intense domestic opposition in both Egypt and Israel, as well as the wider Arab World, but each side agreed to negotiate a peace treaty on the basis of the accords.[192]

On March 26, 1979, Egypt and Israel signed a peace treaty in Washington,[193] Carter's role in getting the treaty was essential. Author Aaron David Miller concluded the following: "No matter whom I spoke to — Americans, Egyptians, or Israelis — most everyone said the same thing: no Carter, no peace treaty."[194] Carter himself viewed the agreement as his most important accomplishment in office.[192]

Iranian Revolution and hostage crisis

 
The Iranian Shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, meeting with Alfred Atherton, William H. Sullivan, Cyrus Vance, President Jimmy Carter and Zbigniew Brzezinski in Tehran, 1977

Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the Shah of Iran, had been a reliable U.S. ally since the 1953 Iranian coup d'état. During the years after the coup, the U.S. lavished aid on Iran, while Iran served as a dependable source of oil exports.[195] Carter, Vance, and Brzezinski all viewed Iran as a key Cold War ally, not only for the oil it produced but also because of its influence in OPEC and its strategic position between the Soviet Union and the Persian Gulf.[196] Despite human rights violations, Carter visited Iran in late 1977 and authorized the sale of U.S. fighter aircraft. That same year, rioting broke out in several cities, and it soon spread across the country. Poor economic conditions, the unpopularity of Pahlavi's "White Revolution", and an Islamic revival all led to increasing anger among Iranians, many of whom also despised the United States for its support of Pahlavi and its role in the 1953 coup.[195]

By 1978, the Iranian Revolution had broken out against the Shah's rule.[197] Secretary of State Vance argued that the Shah should institute a series of reforms to appease the voices of discontent, while Brzezinski argued in favor of a crackdown on dissent. The mixed messages that the Shah received from Vance and Brzezinski contributed to his confusion and indecision. The Shah went into exile, leaving a caretaker government in control. A popular religious figure, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, returned from exile in February 1979 to popular acclaim. As the unrest continued, Carter allowed Pahlavi into the United States for medical treatment.[198] Carter and Vance were both initially reluctant to admit Pahlavi due to concerns about the reaction in Iran, but Iranian leaders assured them that it would not cause an issue.[199] In November 1979, shortly after Pahlavi was allowed to enter the U.S., a group of Iranians stormed the U.S. embassy in Tehran and took 66 American captives, beginning the Iran hostage crisis.[198] Iranian Prime Minister Mehdi Bazargan ordered the militants to release the hostages, but he resigned from office after Khomeini backed the militants.[199]

The crisis quickly became the subject of international and domestic attention, and Carter vowed to secure the release of the hostages. He refused the Iranian demand of the return of Pahlavi in exchange for the release of the hostages. His approval ratings rose as Americans rallied around his response, but the crisis became increasingly problematic for his administration as it continued.[200] In an attempt to rescue the hostages, Carter launched Operation Eagle Claw in April 1980. The operation was a total disaster, and it ended in the death of eight American soldiers. The failure of the operation strengthened Ayatollah Khomeini's position in Iran and badly damaged Carter's domestic standing.[201] Carter was dealt another blow when Vance, who had consistently opposed the operation, resigned.[202] Iran refused to negotiate the return of the hostages until Iraq launched an invasion in September 1980. With Algeria serving as an intermediary, negotiations continued until an agreement was reached in January 1981. In return for releasing the 52 captives, Iran was allowed access to over $7 billion of its money that had been frozen in the United States. Iran waited to release the captives until 30 minutes after Carter left office on January 20, 1981.[203]

Released in 2017, a declassified memo produced by the CIA in 1980 concluded "Iranian hardliners – especially Ayatollah Khomeini" were "determined to exploit the hostage issue to bring about President Carter's defeat in the November elections." Additionally, Tehran in 1980 wanted "the world to believe that Imam Khomeini caused President Carter's downfall and disgrace"[204]

Latin America

Panama Canal treaties

 
Carter and Omar Torrijos shake hands moments after the signing of the Torrijos-Carter Treaties.

Since the 1960s, Panama had called for the United States to cede control of the Panama Canal.[205] The bipartisan national policy of turning over the Canal to Panama had been established by presidents Johnson, Nixon, and Ford, but negotiations had dragged on for a dozen years. Carter made the cession of the Panama Canal a priority, believing it would implement Carter's call for a moral cleaning of American foreign policy and win approval across Latin America as a gracious apology for American wrongdoing. He also feared that another postponement of negotiations might precipitate violent upheaval in Panama, which could damage or block the canal.[206]

The Carter administration negotiated the Torrijos-Carter Treaties, two treaties which provided that Panama would gain control of the canal in 1999.[207] Carter's initiative faced wide resistance in the United States, and many in the public, particularly conservatives, thought that Carter was "giving away" a crucial U.S. asset.[208] Conservatives formed groups such as the Committee to Save the Panama Canal in an attempt to defeat the treaties in the Senate, but Carter made ratification of the treaties his top priority. During the ratification debate, the Senate crafted amendments that granted the U.S. the right to intervene militarily to keep the canal open, which the Panamanians assented to after further negotiations.[209] In March 1978, the Senate ratified both treaties by a margin of 68-to-32, narrowly passing the two-thirds margin necessary for ratification. The Canal Zone and all its facilities were ultimately turned over to Panama on December 31, 1999.[210][211]

Cuba

Carter hoped to improve relations with Cuba upon taking office, but any thaw in relations was prevented by ongoing Cold War disputes in Central America and Africa. In early 1980, Cuban leader Fidel Castro announced that anyone who wished to leave Cuba would be allowed to do so through the port of Mariel. After Carter announced that the United States would provide "open arms for the tens of thousands of refugees seeking freedom from Communist domination", Cuban Americans arranged the Mariel boatlift. The Refugee Act, signed earlier in the year, had provided for annual cap of 19,500 Cuban immigrants to the United States per year, and required that those refugees go through a review process. By September, 125,000 Cubans had arrived in the United States, and many faced a lack of adequate food and housing. Carter was widely criticized for his handling of the boatlift, especially in the electorally important state of Florida.[212]

Asia

Rapprochement with China

 
Deng Xiaoping with President Carter

Continuing a rapprochement begun during the Nixon administration, Carter successfully achieved closer relations with the People's Republic of China (PRC).[213] The two countries increasingly collaborated against the Soviet Union, and the Carter administration tacitly consented to the Chinese invasion of Vietnam. In 1979, Carter extended formal diplomatic recognition to the PRC for the first time. This decision led to a boom in trade between the United States and the PRC, which was pursuing economic reforms under the leadership of Deng Xiaoping.[214] After the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, Carter allowed the sale of military supplies to China and began negotiations to share military intelligence.[215] In January 1980, Carter unilaterally revoked the Sino-American Mutual Defense Treaty with the Republic of China (ROC), which had lost control of mainland China to the PRC in the Chinese Civil War, but was now based offshore on the island of Taiwan. Carter's abrogation of the treaty was challenged in court by conservative Republicans, but the Supreme Court ruled that the issue was a non-justiciable political question in Goldwater v. Carter. The U.S. continued to maintain diplomatic contacts with the ROC through the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act.[216]

South Korea

One of Carter's first acts was to order the withdrawal of troops from South Korea, which had hosted a large number of U.S. military personnel since the end of the Korean War. Carter believed that the soldiers could be put to better use in Western Europe, but opponents of the withdrawal feared that North Korea would invade South Korea in the aftermath of the withdrawal. South Korea and Japan both protested the move, as did many members of Congress, the military, and the State Department. After a strong backlash, Carter delayed the withdrawal, and ultimately only a fraction of the U.S. forces left South Korea. Carter's attempt to remove U.S. forces from South Korea weakened the government of South Korean President Park Chung-hee, who was assassinated in 1979.[217]

Africa

In sharp contrast to Nixon and Ford, Carter gave priority to sub-Sahara Africa.[218][219] Southern Africa especially emerged as a Cold War battleground after Cuba sent a large military force that took control of Angola in 1976.[220] The chief policy person for Africa in the Carter administration was Andrew Young, a leader in the black Atlanta community who became Ambassador to the United Nations. Young opened up friendly relationships with key leaders, especially in Nigeria. A highly controversial issue was independence of Namibia from Union of South Africa. Young began United Nations discussions which went nowhere, and Namibia would not gain independence until long after Carter left office.[221] Young advocated strong sanctions after the murder by South African police of Steve Biko in 1977, but Carter refused and only imposed a limited arms embargo and South Africa ignored the protests.[222] The most important success of the Carter administration in Africa was helping the transition from white-dominated Southern Rhodesia to black rule in Zimbabwe.[223][224]

International travels

 
Countries visited by Carter during his presidency

Carter made 12 international trips to 25 nations during his presidency.[225]

Controversies

OMB Director Bert Lance resigned his position on September 21, 1977, amid allegations of improper banking activities prior to his becoming director.[226] The controversy over Lance damaged Carter's standing with Congress and the public, and Lance's resignation removed one of Carter's most effective advisers from office.[227] In April 1979, Attorney General Bell appointed Paul J. Curran as a special counsel to investigate loans made to the peanut business owned by Carter by a bank controlled by Bert Lance. Unlike Archibald Cox and Leon Jaworski who were named as special prosecutors to investigate the Watergate scandal, Curran's position as special counsel meant that he would not be able to file charges on his own, but would require the approval of Assistant Attorney General Philip Heymann.[228] Carter became the first sitting president to testify under oath as part of an investigation of that president.[229] The investigation was concluded in October 1979, with Curran announcing that no evidence had been found to support allegations that funds loaned from the National Bank of Georgia had been diverted to Carter's 1976 presidential campaign.[230]

Carter's brother Billy Carter generated a great deal of notoriety during Carter's presidency for his colorful and often outlandish public behavior.[231] The Senate began an investigation into Billy Carter's activities after it was disclosed that Libya had given Billy over $200,000 for unclear reasons.[49] The controversy over Billy Carter's relation to Libya became known as "Billygate", and, while the president had no personal involvement in it, Billygate nonetheless damaged the Carter administration.[232]

1980 presidential election

 
Graph of Carter's Gallup approval ratings

In April 1978, polling showed that Carter's approval rating had declined precipitously, and a Gallup survey found Carter trailing Ted Kennedy for the 1980 Democratic nomination.[233] By mid-1979, Carter faced an energy crisis, rampant inflation, slow economic growth, and the widespread perception that his administration was incompetent.[234] In November 1979, Kennedy announced that he would challenge Carter in the 1980 Democratic primaries.[235] Carter's polling numbers shot up following the start of the Iran hostage crisis,[236] and his response to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan further boosted his prospects in the Democratic primaries.[177] Carter dominated the early primaries, allowing him to amass an early delegate lead. Carter's polling numbers tumbled in March, and Kennedy won the New York and Connecticut primaries.[237] Though Carter developed a wide delegate lead, Kennedy stayed in the race after triumphing in Pennsylvania and Michigan.[238] By the day of the final primaries, Carter had registered the lowest approval ratings in the history of presidential polling, and Kennedy won just enough delegates to prevent Carter from clinching the nomination.[239]

After the final primaries, Carter met with Kennedy in the White House. Partly because Carter refused to accept a party platform calling for the establishment of a national health insurance program, Kennedy refused to concede. He instead called for an "open convention", in which delegates would be free to vote for the candidate of their choice regardless of the result in the primaries.[240] Carter's allies defeated Kennedy's maneuverings at the 1980 Democratic National Convention, and Carter and Vice President Mondale won re-nomination.[241] Despite Kennedy's defeat, he had mobilized the liberal wing of the Democratic Party, which would give Carter only weak support in the general election.[242]

The 1980 Republican presidential primaries quickly developed into a two-man contest between former Governor Ronald Reagan of California and former Congressman George H. W. Bush of Texas. Bush, who referred to Reagan's tax cut proposal as "voodoo economics", won the Iowa Caucus but faded later in the race. Reagan won the presidential nomination on the first ballot of the 1980 Republican National Convention and named Bush as his running mate.[243] Meanwhile, Republican Congressman John B. Anderson, who had previously sought the Republican presidential nomination, launched an independent campaign for president.[244] Polls taken in September, after the conclusion of the party conventions, showed a tied race between Reagan and Carter.[245] The Carter campaign felt confident that the country would reject the conservative viewpoints espoused by Reagan, and there were hopeful signs with regards to the economy and the Iranian hostage crisis.[246] Seeking to unite Democrats behind his re-election campaign, Carter decided to focus on attacking Reagan's supposed ideological extremism rather than on his own policies.[247]

 
The electoral map of the 1980 election

A key strength for Reagan was his appeal to the rising conservative movement, as epitomized by activists like Paul Weyrich, Richard Viguerie, and Phyllis Schlafly. Though most conservative leaders espoused cutting taxes and budget deficits, many conservatives focused more closely on social issues like abortion and homosexuality.[248] Developments of the 1970s, including the Supreme Court case of Roe v. Wade and the withdrawal of Bob Jones University's tax-exempt status, convinced many evangelical Protestants to become engaged in politics for the first time. Evangelical Protestants became an increasingly important voting bloc, and they generally supported Reagan in the 1980 campaign.[249] Reagan also won the backing of so-called "Reagan Democrats", who tended to be Northern, white, working-class voters who supported liberal economic programs but disliked policies such as affirmative action.[250] Though he advocated socially conservative view points, Reagan focused much of his campaign on attacks against Carter's foreign policy, including the SALT II treaty, the Torrijos–Carter Treaties, and the revocation of the Sino-American Mutual Defense Treaty.[251] Reagan called for increased defense spending, tax cuts, domestic spending cuts, and the dismantling of the Department of Education and the Department of Energy.[252]

Polling remained close throughout September and October, but Reagan's performance in the October 28 debate and Carter's failure to win the release of the Iranian hostages gave Reagan the momentum entering election day.[253] Reagan won 50.7 percent of the popular vote and 489 electoral votes, Carter won 41 percent of the popular vote and 49 electoral votes, and Anderson won 6.6 percent of the popular vote.[254] Reagan carried all but a handful of states, and performed especially well among Southern whites.[255] The size of Reagan's victory surprised many observers, who had expected a close race. Voter turnout reached its lowest point since the 1948 presidential election, a reflection of the negative attitudes many people held towards all three major candidates.[256] In the concurrent congressional elections, Republicans won control of the Senate for the first time since the 1950s.[255] Carter, meanwhile, was the first elected president to lose re-election since Herbert Hoover in 1932.[257]

Evaluation and legacy

Polls of historians and political scientists have generally ranked Carter as a below-average president. A 2018 poll of the American Political Science Association's Presidents and Executive Politics section ranked Carter as the 26th best president.[258] A 2017 C-SPAN poll of historians also ranked Carter as the 26th best president.[259] Some critics have compared Carter to Herbert Hoover, who was similarly a "hardworking but uninspiring technocrat."[260]

Robert A. Strong writes:

Jimmy Carter is much more highly regarded today than when he lost his bid for reelection in 1980. He has produced an exemplary post-presidency, and today there is an increased appreciation for the enormity of the task he took on in 1977, if not for the measures he took to deal with the crises that he faced. Carter took office just thirty months after a President had left the entire federal government in a shambles. He faced epic challenges—the energy crisis, Soviet aggression, Iran, and above all, a deep mistrust of leadership by his citizens. He was hard working and conscientious. But he often seemed like a player out of position, a man more suited to be secretary of energy than president. Carter became President by narrowly defeating an uninspiring, unelected chief executive heir to the worst presidential scandal in history. The nomination was his largely because in the decade before 1976, Democratic leadership in the nation had been decimated by scandal, Vietnam, and an assassination.[261]

Historians Burton I. Kaufman and Scott Kaufman conclude:

It was Carter's fate to attempt to navigate the nation between the rock of traditional Democratic constituencies and the hard place of an emerging conservative movement whose emphasis was more on social and cultural values than on the economic concerns of the Democratic Party. It was also Carter's misfortune that he led the nation at a time of staggering inflation and growing unemployment, compounded by an oil shock over which he had little control... At the same time, it is hard to avoid the conclusion that Carter's was a mediocre presidency and that this was largely his own doing. He was smart rather than shrewd. He was not a careful political planner. He suffered from strategic myopia. He was long on good intentions but short on know-how. He had lofty ideals, such as in the area of human rights, which had symbolic and long-lasting importance, but they often blinded him to political realities. He was self-righteous. He was an administrator who micro-managed, but not well. Most important, he was a president who never adequately defined a mission for his government, a purpose for the country, and a way to get there.[262]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Ford meant to say that the United States did not accept the Soviet domination of Eastern Europe.[13]
  2. ^ The War Powers Resolution and the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974 were among the laws passed by Congress under Nixon and Ford to restrict the president's power; Congress also created the Congressional Budget Office and began to take a more active role in foreign policy.[41]
  3. ^ Congress rescinded the surcharge by passing a joint resolution over Carter's veto. Carter was the first president since Harry S. Truman to have his veto overridden by a Congress controlled by the same party.[72]

References

  1. ^ Kaufman and Kaufman, 2006, pp. 9–12
  2. ^ Zelizer, p. 29
  3. ^ Zelizer, pp. 31–32
  4. ^ Zelizer, pp. 35–36
  5. ^ Zelizer, pp. 34–38
  6. ^ Zelizer, pp. 39–40
  7. ^ Kaufman and Kaufman, 2006, p. 15
  8. ^ Zelizer, pp. 41–44
  9. ^ a b Zelizer, pp. 45–46
  10. ^ a b Kaufman and Kaufman, 2006, pp. 16–17
  11. ^ Zelizer, pp. 47–48
  12. ^ a b Howard, Adam (September 26, 2016). "10 Presidential Debates That Actually Made an Impact". NBC News. Retrieved December 31, 2016.
  13. ^ a b Kaufman and Kaufman, 2006, pp. 17–19
  14. ^ Zelizer, p. 52
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Works cited

  • Alter, Jonathan. His Very Best: Jimmy Carter, a Life (2020). excerpt
  • Bickerton, Ian J.; Carla L. Klausner (2007). A history of the Arab-Israeli conflict. Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Pearson Prentice Hall. ISBN 9780132223355.
  • Herring, George C. (2008). From Colony to Superpower; U.S. Foreign Relations Since 1776. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-507822-0.
  • Kaufman, Burton I.; Kaufman, Scott (2006). The Presidency of James Earl Carter (2nd ed.). University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0700614714.
  • Patterson, James (2005). Restless Giant: The United States from Watergate to Bush v. Gore. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195122169.
  • Weiner, Tim (2008). Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA. Anchor Books. ISBN 9780307389008.
  • Zelizer, Julian (2010). Jimmy Carter. Times Books. ISBN 978-0-8050-8957-8.

Further reading

  • Abramson, Paul R., John H. Aldrich, and David W. Rohde. Change and Continuity in the 1980 Elections (1983).
  • Anderson, Patrick. Electing Jimmy Carter: The Campaign of 1976 (1994)
  • Berggren, D. Jason, and Nicol C. Rae. "Jimmy Carter and George W. Bush: Faith, foreign policy, and an evangelical presidential style." Presidential Studies Quarterly 36.4 (2006): 606–632 online.
  • Bird, Kai. The Outlier (2021), in-depth popular study online review
  • Biven, W. Carl. Jimmy Carter's Economy: Policy in an Age of Limits (U of North Carolina Press. 2002) online
  • Bourne, Peter G. (1997). Jimmy Carter: A Comprehensive Biography From Plains to Post-Presidency. New York: Scribner. ISBN 0-684-19543-7.
  • Busch, Andrew E. (2005). Reagan's Victory: The Presidential Election of 1980 and the Rise of the Right. University Press of Kansas.
  • Campagna, Anthony S. Economic Policy in the Carter Administration (Greenwood Press, 1995) online
  • Carleton, David, and Michael Stohl. "The foreign policy of human rights: Rhetoric and reality from Jimmy Carter to Ronald Reagan." Human Rights Quarterly 7 (1985): 205–229 online.
  • Congressional Quarterly. Congress and the Nation V: 1977–1980 (1981) in-depth nonpartisan detail on all major issues; 1240pp; contents
  • Dumbrell, John (1995). The Carter Presidency: A Re-evaluation (2nd ed.). Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press. ISBN 0-7190-4693-9.
  • Fink, Gary M.; Graham, Hugh Davis, eds. (1998). The Carter Presidency: Policy Choices in the Post-New Deal Era. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 0-7006-0895-8.
  • Garrison, Jean A. Games Advisors Play: Foreign Policy in the Nixon and Carter Administrations (1999) online
  • Glad, Betty. An outsider in the White House: Jimmy Carter, his advisors, and the making of American foreign policy (Cornell University Press, 2009).
  • Graff, Henry F., ed. The Presidents: A Reference History (3rd ed. 2002)
  • Hargrove, Erwin C. Jimmy Carter as president: Leadership and the politics of the public good (LSU Press, 1999).
  • Holzer, Harold. The Presidents Vs. the Press: The Endless Battle Between the White House and the Media--from the Founding Fathers to Fake News (Dutton, 2020) pp. 293–304.. online
  • Jensehaugen, Jørgen. 2018 Arab-Israeli Diplomacy under Carter: The US, Israel and the Palestinians (I. B. Tauris, 2018) online analysis by scholars on H-diplo
  • Kaufman, Victor S. "The Bureau of Human Rights during the Carter Administration." The Historian 61.1 (1998): 51–66.
  • Kaufman, Burton I. ed. A Companion to Gerald R. Ford and Jimmy Carter (2015) 30 scholarly essays by experts; excerpts
  • Kaufman, Burton I. The Carter Years (2006) 648pp; long scholarly biographies of all the major players.
  • Kaufman, Diane, and Scott Kaufman. (2013) Historical Dictionary of the Carter Era (Scarecrow, 2013) 301 pp.
  • Krukones, Michael G. "The campaign promises of Jimmy Carter: Accomplishments and failures." Presidential Studies Quarterly (1985): 136-144. online
  • Mattson, Kevin. 'What the Heck Are You Up To, Mr. President?': Jimmy Carter, America's 'Malaise,' and the Speech That Should Have Changed the Country (Bloomsbury, 2010).
  • Mitchell, Nancy. Jimmy Carter in Africa: Race and the cold war (Stanford UP, 2018).
  • Morris, Kenneth Earl, ed. Jimmy Carter, American Moralist (University of Georgia Press, 1996).
  • Reichard, Gary W. "Early Returns: Assessing Jimmy Carter" Presidential Studies Quarterly 20#3 (Summer 1990) 603–620. online
  • Poe, Steven C. "Human rights and economic aid allocation under Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter." American Journal of Political Science (1992): 147–167 online.
  • Quandt, William B. Camp David: peacemaking and politics (Brookings Institution Press, 2015).
  • Roessner, Amber (2020). Jimmy Carter and the Birth of the Marathon Media Campaign. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 978-0807170793.
  • Rosenbaum, Herbert D. and Alexej Ugrinsky, eds. Jimmy Carter: Foreign Policy and Post-Presidential Years (1994) 532pp; essays by experts
  • Rosenbaum, Herbert D. and Alexej Ugrinsky, eds. The Presidency and Domestic Policies of Jimmy Carter (1994) 876pp; essays by experts online
  • Sarantakes, Nicholas Evan. Dropping the torch: Jimmy Carter, the Olympic boycott, and the Cold War (Cambridge University Press, 2010).
  • Schmitz, David F., and Vanessa Walker. "Jimmy Carter and the Foreign Policy of Human Rights: The Development of a Post‐Cold War Foreign Policy." Diplomatic History 28.1 (2004): 113–143.
  • Smith, Gaddis. Morality, Reason, and Power: American diplomacy in the Carter years (New York: Hill and Wang, 1986).
  • Strong, Robert A. (2000). Working in the World: Jimmy Carter and the Making of American Foreign Policy. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 0-8071-2445-1.
  • Thornton, Richard C. The Carter Years: Toward a New Global Order (1991 ) 596pp; comprehensive coverage of foreign policy online
  • Zelizer, Julian E. Jimmy Carter: The American Presidents Series: The 39th President, 1977–1981 (Macmillan, 2010).

Primary sources and memoirs

  • Kantowicz, Edward R. "Reminiscences of a Fated Presidency: Themes from the Carter Memoirs." Presidential Studies Quarterly 15#4 1986, pp. 651–665. online
  • Lafeber, Walter. "From confusion to Cold War: The memoirs of the Carter administration." Diplomatic History 8.1 (1984): 1–12 online
  • Thomas, Norman C. "The Carter Administration Memoirs: A Review Essay." Western Political Quarterly 39.2 (1986): 348–360. online
  • Brzeziński, Zbigniew. Power and Principle. Memoirs of the National Security Adviser, 1977–1981 (1983)
  • Califano, Jr., Joseph A. Governing America (1981) online
  • Carter, Jimmy. Keeping faith: Memoirs of a president (U of Arkansas Press, 1995). online
  • Carter, Jimmy. A Government as Good as its People (U of Arkansas Press, 1996).
  • Carter, Jimmy. White House diary (2011) online
  • Carter, Jimmy. Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: Jimmy Carter, 1977 (1978); annual online
  • Eizenstat, Stuart E. President Carter: The White House Years (2018).
  • Jordan, Hamilton. Crisis. The Last Year of the Carter Presidency (1982) online.
  • Lance, Bert. The Truth of the Matter: My Life in and out of Politics (1991). online
  • Mondale, Walter. The good fight: a life in liberal politics (2010) online
  • O'Neill Jr, Tip, and William Novak. Man of the House: The life and political memoirs of Speaker Tip O'Neill (1987) online.
  • Powell, Jody. The Other Side of the Story (1984). online
  • Thompson, Kenneth W., ed. The Carter presidency: fourteen intimate perspectives of Jimmy Carter (1990).
  • Vance, Cyrus. Hard Choices: Four Critical Years in Managing America's Foreign Policy (1983) online.

External links

  • Carter Library
  • Miller Center on the Presidency at U of Virginia, brief articles on Carter and his presidency

presidency, jimmy, carter, chronological, guide, timeline, jimmy, carter, presidency, jimmy, carter, tenure, 39th, president, united, states, began, with, inauguration, january, 1977, ended, january, 1981, democrat, from, georgia, carter, took, office, after, . For a chronological guide see Timeline of the Jimmy Carter presidency Jimmy Carter s tenure as the 39th president of the United States began with his inauguration on January 20 1977 and ended on January 20 1981 A Democrat from Georgia Carter took office after defeating incumbent Republican President Gerald Ford in the 1976 election His presidency ended following his defeat in the 1980 election by Republican Ronald Reagan Aged 98 he is the oldest living longest lived and longest married president and has the longest post presidency He is the third oldest living former state leader Presidency of Jimmy Carter January 20 1977 January 20 1981CabinetSee listPartyDemocraticElection1976SeatWhite House Gerald FordRonald Reagan Seal of the PresidentLibrary websiteCarter took office during a period of stagflation as the economy experienced a combination of high inflation and slow economic growth His budgetary policies centered on taming inflation by reducing deficits and government spending Responding to energy concerns that had persisted through much of the 1970s his administration enacted a national energy policy designed for long term energy conservation and the development of alternative resources In the short term the country was beset by an energy crisis in 1979 which was overlapped by a recession in 1980 Carter sought reforms to the country s welfare health care and tax systems but was largely unsuccessful partly due to poor relations with Democrats in Congress Carter reoriented U S foreign policy towards an emphasis on human rights He continued the conciliatory late Cold War policies of his predecessors normalizing relations with China and pursuing further Strategic Arms Limitation Talks with the Soviet Union In an effort to end the Arab Israeli conflict he helped arrange the Camp David Accords between Israel and Egypt Through the Torrijos Carter Treaties Carter guaranteed the eventual transfer of the Panama Canal to Panama Denouncing the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 he reversed his conciliatory policies towards the Soviet Union and began a period of military build up and diplomatic pressure such as pulling out of the Moscow Olympics The final fifteen months of Carter s presidential tenure were marked by several additional major crises including the Iran hostage crisis and economic malaise Ted Kennedy a prominent liberal Democrat who protested Carter s opposition to a national health insurance system challenged Carter in the 1980 Democratic primaries Boosted by public support for his policies in late 1979 and early 1980 Carter rallied to defeat Kennedy and win re nomination He lost the 1980 presidential election in a landslide to Republican nominee Ronald Reagan Polls of historians and political scientists generally rank Carter as a below average president although his post presidential activities are viewed more favorably Contents 1 1976 election 2 Transition 3 Inauguration 4 Administration 5 Judicial appointments 6 Domestic affairs 6 1 Relations with Congress 6 2 Budget policies 6 3 Energy 6 3 1 National Energy Act 6 3 2 1979 energy crisis 6 4 Economy 6 5 Health care 6 6 Welfare and tax reform proposals 6 7 Environment 6 8 Education 6 9 Other initiatives 7 Foreign affairs 7 1 Cold War 7 1 1 Human rights 7 1 2 SALT II 7 1 3 Yemen 7 1 4 Afghanistan 7 2 Middle East 7 2 1 Camp David Accords 7 2 2 Iranian Revolution and hostage crisis 7 3 Latin America 7 3 1 Panama Canal treaties 7 3 2 Cuba 7 4 Asia 7 4 1 Rapprochement with China 7 4 2 South Korea 7 5 Africa 7 6 International travels 8 Controversies 9 1980 presidential election 10 Evaluation and legacy 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Works cited 14 Further reading 14 1 Primary sources and memoirs 15 External links1976 election EditMain articles Jimmy Carter 1976 presidential campaign and 1976 United States presidential election Further information 1976 United States elections 1976 Democratic Party presidential primaries and 1976 Democratic National Convention Carter and President Gerald Ford debating at the Walnut Street Theatre in Philadelphia Carter was elected as the Governor of Georgia in 1970 and during his four years in office he earned a reputation as a progressive racially moderate Southern governor Observing George McGovern s success in the 1972 Democratic primaries Carter came to believe that he could win the 1976 Democratic presidential nomination by running as an outsider unconnected to establishment politicians in Washington 1 Carter declared his candidacy for the 1976 Democratic presidential nomination in December 1974 and swore to never lie to the American people 2 As Democratic leaders such as 1968 nominee Hubert Humphrey Senator Walter Mondale of Minnesota and Senator Ted Kennedy of Massachusetts declined to enter the race there was no clear favorite in the Democratic primaries Mo Udall Sargent Shriver Birch Bayh Fred R Harris Terry Sanford Henry M Jackson Lloyd Bentsen and George Wallace all sought the nomination and many of these candidates were better known than Carter 3 Carter sought to appeal to various groups in the party his advocacy for cutting defense spending and reining in the CIA appealed to liberals while his emphasis on eliminating government waste appealed to conservatives 4 Carter won the most votes of any candidate in the Iowa caucus and he dominated media coverage in advance of the New Hampshire primary which he also won 5 Carter s subsequent defeat of Wallace in the Florida and North Carolina primaries eliminated Carter s main rival in the South 6 With a victory over Jackson in the Pennsylvania primary Carter established himself as the clear front runner 7 Despite the late entrance of Senator Frank Church and Governor Jerry Brown into the race Carter clinched the nomination on the final day of the primaries 8 The 1976 Democratic National Convention proceeded harmoniously and after interviewing several candidates Carter chose Mondale as his running mate The selection of Mondale was well received by many liberal Democrats many of whom had been skeptical of Carter 9 The electoral map of the 1976 election The Republicans experienced a contested convention that ultimately nominated incumbent President Gerald Ford who had succeeded to the presidency in 1974 after the resignation of Richard Nixon due to the latter s involvement in the Watergate scandal 9 With the Republicans badly divided and with Ford facing questions over his competence as president polls taken in August 1976 showed Carter with a 15 point lead 10 In the general election campaign Carter continued to promote a centrist agenda seeking to define new Democratic positions in the aftermath of the tumultuous 1960s Above all Carter attacked the political system defining himself as an outsider who would reform Washington in the post Watergate era 11 In response Ford attacked Carter s supposed fuzziness arguing that Carter had taken vague stances on major issues 10 Carter and President Ford faced off in three televised debates during the 1976 election 12 the first such debates since 1960 12 Ford was generally viewed as the winner of the first debate but he made a major gaffe in the second debate when he stated there was no Soviet domination of Eastern Europe a The gaffe put an end to Ford s late momentum and Carter helped his own campaign with a strong performance in the third debate Polls taken just before election day showed a very close race 13 Carter won the election with 50 1 of the popular vote and 297 electoral votes while Ford won 48 of the popular vote and 240 electoral votes The 1976 presidential election represents the lone Democratic presidential election victory between the elections of 1964 and 1992 Carter fared particularly well in the Northeast and the South while Ford swept the West and won much of the Midwest In the concurrent congressional elections Democrats increased their majorities in both the House and Senate 14 Transition EditMain article Presidential transition of Jimmy Carter Preliminary planning for Carter s presidential transition had already been underway for months before his election 15 16 Carter was the first presidential candidate to allot significant funds and a significant number of personnel to a pre election transition planning effort which subsequently would become standard practice 17 Carter made an innovation with his presidential transition that would influence all subsequent presidential transitions taking a methodical approach to his transition and having a larger and more formal operation than past presidential transitions had 17 16 Inauguration EditMain article Inauguration of Jimmy Carter President Jimmy Carter and Rosalynn Carter walk down Pennsylvania Avenue during Inauguration In his inaugural address Carter said We have learned that more is not necessarily better that even our great nation has its recognized limits and that we can neither answer all questions nor solve all problems 18 Carter had campaigned on a promise to eliminate the trappings of the Imperial Presidency and began taking action according to that promise on Inauguration Day breaking with recent history and security protocols by walking from the Capitol to the White House in his inaugural parade His first steps in the White House went further in this direction Carter cut the size of the 500 member White House staff by one third and reduced the perks for the president and cabinet members 19 He also fulfilled a campaign promise by issuing a full complete and unconditional pardon amnesty for Vietnam War era draft evaders 20 Administration EditThe Carter cabinetOfficeNameTermPresidentJimmy Carter1977 1981Vice PresidentWalter Mondale1977 1981Secretary of StateCyrus Vance1977 1980Edmund Muskie1980 1981Secretary of the TreasuryW Michael Blumenthal1977 1979G William Miller1979 1981Secretary of DefenseHarold Brown1977 1981Attorney GeneralGriffin Bell1977 1979Benjamin Civiletti1979 1981Secretary of the InteriorCecil Andrus1977 1981Secretary of AgricultureRobert Bergland1977 1981Secretary of CommerceJuanita M Kreps1977 1979Philip Klutznick1980 1981Secretary of LaborRay Marshall1977 1981Secretary of Health Education and WelfareJoseph A Califano Jr 1977 1979Patricia Roberts Harris 1979 1980Secretary of Health andHuman ServicesPatricia Roberts Harris 1980 1981Secretary of Housing andUrban DevelopmentPatricia Roberts Harris1977 1979Maurice Moon Landrieu1979 1981Secretary of TransportationBrock Adams1977 1979Neil Goldschmidt1979 1981Secretary of EnergyJames R Schlesinger1977 1979Charles Duncan Jr 1979 1981Secretary of EducationShirley Hufstedler 1979 1981Director of the Office ofManagement and BudgetBert Lance1977James T McIntyre1977 1981United States Trade RepresentativeRobert S Strauss1977 1979Reubin Askew1979 1980Ambassador to the United NationsAndrew Young1977 1979Donald McHenry1979 1981National Security AdvisorZbigniew Brzezinski1977 1981Chair of theCouncil of Economic AdvisersCharles Schultze1977 1981 The Department of Health Education and Welfare HEW was renamed theDepartment of Health and Human Services HHS in 1980 when its educationfunctions were transferred to the newly created Department of Education underthe Department of Education Organization Act 1979 Though Carter had campaigned against Washington insiders many of his top appointees had served in previous presidential administrations 21 Secretary of State Cyrus Vance Secretary of Defense Harold Brown and Secretary of the Treasury W Michael Blumenthal had been high ranking officials in the Kennedy and Johnson administrations 22 Other notable appointments included Charles Schultze as Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers former Secretary of Defense James R Schlesinger as a presidential assistant on energy issues federal judge Griffin Bell as Attorney General and Patricia Roberts Harris the first African American woman to serve in the cabinet 23 as Secretary of Housing and Urban Development 24 Carter appointed several close associates from Georgia to staff the Executive Office of the President He initially offered the position of White House Chief of Staff to two of his advisers Hamilton Jordan and Charles Kirbo but both declined Carter decided not to have a chief of staff instead implementing a system in which cabinet members would have more direct access to the president 25 Bert Lance was selected to lead the Office of Management and Budget while Jordan became a key aide and adviser Other appointees from Georgia included Jody Powell as White House Press Secretary Jack Watson as cabinet secretary and Stuart E Eizenstat as head of the Domestic Policy Staff 26 To oversee the administration s foreign policy Carter relied on several members of the Trilateral Commission including Vance and National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski Brzezinski emerged as one of Carter s closest advisers and Carter made use of both the National Security Council and Vance s State Department in developing and implementing foreign policy 27 The hawkish Brzezinski clashed frequently with Vance who pushed for detente with the Soviet Union 28 page needed Vice President Mondale served as a key adviser on both foreign and domestic issues 29 First Lady Rosalynn Carter emerged as an important part of the administration sitting in on several Cabinet meetings and serving as a sounding board advisor and surrogate for the president She traveled abroad to negotiate foreign policy and some polling found that she was tied with Mother Teresa as the most admired woman in the world 30 Carter shook up the White House staff in mid 1978 bringing in advertising executive Gerald Rafshoon to serve as the White House Communications Director and Anne Wexler to lead the Office of Public Liaison 31 Carter implemented broad personnel changes in the White House and cabinet in mid 1979 Five cabinet secretaries left office including Blumenthal Bell and Joseph Califano the Secretary of Health Education and Welfare Jordan was selected as the president s first chief of staff while Alonzo L McDonald formerly of McKinsey amp Company became the White House staff director Federal Reserve Chairman G William Miller replaced Blumenthal as Secretary of the Treasury Benjamin Civiletti took office as Attorney General and Charles Duncan Jr became Secretary of Energy 32 After Vance resigned in 1980 Carter appointed Edmund Muskie a well respected Senator with whom Carter had developed friendly relations to serve as Secretary of State 33 Judicial appointments EditFurther information Jimmy Carter Supreme Court candidates Jimmy Carter judicial appointments and Jimmy Carter judicial appointment controversies Among presidents who served at least one full term Carter is the only one who never made an appointment to the Supreme Court 34 Carter appointed 56 judges to the United States Courts of Appeals and 203 judges to the United States district courts Two of his circuit court appointees Stephen Breyer and Ruth Bader Ginsburg were later appointed to the Supreme Court by Bill Clinton Carter was the first president to make demographic diversity a key priority in the selection of judicial nominees 35 During Carter s presidency the number of female circuit court judges increased from one to twelve the number of non white male circuit judges increased from six to thirteen the number of female district court judges increased from four to 32 and the number of non white male district court judges increased from 23 to 55 Carter appointed the first female African American circuit court judge Amalya Lyle Kearse the first Hispanic circuit court judge Reynaldo Guerra Garza and the first female Hispanic district court judge Carmen Consuelo Cerezo 36 Federal Judicial Center data shows that Carter appointed more women 41 and people of color 57 than had been appointed by all past presidents combined 10 women and 35 people of color 37 Domestic affairs Edit Robert Templeton s portrait of President Carter displayed in the National Portrait Gallery Washington D C President Carter was not a product of the New Deal traditions of liberal Northern Democrats Instead he traced his ideological background to the Progressive Era He was thus much more conservative than the dominant liberal wing of the party could accept 38 British historian Iwan Morgan argues Carter traced his political values to early twentieth century southern progressivism with its concern for economy and efficiency in government and compassion for the poor He described himself as a fiscal conservative but liberal on matters like civil rights the environment and helping people to overcome handicaps to lead fruitful lives an ideological construct that appeared to make him the legatee of Dwight D Eisenhower rather than Franklin D Roosevelt 39 Relations with Congress Edit Carter successfully campaigned as a Washington outsider critical of both President Gerald Ford and the Democratic Congress as president he continued this theme This refusal to play by the rules of Washington contributed to the Carter administration s difficult relationship with Congress After the election the President demanded the power to reorganize the executive branch alienating powerful Democrats like Speaker Tip O Neill and Jack Brooks During the Nixon administration Congress had passed a series of reforms that removed power from the president and most members of Congress were unwilling to restore that power even with a Democrat now in office 40 b Unreturned phone calls verbal insults and an unwillingness to trade political favors soured many on Capitol Hill and affected the president s ability to enact his agenda 42 In many cases these failures of communication stemmed not from intentional neglect but rather from poor organization of the administration s congressional liaison functions 43 President Carter attempted to woo O Neill Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd and other members of Congress through personal engagement but he was generally unable to rally support for his programs through these meetings 44 Carter also erred in focusing on too many priorities at once especially in the first months of his presidency 45 Democrats in Congress were displeased with his moralistic executive oriented rational approach to decision making and his reluctance to accept standard congressional methods of compromise patronage and log rolling 46 A few months after his term started Carter issued a hit list of 19 projects that he claimed were pork barrel spending He said that he would veto any legislation that contained projects on this list 47 Congress responded by passing a bill that combined several of the projects that Carter objected to with economic stimulus measures that Carter favored Carter chose to sign the bill but his criticism of the alleged pork barrel projects cost him support in Congress 48 These struggles set a pattern for Carter s presidency and he would frequently clash with Congress for the remainder of his tenure 49 Budget policies Edit Jimmy Carter and his cabinet in 1978 On taking office Carter proposed an economic stimulus package that would give each citizen a 50 tax rebate cut corporate taxes by 900 million and increase spending on public works The limited spending involved in the package reflected Carter s fiscal conservatism as he was more concerned with avoiding inflation and balancing the budget than addressing unemployment Carter s resistance to higher federal spending drew attacks from many members of his own party who wanted to lower the unemployment rate through federal public works projects Carter signed several measures designed to address unemployment in 1977 including an extension of the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act but he continued to focus primarily on reducing deficits and inflation In November 1978 Carter signed the Revenue Act of 1978 an 19 billion tax cut 50 Federal budget deficits throughout Carter s term remained at around the 70 billion level reached in 1976 but as a percentage of GDP the deficits fell from 4 when he took office to 2 5 in the 1980 81 fiscal year 51 The national debt of the United States increased by about 280 billion from 620 billion in early 1977 to 900 billion in late 1980 52 However because economic growth outpaced the growth in nominal debt the federal government s debt as a percentage of gross domestic product decreased slightly from 33 6 in early 1977 to 31 8 in late 1980 53 Energy Edit National Energy Act Edit Carter at Three Mile Island nuclear accident April 1 1979 In 1973 the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries OPEC based in the Middle East had reduced output to raise world prices and to hurt Israel and its allies including the United States 54 This sparked the 1973 Oil Crisis a period of high oil prices which in turn forced higher prices throughout the American economy and slowed economic growth 55 The United States continued to face energy issues in the following years and during the winter of 1976 1977 natural gas shortages forced the closure of many schools and factories leading to the temporary layoffs of hundreds of thousands of workers 56 By 1977 energy policy was one of the greatest challenges facing the United States Oil imports had increased 65 annually since 1973 and the U S consumed over twice as much energy per capita as other developed countries 49 Upon taking office Carter asked James Schlesinger to develop a plan to address the energy crisis 57 In an address to the nation of April 18 1977 Carter called the energy crisis as apart from preventing war the greatest challenge that our country will face during our lifetime He called for energy conservation increased use of U S coal reserves and carefully controlled expansion of nuclear power His chief goals were to limit the growth of energy demand to an increase of two percent a year cut oil imports in half and establish a new strategic petroleum reserve containing a six month supply 58 Carter won congressional approval for the creation of the Department of Energy and he named Schlesinger as the first head of that department Schlesinger presented an energy plan that contained 113 provisions the most important of which were taxes on domestic oil production and gasoline consumption The plan also provided for tax credits for energy conservation taxes on automobiles with low fuel efficiency and mandates to convert from oil or natural gas to coal power 59 The House approved much of Carter s plan in August 1977 but the Senate passed a series of watered down energy bills that included few of Carter s proposals Negotiations with Congress dragged on into 1978 but Carter signed the National Energy Act in November 1978 Many of Carter s original proposals were not included in the legislation but the act deregulated natural gas and encouraged energy conservation and the development of renewable energy through tax credits 60 1979 energy crisis Edit See also 1979 energy crisis Another energy shortage hit the United States in 1979 forcing millions of frustrated motorists into long waits at gasoline stations In response Carter asked Congress to deregulate the price of domestic oil At the time domestic oil prices were not set by the world market but rather by the complex price controls of the 1975 Energy Policy and Conservation Act EPCA Oil companies strongly favored the deregulation of prices since it would increase their profits but some members of Congress worried that deregulation would contribute to inflation In late April and early May the Gallup poll found only 14 percent of the public believed that America was in an actual energy shortage The other 77 percent believed that this was brought on by oil companies just to make a profit 61 Carter paired the deregulation proposal with a windfall profits tax which would return about half of the new profits of the oil companies to the federal government Carter used a provision of EPCA to phase in oil controls but Congress balked at implementing the proposed tax 62 63 I want to talk to you right now about a fundamental threat to American democracy I do not refer to the outward strength of America a nation that is at peace tonight everywhere in the world with unmatched economic power and military might The threat is nearly invisible in ordinary ways It is a crisis of confidence It is a crisis that strikes at the very heart and soul and spirit of our national will We can see this crisis in the growing doubt about the meaning of our own lives and in the loss of a unity of purpose for our nation Jimmy Carter 64 In July 1979 as the energy crisis continued Carter met with a series of business government labor academic and religious leaders in an effort to overhaul his administration s policies 65 His pollster Pat Caddell told him that the American people faced a crisis of confidence stemming from the assassinations of major leaders in the 1960s the Vietnam War and the Watergate scandal 66 Though most of his other top advisers urged him to continue to focus on inflation and the energy crisis Carter seized on Caddell s notion that the major crisis facing the country was a crisis of confidence On July 15 Carter delivered a nationally televised speech in which he called for long term limits on oil imports and the development of synthetic fuels But he also stated all the legislation in the world can t fix what s wrong with America What is lacking is confidence and a sense of community 67 The speech named A Crisis of Confidence 64 came to be known as his malaise speech although Carter never used the word in the speech 68 69 The initial reaction to Carter s speech was generally positive but Carter erred by forcing out several cabinet members including Secretary of Energy Schlesinger later in July 70 Nonetheless Congress approved a 227 billion windfall profits tax and passed the Energy Security Act The Energy Security Act established the Synthetic Fuels Corporation which was charged with developing alternative energy sources 71 Despite those legislative victories in 1980 Congress rescinded Carter s imposition of a surcharge on imported oil c and rejected his proposed Energy Mobilization Board a government body that was designed to facilitate the construction of power plants 73 Nonetheless Kaufman and Kaufman write that policies enacted under Carter represented the most sweeping energy legislation in the nation s history 71 Carter s policies contributed to a decrease in per capita energy consumption which dropped by 10 percent from 1979 to 1983 74 Oil imports which had reached a record 2 4 billion barrels in 1977 50 of supply declined by half from 1979 to 1983 51 Economy Edit Federal finances and GDP during Carter s presidency 75 FiscalYear Receipts Outlays Surplus Deficit GDP Debt as a of GDP 76 1977 355 6 409 2 53 7 2 024 3 27 11978 399 6 458 7 59 2 2 273 5 26 71979 463 3 504 0 40 7 2 565 6 25 01980 517 1 590 9 73 8 2 791 9 25 51981 599 3 678 2 79 0 3 133 2 25 2Ref 77 78 79 Carter took office during a period of stagflation as the economy experienced both high inflation and low economic growth 80 The U S had recovered from the 1973 75 recession but the economy and especially inflation continued to be a top concern for many Americans in 1977 and 1978 81 The economy had grown by 5 in 1976 and it continued to grow at a similar pace during 1977 and 1978 82 Unemployment declined from 7 5 in January 1977 to 5 6 by May 1979 with over 9 million net new jobs created during that interim 83 and real median household income grew by 5 from 1976 to 1978 84 In October 1978 responding to worsening inflation Carter announced the beginning of phase two of his anti inflation campaign on national television He appointed Alfred E Kahn as the Chairman of the Council on Wage and Price Stability COWPS and COWPS announced price targets for industries and implemented other policies designed to lower inflation 85 The 1979 energy crisis ended a period of growth both inflation and interest rates rose while economic growth job creation and consumer confidence declined sharply 86 The relatively loose monetary policy adopted by Federal Reserve Board Chairman G William Miller had already contributed to somewhat higher inflation 87 rising from 5 8 in 1976 to 7 7 in 1978 The sudden doubling of crude oil prices by OPEC 88 forced inflation to double digit levels averaging 11 3 in 1979 and 13 5 in 1980 51 Following a mid 1979 cabinet shake up Carter named Paul Volcker as Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board 89 Volcker pursued a tight monetary policy to bring down inflation but this policy also had the effect of slowing economic growth even further 90 Author Ivan Eland points out that this came during a long trend of inflation saying Easy money and cheap credit during the 1970s had caused rampant inflation which topped out at 13 percent in 1979 91 Carter enacted an austerity program by executive order justifying these measures by observing that inflation had reached a crisis stage both inflation and short term interest rates reached 18 percent in February and March 1980 92 In March the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell to its lowest level since mid 1976 and the following month unemployment rose to seven percent 93 The economy entered into another recession its fourth in little more than a decade 91 and unemployment quickly rose to 7 8 percent 94 This V shaped recession and the malaise accompanying it coincided with Carter s 1980 re election campaign and contributed to his unexpectedly severe loss to Ronald Reagan 95 Not until March 1981 did GDP and employment totals regain pre recession levels 82 83 Health care Edit See also History of health care reform in the United States Carter in office February 1977 During the 1976 presidential campaign Carter proposed a health care reform plan that included key features of a bipartisan bill sponsored by Senator Ted Kennedy that provided for the establishment of a universal national health insurance NHI system 96 Though most Americans had health insurance through Medicare Medicaid or private plans approximately ten percent of the population did not have coverage in 1977 The establishment of an NHI plan was the top priority of organized labor and many liberal Democrats but Carter had concerns about cost as well as the inflationary impact of such a system He delayed consideration of health care through 1977 and ultimately decided that he would not support Kennedy s proposal to establish an NHI system that covered all Americans Kennedy met repeatedly with Carter and White House staffers in an attempt to forge a compromise health care plan but negotiations broke down in July 1978 Though Kennedy and Carter had previously been on good terms differences over health insurance led to an open break between the two Democratic leaders 97 In June 1979 Carter proposed more limited health insurance reform an employer mandate to provide private catastrophic health insurance The plan would also extend Medicaid to the very poor without dependent minor children and would add catastrophic coverage to Medicare 98 Kennedy rejected the plan as insufficient 99 In November 1979 Senator Russell B Long led a bipartisan conservative majority of the Senate Finance Committee to support an employer mandate to provide catastrophic coverage and the addition of catastrophic coverage to Medicare 98 These efforts were abandoned in 1980 due to budget constraints 100 Welfare and tax reform proposals Edit Carter sought a comprehensive overhaul of welfare programs in order to provide more cost effective aid Congress rejected almost all of his proposals 101 Proposals contemplated by the Carter administration include a guaranteed minimum income a federal job guarantee for the unemployed a negative income tax and direct cash payments to aid recipients In early 1977 Secretary Califano presented Carter with several options for welfare reform all of which Carter rejected because they increased government spending In August 1977 Carter proposed a major jobs program for welfare recipients capable of working and a decent income to those who were incapable of working 102 Carter was unable to win support for his welfare reform proposals and they never received a vote in Congress 103 In October 1978 Carter helped convince the Senate to pass the Humphrey Hawkins Full Employment Act which committed the federal government to the goals of low inflation and low unemployment To the disappointment of the Congressional Black Caucus CBC and organized labor the final act did not include a provision authorizing the federal government to act as an employer of last resort in order to provide for full employment 104 Carter also sought tax reform in order to create a simpler more progressive taxation system He proposed taxing capital gains as ordinary income eliminating tax shelters limiting itemized tax deductions and increasing the standard deduction 105 Carter s taxation proposals were rejected by Congress and no major tax reform bill was passed during Carter s presidency 106 Amid growing public fear that the social security system was in danger of bankruptcy within a few years Carter signed the Social Security Financing Amendments Act in December 1977 which corrected a flaw that had been introduced into the benefit formula by earlier legislation in 1972 raised Social Security taxes and reduced Social Security benefits Now this legislation the president remarked will guarantee that from 1980 to the year 2030 the social security funds will be sound 107 108 Environment Edit Carter supported many of the goals of the environmentalist movement and appointed prominent environmentalists to high positions As president his rhetoric strongly supported environmentalism with a certain softness regarding his acceptance of nuclear energy he had been trained in nuclear energy with atomic submarines in the Navy 109 He signed several significant bills to protect the environment such as the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977 which regulates strip mining 110 In 1980 Carter signed into law a bill that established Superfund a federal program designed to clean up mining or factory sites contaminated with hazardous substances 111 Other environmental laws signed by Carter addressed energy conservation federal mine safety standards and control of pesticides 112 Secretary of the Interior Cecil Andrus convinced Carter to withdraw over 100 million acres of public domain land in Alaska from commercial use by designating the land as conservation areas The 1980 Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act doubled the amount of public land set aside for national parks and wildlife refuges 113 114 Business and conservative interests complained that economic growth would be hurt by these conservation efforts 115 Education Edit Early in his term Carter worked to fulfill a campaign promise to teachers unions to create a cabinet level Department of Education Carter argued that the establishment of the department would increase efficiency and equal opportunity but opponents in both parties criticized it as an additional layer of bureaucracy that would reduce local control and local support of education 116 In October 1979 Carter signed the Department of Education Organization Act establishing the United States Department of Education Carter appointed Shirley Mount Hufstedler a liberal judge from California as the first Secretary of Education 117 Carter also expanded the Head Start program with the addition of 43 000 children and families 118 During his tenure education spending as a share of federal non defense spending was doubled 119 Carter opposed tax breaks for Protestant schools in the South a position that alienated some on the Religious Right 120 He also helped defeat the Moynihan Packwood Bill which called for tuition tax credits for parents to use for nonpublic school education 121 Other initiatives Edit See also Cannabis policy of the Jimmy Carter administration Carter took a stance in support of decriminalization of cannabis citing the legislation passed in Oregon in 1973 122 In a 1977 address to Congress Carter submitted that penalties for cannabis use should not outweigh the actual harms of cannabis consumption Carter retained pro decriminalization advisor Robert Du Pont and appointed pro decriminalization British physician Peter Bourne as his drug advisor or drug czar to head up his newly formed Office of Drug Abuse Policy 123 124 However law enforcement conservative politicians and grassroots parents groups opposed this measure and the War on Drugs continued 123 125 At the same time cannabis consumption in the United States reached historically high levels 126 Carter was the first president to address the topic of gay rights and his administration was the first to meet with a group of gay rights activists 127 128 Carter opposed the Briggs Initiative a California ballot measure that would have banned gays and supporters of gay rights from being public school teachers 128 Carter supported the policy of affirmative action and his administration submitted an amicus curiae brief to the Supreme Court while it heard the case of Regents of the Univ of Cal v Bakke The Supreme Court s holding delivered in 1978 upheld the constitutionality of affirmative action but prohibited the use of racial quotas in college admissions 129 First Lady Rosalynn Carter publicly campaigned for the ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment and the president supported the extension of the ratification period for that amendment 130 Carter presided over the deregulation of several industries which proponents hoped would help revive the sluggish economy The Airline Deregulation Act 1978 abolished the Civil Aeronautics Board over six years provided for the free entry of airlines into new routes and opened air fares up to competition 131 Carter also signed the Motor Carrier Act 1980 which gradually withdrew the government from controlling access rates and routes in the trucking industry the Staggers Rail Act 1980 which loosened railroad regulations by allowing railroad executives to negotiate mergers with barge and truck lines 132 and the Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act 1980 which removed ceilings on interest rates and permitted savings and commercial banks to write home mortgages extend business loans and underwrite securities issues 131 The Housing and Community Development Act of 1977 set up Urban Development Action Grants extended handicapped and elderly provisions and established the Community Reinvestment Act 133 which sought to prevent banks from denying credit and loans to poor communities 134 The Child Nutrition Amendments of 1978 introduced a national income standard for program eligibility based on income standards prescribed for reduced price school lunches The Act also strengthened the nutrition education component of the WIC program by requiring the provision of nutritional education to all program participants 135 Urban development Action grants supplied nearly 5 million for some 3 300 projects in declining cities 136 and a Fair Debt Collection Practices Act was passed with the aim of prohibiting abusive and unfair techniques of debt collection 137 The Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977 was passed with the intention of enabling the coal industry to develop coal resources without damaging other natural resources in the process 138 while the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977 was aimed at safeguarding mineworkers from harm in the workplace 139 Occupational Safety and Health Administration OSHA programs and women s programs were also strengthened and common sense priorities led to focus on major health problems 140 The Pregnancy Discrimination Act passed in 1978 prohibited companies or organizations from discriminating against pregnant employees while providing protection in the areas of childbirth and medical conditions related to pregnancy or childbirth 141 The National Consumer Cooperative Bank Act of 1978 sought to put funds aside for low interest loans to start cooperatives 142 Minimum wage coverage was extended to farmworkers and the Age Discrimination in Employment Act Amendments of 1978 increased the upper age limit on coverage against age discrimination in non federal employment and in the private sector from 65 to 70 as a means of extending safeguards against age discrimination 143 In addition the purchase requirement for food stamps was abolished 144 and the first ever national youth employment law was enacted 145 In 1979 Carter opened the first White House Conference on Library and Information Services stating that libraries must be strengthened and the public made more aware of their potential Libraries can be community resources for the consumer and small business on matters such as energy and marketing and technological innovation 146 The White House Conference on Library and Information Services was a project of the National Commission on Libraries and Information Science Foreign affairs EditMain article Foreign policy of the Jimmy Carter administration Although foreign policy was not his highest priority at first a series of worsening crises made it increasingly the focus of attention regarding the Soviet Union Afghanistan Iran and the global energy crisis 147 His handling of the Iranian Revolution and hostage crisis made him very unpopular at home and lowered his historical stature as measured by historians 148 Cold War Edit A map of the geopolitical situation in 1980 Carter took office during the Cold War a sustained period of geopolitical tension between the United States and the Soviet Union During the late 1960s and early 1970s relations between the two superpowers had improved through a policy known as detente In a reflection of the waning importance of the Cold War some of Carter s contemporaries labeled him as the first post Cold War president but relations with the Soviet Union would continue to be an important factor in American foreign policy in the late 1970s and the 1980s Many of the leading officials in the Carter administration including Carter himself were members of the Trilateral Commission which de emphasized the Cold War The Trilateral Commission instead advocated a foreign policy focused on aid to Third World countries and improved relations with Western Europe and Japan The central tension of the Carter administration s foreign policy was reflected in the division between Secretary of State Cyrus Vance who sought improved relations with the Soviet Union and the Third World and National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski who favored confrontation with the Soviet Union on a range of issues 149 After the disappointment of the Vietnam war a re focus of the US Army on the Warsaw Pact problem found that technology and teamwork both were in dire need to be upgraded Guided by General Donn A Starry and the concept that was to become AirLand Battle Carter and his administration approved the initial outlays for the A 10 AH 64 HIMARS Bradley IFV M109 Paladin Patriot missile M1 Abrams 150 and the Lockheed F 117 Nighthawk 151 Human rights Edit Carter meeting with Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet in Washington September 6 1977 Carter believed that previous administrations had erred in allowing the Cold War concerns and Realpolitik to dominate foreign policy His administration placed a new emphasis on human rights democratic values nuclear proliferation and global poverty 152 153 The Carter administration s human rights emphasis was part of a broader worldwide focus on human rights in the 1970s as non governmental organizations such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch became increasingly prominent Carter nominated civil rights activist Patricia M Derian as Coordinator for Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs and in August 1977 had the post elevated to that of Assistant Secretary of State Derian established the United States Country Reports on Human Rights Practices published annually since 1977 154 Latin America was central to Carter s new focus on human rights 155 The Carter administration ended support to the historically U S backed Somoza regime in Nicaragua and directed aid to the new Sandinista National Liberation Front government that assumed power after Somoza s overthrow Carter also cut back or terminated military aid to Augusto Pinochet of Chile Ernesto Geisel of Brazil and Jorge Rafael Videla of Argentina all of whom he criticized for human rights violations 156 Carter s ambassador to the United Nations Andrew Young was the first African American to hold a high level diplomatic post Along with Carter he sought to change U S policy towards Africa emphasizing human rights concerns over Cold War issues 157 In 1978 Carter became the first sitting president to make an official state visit to Sub Saharan Africa 158 a reflection of the region s new importance under the Carter administration s foreign policy 159 Unlike his predecessors Carter took a strong stance against white minority rule in Rhodesia and South Africa With Carter s support the United Nations passed Resolution 418 which placed an arms embargo on South Africa Carter won the repeal of the Byrd Amendment which had undercut international sanctions on the Rhodesian government of Ian Smith He also pressured Smith to hold elections leading to the 1979 Rhodesia elections and the eventual creation of Zimbabwe 160 The more assertive human rights policy championed by Derian and State Department Policy Planning Director Anthony Lake was somewhat blunted by the opposition of Brzezinski Policy disputes reached their most contentious point during the 1979 fall of Pol Pot s genocidal regime of Democratic Kampuchea following the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia when Brzezinski prevailed in having the administration refuse to recognize the new Cambodian government due to its support by the Soviet Union 161 Despite human rights concerns Carter continued U S support for Joseph Mobutu of Zaire who defeated Angolan backed insurgents in conflicts known as Shaba I and Shaba II 162 His administration also generally refrained from criticizing human rights abuses in the Philippines Indonesia South Korea Iran Israel Egypt Saudi Arabia and North Yemen 163 164 SALT II Edit President Jimmy Carter and Soviet general secretary Leonid Brezhnev sign the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks SALT II treaty June 18 1979 in Vienna Ford and Nixon had sought to reach agreement on a second round of the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks SALT which had set upper limits on the number of nuclear weapons possessed by both the United States and the Soviet Union 165 Carter hoped to extend these talks by reaching an agreement to reduce rather than merely set upper limits on the nuclear arsenals of both countries 166 At the same time he criticized the Soviet Union s record with regard to human rights partly because he believed the public would not support negotiations with the Soviets if the president seemed too willing to accommodate the Soviets Carter and Soviet Leader Leonid Brezhnev reached an agreement in June 1979 in the form of SALT II but Carter s waning popularity and the opposition of Republicans and neoconservative Democrats made ratification difficult 167 The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan severely damaged U S Soviet relations and ended any hope of ratifying SALT II Yemen Edit In 1979 the Soviets intervened in the Second Yemenite War The Soviet backing of South Yemen constituted a smaller shock in tandem with the Iranian Revolution This played a role in shifting Carter s viewpoint on the Soviet Union to a more assertive one a shift that finalized with the Soviet Afghan War 168 Afghanistan Edit Further information CIA activities in Afghanistan Soviet Afghan War United States and Operation Cyclone Afghanistan had been non aligned during the early stages of the Cold War 169 In 1978 Communists under the leadership of Nur Muhammad Taraki seized power 170 The new regime which was divided between Taraki s extremist Khalq faction and the more moderate Parcham signed a treaty of friendship with the Soviet Union in December 1978 170 171 Taraki s efforts to improve secular education and redistribute land were accompanied by mass executions and political oppression unprecedented in Afghan history igniting a revolt by Afghan mujahideen rebels 170 Following a general uprising in April 1979 Taraki was deposed by Khalq rival Hafizullah Amin in September 170 171 Soviet leaders feared that an Islamist government in Afghanistan would threaten the control of Soviet Central Asia and as the unrest continued they deployed 30 000 soldiers to the Soviet Afghan border 172 Historian George C Herring states Carter and Brzezinski both saw Afghanistan as a potential trap that could expend Soviet resources in a fruitless war and the U S began sending aid to the mujahideen rebels in mid 1979 173 However a 2020 review of declassified U S documents by Conor Tobin in the journal Diplomatic History found that a Soviet military intervention was neither sought nor desired by the Carter administration The small scale covert program that developed in response to the increasing Soviet influence was part of a contingency plan if the Soviets did intervene militarily as Washington would be in a better position to make it difficult for them to consolidate their position but not designed to induce an intervention 174 By December Amin s government had lost control of much of the country prompting the Soviet Union to invade Afghanistan execute Amin and install Parcham leader Babrak Karmal as president 170 171 Carter was surprised by the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan as the consensus of the U S intelligence community during 1978 and 1979 was that Moscow would not forcefully intervene 175 CIA officials had tracked the deployment of Soviet soldiers to the Afghan border but they had not expected the Soviets to launch a full fledged invasion 176 Carter believed that the Soviet conquest of Afghanistan would present a grave threat to the Persian Gulf region and he vigorously responded to what he considered a dangerous provocation 177 In a televised speech Carter announced sanctions on the Soviet Union promised renewed aid to Pakistan and articulated the Carter doctrine which stated that the U S would repel any attempt to gain control of the Persian Gulf 178 179 Pakistani leader Muhammad Zia ul Haq had previously had poor relations with Carter due to Pakistan s nuclear program and the execution of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto but the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and instability in Iran reinvigorated the traditional Pakistan United States alliance 175 In cooperation with Saudi Arabia and Pakistan s Inter Services Intelligence ISI Carter increased aid to the mujahideen through the CIA s Operation Cyclone 179 Carter also later announced a U S boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow which was joined by 65 other nations 180 181 182 and imposed an embargo on shipping American wheat to the Soviet Union The embargo ultimately hurt American farmers more than it did the Soviet economy and the United States lifted the embargo after Carter left office 183 The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan brought a significant change in Carter s foreign policy and ended the period of detente that had begun in the mid 1960s 184 Returning to a policy of containment the United States reconciled with Cold War allies and increased the defense budget leading to a new arms race with the Soviet Union 185 U S support for the mujahideen in Afghanistan would continue until the Soviet Union withdrew from Afghanistan in 1989 The USSR collapsed two years later 186 175 Middle East Edit Camp David Accords Edit Further information Camp David Accords and Egypt Israel peace treaty Anwar Sadat Jimmy Carter and Menachem Begin meet at Camp David on September 6 1978 Sadat Carter and Begin shaking hands after signing Peace treaty between Egypt and Israel in the White House March 27 1979 On taking office Carter decided to attempt to mediate the long running Arab Israeli conflict 187 188 He sought a comprehensive settlement between Israel and its neighbors through a reconvening of the 1973 Geneva Conference but these efforts had collapsed by the end of 1977 189 Carter did convince Egyptian leader Anwar Sadat to visit Israel in 1978 Sadat s visit drew the condemnation of other Arab League countries but Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin each expressed an openness to bilateral talks Begin sought security guarantees Sadat sought the withdrawal of Israeli forces from the Sinai Peninsula and home rule for the West Bank and Gaza Israeli occupied territories that were largely populated by Palestinian Arabs Israel had taken control of the West Bank and Gaza in the 1967 Six Day War while the Sinai had been occupied by Israel since the end of the 1973 Yom Kippur War 190 Seeking to further negotiations Carter invited Begin and Sadat to the presidential retreat of Camp David in September 1978 Because direct negotiations between Sadat and Begin proved unproductive Carter began meeting with the two leaders individually 191 While Begin was willing to withdraw from the Sinai Peninsula he refused to agree to the establishment of a Palestinian state Israel had begun constructing settlements in the West Bank which emerged as an important barrier to a peace agreement Unable to come to definitive settlement over an Israeli withdrawal the two sides reached an agreement in which Israel promised to allow the creation of an elected government in the West Bank and Gaza In return Egypt became the first Arab state to recognize Israel s right to exist The Camp David Accords were the subject of intense domestic opposition in both Egypt and Israel as well as the wider Arab World but each side agreed to negotiate a peace treaty on the basis of the accords 192 On March 26 1979 Egypt and Israel signed a peace treaty in Washington 193 Carter s role in getting the treaty was essential Author Aaron David Miller concluded the following No matter whom I spoke to Americans Egyptians or Israelis most everyone said the same thing no Carter no peace treaty 194 Carter himself viewed the agreement as his most important accomplishment in office 192 Iranian Revolution and hostage crisis Edit Further information Jimmy Carter s engagement with Ruhollah Khomeini Iranian Revolution Iran hostage crisis and United States support for Iraq during the Iran Iraq War The Iranian Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi meeting with Alfred Atherton William H Sullivan Cyrus Vance President Jimmy Carter and Zbigniew Brzezinski in Tehran 1977 Mohammad Reza Pahlavi the Shah of Iran had been a reliable U S ally since the 1953 Iranian coup d etat During the years after the coup the U S lavished aid on Iran while Iran served as a dependable source of oil exports 195 Carter Vance and Brzezinski all viewed Iran as a key Cold War ally not only for the oil it produced but also because of its influence in OPEC and its strategic position between the Soviet Union and the Persian Gulf 196 Despite human rights violations Carter visited Iran in late 1977 and authorized the sale of U S fighter aircraft That same year rioting broke out in several cities and it soon spread across the country Poor economic conditions the unpopularity of Pahlavi s White Revolution and an Islamic revival all led to increasing anger among Iranians many of whom also despised the United States for its support of Pahlavi and its role in the 1953 coup 195 By 1978 the Iranian Revolution had broken out against the Shah s rule 197 Secretary of State Vance argued that the Shah should institute a series of reforms to appease the voices of discontent while Brzezinski argued in favor of a crackdown on dissent The mixed messages that the Shah received from Vance and Brzezinski contributed to his confusion and indecision The Shah went into exile leaving a caretaker government in control A popular religious figure Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini returned from exile in February 1979 to popular acclaim As the unrest continued Carter allowed Pahlavi into the United States for medical treatment 198 Carter and Vance were both initially reluctant to admit Pahlavi due to concerns about the reaction in Iran but Iranian leaders assured them that it would not cause an issue 199 In November 1979 shortly after Pahlavi was allowed to enter the U S a group of Iranians stormed the U S embassy in Tehran and took 66 American captives beginning the Iran hostage crisis 198 Iranian Prime Minister Mehdi Bazargan ordered the militants to release the hostages but he resigned from office after Khomeini backed the militants 199 The crisis quickly became the subject of international and domestic attention and Carter vowed to secure the release of the hostages He refused the Iranian demand of the return of Pahlavi in exchange for the release of the hostages His approval ratings rose as Americans rallied around his response but the crisis became increasingly problematic for his administration as it continued 200 In an attempt to rescue the hostages Carter launched Operation Eagle Claw in April 1980 The operation was a total disaster and it ended in the death of eight American soldiers The failure of the operation strengthened Ayatollah Khomeini s position in Iran and badly damaged Carter s domestic standing 201 Carter was dealt another blow when Vance who had consistently opposed the operation resigned 202 Iran refused to negotiate the return of the hostages until Iraq launched an invasion in September 1980 With Algeria serving as an intermediary negotiations continued until an agreement was reached in January 1981 In return for releasing the 52 captives Iran was allowed access to over 7 billion of its money that had been frozen in the United States Iran waited to release the captives until 30 minutes after Carter left office on January 20 1981 203 Released in 2017 a declassified memo produced by the CIA in 1980 concluded Iranian hardliners especially Ayatollah Khomeini were determined to exploit the hostage issue to bring about President Carter s defeat in the November elections Additionally Tehran in 1980 wanted the world to believe that Imam Khomeini caused President Carter s downfall and disgrace 204 Latin America Edit Panama Canal treaties Edit See also Torrijos Carter Treaties Statement on the Panama Canal Treaty Signing source source track Jimmy Carter s speech upon signing the Panama Canal treaty September 7 1977 Problems playing this file See media help Carter and Omar Torrijos shake hands moments after the signing of the Torrijos Carter Treaties Since the 1960s Panama had called for the United States to cede control of the Panama Canal 205 The bipartisan national policy of turning over the Canal to Panama had been established by presidents Johnson Nixon and Ford but negotiations had dragged on for a dozen years Carter made the cession of the Panama Canal a priority believing it would implement Carter s call for a moral cleaning of American foreign policy and win approval across Latin America as a gracious apology for American wrongdoing He also feared that another postponement of negotiations might precipitate violent upheaval in Panama which could damage or block the canal 206 The Carter administration negotiated the Torrijos Carter Treaties two treaties which provided that Panama would gain control of the canal in 1999 207 Carter s initiative faced wide resistance in the United States and many in the public particularly conservatives thought that Carter was giving away a crucial U S asset 208 Conservatives formed groups such as the Committee to Save the Panama Canal in an attempt to defeat the treaties in the Senate but Carter made ratification of the treaties his top priority During the ratification debate the Senate crafted amendments that granted the U S the right to intervene militarily to keep the canal open which the Panamanians assented to after further negotiations 209 In March 1978 the Senate ratified both treaties by a margin of 68 to 32 narrowly passing the two thirds margin necessary for ratification The Canal Zone and all its facilities were ultimately turned over to Panama on December 31 1999 210 211 Cuba Edit Further information El Dialogo and Mariel boatlift Carter hoped to improve relations with Cuba upon taking office but any thaw in relations was prevented by ongoing Cold War disputes in Central America and Africa In early 1980 Cuban leader Fidel Castro announced that anyone who wished to leave Cuba would be allowed to do so through the port of Mariel After Carter announced that the United States would provide open arms for the tens of thousands of refugees seeking freedom from Communist domination Cuban Americans arranged the Mariel boatlift The Refugee Act signed earlier in the year had provided for annual cap of 19 500 Cuban immigrants to the United States per year and required that those refugees go through a review process By September 125 000 Cubans had arrived in the United States and many faced a lack of adequate food and housing Carter was widely criticized for his handling of the boatlift especially in the electorally important state of Florida 212 Asia Edit Rapprochement with China Edit See also Sino American relations Deng Xiaoping with President Carter Continuing a rapprochement begun during the Nixon administration Carter successfully achieved closer relations with the People s Republic of China PRC 213 The two countries increasingly collaborated against the Soviet Union and the Carter administration tacitly consented to the Chinese invasion of Vietnam In 1979 Carter extended formal diplomatic recognition to the PRC for the first time This decision led to a boom in trade between the United States and the PRC which was pursuing economic reforms under the leadership of Deng Xiaoping 214 After the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan Carter allowed the sale of military supplies to China and began negotiations to share military intelligence 215 In January 1980 Carter unilaterally revoked the Sino American Mutual Defense Treaty with the Republic of China ROC which had lost control of mainland China to the PRC in the Chinese Civil War but was now based offshore on the island of Taiwan Carter s abrogation of the treaty was challenged in court by conservative Republicans but the Supreme Court ruled that the issue was a non justiciable political question in Goldwater v Carter The U S continued to maintain diplomatic contacts with the ROC through the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act 216 South Korea Edit One of Carter s first acts was to order the withdrawal of troops from South Korea which had hosted a large number of U S military personnel since the end of the Korean War Carter believed that the soldiers could be put to better use in Western Europe but opponents of the withdrawal feared that North Korea would invade South Korea in the aftermath of the withdrawal South Korea and Japan both protested the move as did many members of Congress the military and the State Department After a strong backlash Carter delayed the withdrawal and ultimately only a fraction of the U S forces left South Korea Carter s attempt to remove U S forces from South Korea weakened the government of South Korean President Park Chung hee who was assassinated in 1979 217 Africa Edit In sharp contrast to Nixon and Ford Carter gave priority to sub Sahara Africa 218 219 Southern Africa especially emerged as a Cold War battleground after Cuba sent a large military force that took control of Angola in 1976 220 The chief policy person for Africa in the Carter administration was Andrew Young a leader in the black Atlanta community who became Ambassador to the United Nations Young opened up friendly relationships with key leaders especially in Nigeria A highly controversial issue was independence of Namibia from Union of South Africa Young began United Nations discussions which went nowhere and Namibia would not gain independence until long after Carter left office 221 Young advocated strong sanctions after the murder by South African police of Steve Biko in 1977 but Carter refused and only imposed a limited arms embargo and South Africa ignored the protests 222 The most important success of the Carter administration in Africa was helping the transition from white dominated Southern Rhodesia to black rule in Zimbabwe 223 224 International travels Edit Main article List of international presidential trips made by Jimmy Carter Countries visited by Carter during his presidencyCarter made 12 international trips to 25 nations during his presidency 225 Controversies EditOMB Director Bert Lance resigned his position on September 21 1977 amid allegations of improper banking activities prior to his becoming director 226 The controversy over Lance damaged Carter s standing with Congress and the public and Lance s resignation removed one of Carter s most effective advisers from office 227 In April 1979 Attorney General Bell appointed Paul J Curran as a special counsel to investigate loans made to the peanut business owned by Carter by a bank controlled by Bert Lance Unlike Archibald Cox and Leon Jaworski who were named as special prosecutors to investigate the Watergate scandal Curran s position as special counsel meant that he would not be able to file charges on his own but would require the approval of Assistant Attorney General Philip Heymann 228 Carter became the first sitting president to testify under oath as part of an investigation of that president 229 The investigation was concluded in October 1979 with Curran announcing that no evidence had been found to support allegations that funds loaned from the National Bank of Georgia had been diverted to Carter s 1976 presidential campaign 230 Carter s brother Billy Carter generated a great deal of notoriety during Carter s presidency for his colorful and often outlandish public behavior 231 The Senate began an investigation into Billy Carter s activities after it was disclosed that Libya had given Billy over 200 000 for unclear reasons 49 The controversy over Billy Carter s relation to Libya became known as Billygate and while the president had no personal involvement in it Billygate nonetheless damaged the Carter administration 232 1980 presidential election EditMain articles 1980 United States presidential election and Presidential transition of Ronald Reagan Graph of Carter s Gallup approval ratings In April 1978 polling showed that Carter s approval rating had declined precipitously and a Gallup survey found Carter trailing Ted Kennedy for the 1980 Democratic nomination 233 By mid 1979 Carter faced an energy crisis rampant inflation slow economic growth and the widespread perception that his administration was incompetent 234 In November 1979 Kennedy announced that he would challenge Carter in the 1980 Democratic primaries 235 Carter s polling numbers shot up following the start of the Iran hostage crisis 236 and his response to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan further boosted his prospects in the Democratic primaries 177 Carter dominated the early primaries allowing him to amass an early delegate lead Carter s polling numbers tumbled in March and Kennedy won the New York and Connecticut primaries 237 Though Carter developed a wide delegate lead Kennedy stayed in the race after triumphing in Pennsylvania and Michigan 238 By the day of the final primaries Carter had registered the lowest approval ratings in the history of presidential polling and Kennedy won just enough delegates to prevent Carter from clinching the nomination 239 After the final primaries Carter met with Kennedy in the White House Partly because Carter refused to accept a party platform calling for the establishment of a national health insurance program Kennedy refused to concede He instead called for an open convention in which delegates would be free to vote for the candidate of their choice regardless of the result in the primaries 240 Carter s allies defeated Kennedy s maneuverings at the 1980 Democratic National Convention and Carter and Vice President Mondale won re nomination 241 Despite Kennedy s defeat he had mobilized the liberal wing of the Democratic Party which would give Carter only weak support in the general election 242 The 1980 Republican presidential primaries quickly developed into a two man contest between former Governor Ronald Reagan of California and former Congressman George H W Bush of Texas Bush who referred to Reagan s tax cut proposal as voodoo economics won the Iowa Caucus but faded later in the race Reagan won the presidential nomination on the first ballot of the 1980 Republican National Convention and named Bush as his running mate 243 Meanwhile Republican Congressman John B Anderson who had previously sought the Republican presidential nomination launched an independent campaign for president 244 Polls taken in September after the conclusion of the party conventions showed a tied race between Reagan and Carter 245 The Carter campaign felt confident that the country would reject the conservative viewpoints espoused by Reagan and there were hopeful signs with regards to the economy and the Iranian hostage crisis 246 Seeking to unite Democrats behind his re election campaign Carter decided to focus on attacking Reagan s supposed ideological extremism rather than on his own policies 247 The electoral map of the 1980 election A key strength for Reagan was his appeal to the rising conservative movement as epitomized by activists like Paul Weyrich Richard Viguerie and Phyllis Schlafly Though most conservative leaders espoused cutting taxes and budget deficits many conservatives focused more closely on social issues like abortion and homosexuality 248 Developments of the 1970s including the Supreme Court case of Roe v Wade and the withdrawal of Bob Jones University s tax exempt status convinced many evangelical Protestants to become engaged in politics for the first time Evangelical Protestants became an increasingly important voting bloc and they generally supported Reagan in the 1980 campaign 249 Reagan also won the backing of so called Reagan Democrats who tended to be Northern white working class voters who supported liberal economic programs but disliked policies such as affirmative action 250 Though he advocated socially conservative view points Reagan focused much of his campaign on attacks against Carter s foreign policy including the SALT II treaty the Torrijos Carter Treaties and the revocation of the Sino American Mutual Defense Treaty 251 Reagan called for increased defense spending tax cuts domestic spending cuts and the dismantling of the Department of Education and the Department of Energy 252 Polling remained close throughout September and October but Reagan s performance in the October 28 debate and Carter s failure to win the release of the Iranian hostages gave Reagan the momentum entering election day 253 Reagan won 50 7 percent of the popular vote and 489 electoral votes Carter won 41 percent of the popular vote and 49 electoral votes and Anderson won 6 6 percent of the popular vote 254 Reagan carried all but a handful of states and performed especially well among Southern whites 255 The size of Reagan s victory surprised many observers who had expected a close race Voter turnout reached its lowest point since the 1948 presidential election a reflection of the negative attitudes many people held towards all three major candidates 256 In the concurrent congressional elections Republicans won control of the Senate for the first time since the 1950s 255 Carter meanwhile was the first elected president to lose re election since Herbert Hoover in 1932 257 Evaluation and legacy EditPolls of historians and political scientists have generally ranked Carter as a below average president A 2018 poll of the American Political Science Association s Presidents and Executive Politics section ranked Carter as the 26th best president 258 A 2017 C SPAN poll of historians also ranked Carter as the 26th best president 259 Some critics have compared Carter to Herbert Hoover who was similarly a hardworking but uninspiring technocrat 260 Robert A Strong writes Jimmy Carter is much more highly regarded today than when he lost his bid for reelection in 1980 He has produced an exemplary post presidency and today there is an increased appreciation for the enormity of the task he took on in 1977 if not for the measures he took to deal with the crises that he faced Carter took office just thirty months after a President had left the entire federal government in a shambles He faced epic challenges the energy crisis Soviet aggression Iran and above all a deep mistrust of leadership by his citizens He was hard working and conscientious But he often seemed like a player out of position a man more suited to be secretary of energy than president Carter became President by narrowly defeating an uninspiring unelected chief executive heir to the worst presidential scandal in history The nomination was his largely because in the decade before 1976 Democratic leadership in the nation had been decimated by scandal Vietnam and an assassination 261 Historians Burton I Kaufman and Scott Kaufman conclude It was Carter s fate to attempt to navigate the nation between the rock of traditional Democratic constituencies and the hard place of an emerging conservative movement whose emphasis was more on social and cultural values than on the economic concerns of the Democratic Party It was also Carter s misfortune that he led the nation at a time of staggering inflation and growing unemployment compounded by an oil shock over which he had little control At the same time it is hard to avoid the conclusion that Carter s was a mediocre presidency and that this was largely his own doing He was smart rather than shrewd He was not a careful political planner He suffered from strategic myopia He was long on good intentions but short on know how He had lofty ideals such as in the area of human rights which had symbolic and long lasting importance but they often blinded him to political realities He was self righteous He was an administrator who micro managed but not well Most important he was a president who never adequately defined a mission for his government a purpose for the country and a way to get there 262 See also EditHistory of the United States 1964 1980 Jimmy Carter rabbit incident Sixth Party System Timeline of United States history 1970 1989 Notes Edit Ford meant to say that the United States did not accept the Soviet domination of Eastern Europe 13 The War Powers Resolution and the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974 were among the laws passed by Congress under Nixon and Ford to restrict the president s power Congress also created the Congressional Budget Office and began to take a more active role in foreign policy 41 Congress rescinded the surcharge by passing a joint resolution over Carter s veto Carter was the first president since Harry S Truman to have his veto overridden by a Congress controlled by the same party 72 References Edit Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 9 12 Zelizer p 29 Zelizer pp 31 32 Zelizer pp 35 36 Zelizer pp 34 38 Zelizer pp 39 40 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 p 15 Zelizer pp 41 44 a b Zelizer pp 45 46 a b Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 16 17 Zelizer pp 47 48 a b Howard Adam September 26 2016 10 Presidential Debates That Actually Made an Impact NBC News Retrieved December 31 2016 a b Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 17 19 Zelizer p 52 Burke John P 2009 The Contemporary Presidency The Obama Presidential Transition An Early Assessment Presidential Studies Quarterly 39 3 574 604 doi 10 1111 j 1741 5705 2009 03691 x ISSN 0360 4918 JSTOR 41427379 a b Skinner Richard October 5 2016 Jimmy Carter changed presidential transitions forever Vox Retrieved February 4 2021 a b Burke John P 2004 Becoming President The Bush Transition 2000 2003 Boulder Colo Lynne Rienner Publishers pp 12 18 ISBN 1 58826 292 8 Alan Brinkley and Davis Dyer ed 2004 The American Presidency Mariner Books ISBN 978 0 618 38273 6 Shirley Anne Warshaw 2013 Guide to the White House Staff SAGE p 222 ISBN 9781452234328 David Shichor and Donald R Ranish President Carter s Vietnam amnesty An analysis of a public policy decision Presidential Studies Quarterly 1980 10 3 443 450 online R Gordon Hoxie Staffing the Ford and Carter Presidencies Presidential Studies Quarterly 10 3 1980 378 401 online Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 30 32 Patricia Roberts Harris Biography Biography A amp E Television Networks Retrieved May 16 2018 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 29 31 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 30 31 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 p 31 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 43 44 Justin Vaisse Zbigniew Brzezinski America s Grand Strategist 2018 Joel Kramer Goldstein The White House Vice 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United States PDF Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on February 11 2012 Retrieved January 12 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link CRS Report RL33305 The Crude Oil Windfall Profit Tax of the 1980s Implications for Current Energy Policy by Salvatore Lazzari p 5 See for quarterly detail J D Park OPEC and Superpowers Interpretation Coexistence 13 1 1976 49 64 Frum p 312 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 37 38 Patterson pp 120 121 Burton J Kaufman the Carter Years 2006 pp 558 62 Burton I Kaufman The Carter Years 2006 pp 431 36 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp pp 38 70 71 85 87 129 131 Morris Kenneth 1996 Jimmy Carter American Moralist 1 ed Athens amp London University of Georgia Press pp 261 ISBN 0820318620 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 170 173 J William Holland The Great Gamble Jimmy Carter and the 1979 Energy Crisis Prologue 1990 22 1 63 79 a b Carter Jimmy July 15 1979 A Crisis of Confidence Speech American Rhetoric Carter Jimmy July 15 1979 Malaise Speech Bill of Rights Institute Carter Jimmy Crisis of Confidence American Experience PBS org Retrieved February 23 2023 Carter Jimmy Crisis of Confidence American Experience WGBH TV PBS org How Carter s Crisis of Confidence Speech Still Matters Origins osu edu Retrieved February 23 2023 Carter Jimmy July 15 1979 Address to the Nation on Energy and National Goals The Malaise Speech The American Presidency Project University of California Santa Barbara Archived from the original on April 4 2017 Gerhard Peters and John T Woolley Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 176 177 Jimmy Carter American Experience PBS Archived from the original on October 19 2013 Retrieved September 8 2017 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 177 178 Crisis of Confidence Speech July 15 1979 Miller Center University of Virginia Archived from the original text and video on July 21 2009 Alter His Very Best Jimmy Carter a Life 2020 pp 456 475 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 178 179 182 a b Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 182 183 214 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 215 216 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 182 215 Patterson pp 119 120 All figures except for debt percentage are presented in billions of dollars The receipt outlay deficit GDP and debt figures are calculated for the fiscal year which ends on September 30 For example fiscal year 2020 ended on September 30 2020 Represents the national debt held by the public as a percentage of GDP Historical Tables whitehouse gov Office of Management and Budget Table 1 1 Retrieved March 4 2021 Historical Tables whitehouse gov Office of Management and Budget Table 1 2 Retrieved March 4 2021 Historical Tables whitehouse gov Office of Management and Budget Table 7 1 Retrieved March 4 2021 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 90 91 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 126 127 a b Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real GDP Bureau of Economic Analysis a b Labor Force Statistics from the Current Population Survey Bureau of Labor Statistics Households by Median and Mean 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Kennedy D Mass and strongly supported by organized labor UPI April 17 1976 Carter urges universal health plan Chicago Tribune p 4 Archived from the original on January 30 2013 Retrieved July 7 2017 Although Carter didn t provide an estimate of what his health plan would cost taxpayers it features many proposals similar to plans suggested by others including Sen Edward Kennedy D Mass which are estimated to cost at least 40 billion annually Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 122 125 a b National health insurance Congressional Quarterly Almanac 96th Congress 1st Session 1979 Congressional Quarterly Almanac Plus Vol 35 Washington D C Congressional Quarterly 1980 pp 536 540 ISSN 0095 6007 OCLC 1564784 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 p 173 National health insurance Congressional Quarterly Almanac 96th Congress 2nd Session 1980 Congressional Quarterly Almanac Plus Vol 36 Washington D C Congressional Quarterly 1981 p 462 ISSN 0095 6007 OCLC 1564784 Jeff Bloodworth The Program for Better Jobs and Income Welfare Reform Liberalism and the Failed Presidency of Jimmy Carter International Social Science Review 81 3 4 2006 135 150 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 65 68 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 p 122 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 134 135 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 71 72 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 122 131 Zelizer pp 71 72 Presidential Statements Jimmy Carter ssa gov history Washington D C Social Security Administration Retrieved September 28 2019 Byron W Daynes and Glen Sussman White House Politics and the Environment Franklin D Roosevelt to George W Bush 2010 pp 84 100 Robert A Strong Jimmy Carter Domestic affairs Miller Center Patterson pp 118 119 Kaufman the Carter Years 2006 pp 592 610 Stephen W Haycox The Politics of Environment Cecil Andrus and the Alaska Lands Act Idaho Yesterdays 36 3 Fall 1992 pp 28 36 See Seth S King Carter Designates U S Land In Alaska For National Parks New York Times Dec 2 1978 Timo Christopher Allan Locked up A history of resistance to the creation of national parks in Alaska PhD dissertation Washington State University 2010 Deanna L Michael Jimmy Carter as educational policymaker equal opportunity and efficiency 2008 Kaufman Carter Years pp 209 11 ilheadstart org about ihsa history goals and values head start a historical perspective ilheadstart org Archived from the original on December 20 2013 Retrieved March 13 2017 Berube M R 1991 American Presidents and Education Greenwood p 49 ISBN 9780313278488 Robert Freedman The religious Right and the Carter administration Historical Journal 48 1 2005 231 260 Lawrence J McAndrews Constricting Change Jimmy Carter and Tuition Tax Credits Records of the American Catholic Historical Society of Philadelphia 109 3 4 1998 65 111 online United States Congress Senate Committee on the Judiciary Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency 1975 Marijuana Decriminalization Hearing Before the Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency of the Committee on the Judiciary United States Senate Ninety fourth 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Portraits Ray Marshall Archived from the original on September 10 2014 Retrieved December 22 2013 Discrimination Law Issues for the Safety Professional By Thomas D Schneid P 195 Debt for Sale A Social History of the Credit Trap By Brett Williams P 24 U S Department of Labor History Employment Standards Administration ESA Archived from the original on December 24 2013 Retrieved December 22 2013 Social welfare in today s world by William H Whitaker and Ronald C Federico P 175 Beyond the Liberal Consensus A Political History of the United States Since 1965 By Iwan W Morgan P 162 White House Conference on Library and Information Services Journal of Reading 24 no 8 1981 719 21 John Dumbrell American foreign policy Carter to Clinton Macmillan International Higher Education 1996 Lee Sigelman and Pamela Johnston Conover The dynamics of presidential support during international conflict situations The Iranian hostage crisis Political behavior 3 4 1981 303 318 Herring pp 830 833 Suprin John October 25 2012 Yom Kippur War amp The Development of U S Military Doctrine The Dole Institute of Politics YouTube Wagner Rich Tegnelia Jim Technology Strategy Seminar NATO s AirLand Battle Strategy and Future Extended Deterrence Center for Strategic amp International Studies Center for Strategic amp International Studies Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 44 46 David F Schmitz and Vanessa Walker Jimmy Carter and the Foreign Policy of Human Rights The Development of a Post Cold War Foreign Policy Diplomatic History 28 1 2004 113 143 Herring pp 845 846 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 46 47 Herring pp 846 847 Herring p 833 Ottaway David B April 1 1978 Carter Arrives in Nigeria on State Visit New York Times Retrieved May 4 2018 Herring p 842 Herring pp 842 844 Glad Betty 2009 An Outside in the White House Cornell University Press 2009 pp 237 239 ISBN 978 0801448157 Herring pp 844 845 Herring p 846 Alter His Very Best Jimmy Carter a Life 2020 pp 355 370 Thornton The Carter Years Toward a New Global Order 1991 pp 186 207 231 286 Herring pp 835 836 Zelizer pp 57 58 Jimmy Carter and the Second Yemenite War A Smaller Shock of 1979 Wilson Center www wilsoncenter org Retrieved November 21 2021 Herring pp 852 853 a b c d e Kaplan Robert D 2008 Soldiers of God With Islamic Warriors in Afghanistan and Pakistan Knopf Doubleday pp 115 117 ISBN 9780307546982 a b c Kepel Gilles 2006 Jihad The Trail of Political Islam I B Tauris pp 138 139 142 144 ISBN 9781845112578 Weiner pp 422 423 Herring pp 853 854 Tobin Conor April 2020 The Myth of the Afghan Trap Zbigniew Brzezinski and Afghanistan 1978 1979 Diplomatic History Oxford University Press 44 2 237 264 doi 10 1093 dh dhz065 a b c Riedel Bruce 2014 What We Won America s Secret War in Afghanistan 1979 1989 Brookings Institution Press pp ix xi 21 22 93 98 99 105 ISBN 978 0815725954 Weiner pp 423 425 a b Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 p 197 Gates Bob 2007 From the Shadows The Ultimate Insider s Story of Five Presidents and How They Won the Cold War Simon and Schuster pp 145 147 ISBN 9781416543367 a b Herring pp 853 855 Nicholas Evan Sarantakes Dropping the torch Jimmy Carter the Olympic boycott and the Cold War Cambridge UP 2010 Eaton Joseph November 2016 Reconsidering the 1980 Moscow Olympic Boycott American Sports Diplomacy in East Asian Perspective Diplomatic History 40 5 845 864 doi 10 1093 dh dhw026 JSTOR 26376807 Retrieved June 20 2022 Treadaway Dan August 5 1996 Carter stresses role of Olympics in promoting global harmony Emory Report 48 37 Robert L Paarlberg Lessons of the grain embargo Foreign Affairs 59 1 1980 144 162 online Thornton The Carter Years Toward a New Global Order 1991 pp 456 493 Herring pp 855 857 Gaddis John Lewis 1997 We Now Know Rethinking Cold War History Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 878070 0 Jonathan Alter His Very Best Jimmy Carter a Life 2020 pp 388 417 Jorgen Jensehaugen Arab Israeli Diplomacy under Carter The US Israel and the Palestinians 2018 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 53 56 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 104 106 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 150 151 a b Herring pp 841 842 Bickerton and Klausner pp 190 193 198 200 Aaron David Miller The Much Too Promised Land Bantam Books 2008 page 159 a b Herring pp 847 848 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 p 156 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 p 155 a b Herring pp 848 850 a b Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 193 194 Herring p 850 Herring pp 858 859 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 211 213 Patterson pp 125 126 Declassified CIA memo predicted the 1980 October Surprise MuckRock Retrieved November 13 2021 Robert A Strong Jimmy Carter and the Panama Canal Treaties Presidential Studies Quarterly 1991 21 2 269 286 online Gaddis Smith Morality Reason and Power American Diplomacy in the Carter Years 1986 pp 111 15 Alter His Very Best Jimmy Carter a Life 2020 pp 371 387 Zelizer pp 69 70 Herring pp 837 838 Zelizer pp 69 76 Mary C Swilling The Business of the Canal The Economics and Politics of the Carter Administration s Panama Canal Zone Initiative 1978 Essays in Economic amp Business History 2012 22 275 89 online Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 227 228 Alter His Very Best Jimmy Carter a Life 2020 pp 418 430 Herring pp 839 840 Herring pp 855 856 Strong Robert A October 4 2016 Jimmy Carter Foreign Affairs Miller Center University of Virginia Retrieved November 21 2017 Herring pp 834 835 Gaddis Smith Morality Reason and Power American Diplomacy in the Carter Years 1986 pp 133 56 For highly detailed scholarly coverage see Nancy Mitchell Jimmy Carter in Africa Race and the Cold War Stanford UP 2016 913pp excerpt Over Where Cuban Fighters in Angola s Civil War HistoryNet October 20 2016 Retrieved July 21 2022 Piero Gleijeses A Test of Wills Jimmy Carter South Africa and the Independence of Namibia Diplomatic History 34 5 2010 853 891 Alex Thomson The Diplomacy of Impasse the Carter Administration and Apartheid South Africa Diplomacy amp Statecraft 21 1 2010 107 124 Andrew J DeRoche Andrew Young Civil Rights Ambassador 2003 Robert Schulzinger ed A Companion to American Foreign Relations 2006 pp 115 17 Travels of President Jimmy Carter U S Department of State Office of the Historian Bert Lance Carter Adviser Dies at 82 New York Times August 15 2013 1 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 p 77 Staff I Have a Job to Do Time magazine April 2 1979 Accessed September 7 2008 McFadden Robert D September 6 2008 Paul Curran 75 Corruption Foe Dies The New York Times p A30 Retrieved September 6 2008 He also investigated President Jimmy Carter s family peanut business for the Justice Department in 1979 and thus became the first lawyer to examine a sitting president under oath Pound Edward T October 17 1979 Carter s Business Cleared in Inquiry on Campaign Funds Indictments Are Ruled Out Investigator Finds No Evidence of Diversion of Warehouse Profit to 76 Presidential Race Insufficient Loan Collateral Loan Diversion Alleged Carter Business Cleared in Inquiry on Bank Loans and Campaign Funds Errors in the Records History of Loans Traced The New York Times p A1 Retrieved September 7 2008 PBS s American Experience Billy Carter pbs org Retrieved March 13 2017 permanent dead link Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 228 230 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 p 101 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 p 176 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 p 184 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 194 195 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 208 210 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 210 211 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 217 220 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 220 221 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 232 233 Steven F Hayward 2009 The Age of Reagan The Fall of the Old Liberal Order 1964 1980 Random House Digital Inc p 497 ISBN 978 0 307 45370 9 Patterson pp 128 129 Zelizer p 108 Zelizer p 115 Zelizer pp 115 116 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 235 237 Patterson pp 130 134 Patterson pp 135 141 150 Patterson p 131 Patterson pp 145 146 Patterson p 147 Zelizer pp 122 124 Zelizer pp 124 125 a b Patterson pp 149 151 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 p 245 246 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 p 235 Rottinghaus Brandon Vaughn Justin S February 19 2018 How Does Trump Stack Up Against the Best and Worst Presidents New York Times Retrieved May 14 2018 Presidential Historians Survey 2017 C SPAN Retrieved May 14 2018 Patterson p 111 Strong Robert A October 4 2016 JIMMY CARTER IMPACT AND LEGACY Miller Center University of Virginia Retrieved May 16 2018 Kaufman and Kaufman 2006 pp 249 250 Works cited Edit Alter Jonathan His Very Best Jimmy Carter a Life 2020 excerpt Bickerton Ian J Carla L Klausner 2007 A history of the Arab Israeli conflict Upper Saddle River N J Pearson Prentice Hall ISBN 9780132223355 Herring George C 2008 From Colony to Superpower U S Foreign Relations Since 1776 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 507822 0 Kaufman Burton I Kaufman Scott 2006 The Presidency of James Earl Carter 2nd ed University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0700614714 Patterson James 2005 Restless Giant The United States from Watergate to Bush v Gore Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195122169 Weiner Tim 2008 Legacy of Ashes The History of the CIA Anchor Books ISBN 9780307389008 Zelizer Julian 2010 Jimmy Carter Times Books ISBN 978 0 8050 8957 8 Further reading EditMain articles Bibliography of Jimmy Carter and Foreign policy of the Jimmy Carter administration Further reading Abramson Paul R John H Aldrich and David W Rohde Change and Continuity in the 1980 Elections 1983 Anderson Patrick Electing Jimmy Carter The Campaign of 1976 1994 Berggren D Jason and Nicol C Rae Jimmy Carter and George W Bush Faith foreign policy and an evangelical presidential style Presidential Studies Quarterly 36 4 2006 606 632 online Bird Kai The Outlier 2021 in depth popular study online review Biven W Carl Jimmy Carter s Economy Policy in an Age of Limits U of North Carolina Press 2002 online Bourne Peter G 1997 Jimmy Carter A Comprehensive Biography From Plains to Post Presidency New York Scribner ISBN 0 684 19543 7 Busch Andrew E 2005 Reagan s Victory The Presidential Election of 1980 and the Rise of the Right University Press of Kansas Campagna Anthony S Economic Policy in the Carter Administration Greenwood Press 1995 online Carleton David and Michael Stohl The foreign policy of human rights Rhetoric and reality from Jimmy Carter to Ronald Reagan Human Rights Quarterly 7 1985 205 229 online Congressional Quarterly Congress and the Nation V 1977 1980 1981 in depth nonpartisan detail on all major issues 1240pp contents Dumbrell John 1995 The Carter Presidency A Re evaluation 2nd ed Manchester UK Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 4693 9 Fink Gary M Graham Hugh Davis eds 1998 The Carter Presidency Policy Choices in the Post New Deal Era Lawrence University Press of Kansas ISBN 0 7006 0895 8 Garrison Jean A Games Advisors Play Foreign Policy in the Nixon and Carter Administrations 1999 online Glad Betty An outsider in the White House Jimmy Carter his advisors and the making of American foreign policy Cornell University Press 2009 Graff Henry F ed The Presidents A Reference History 3rd ed 2002 Hargrove Erwin C Jimmy Carter as president Leadership and the politics of the public good LSU Press 1999 Holzer Harold The Presidents Vs the Press The Endless Battle Between the White House and the Media from the Founding Fathers to Fake News Dutton 2020 pp 293 304 onlineJensehaugen Jorgen 2018 Arab Israeli Diplomacy under Carter The US Israel and the Palestinians I B Tauris 2018 online analysis by scholars on H diplo Kaufman Victor S The Bureau of Human Rights during the Carter Administration The Historian 61 1 1998 51 66 Kaufman Burton I ed A Companion to Gerald R Ford and Jimmy Carter 2015 30 scholarly essays by experts excerpts Kaufman Burton I The Carter Years 2006 648pp long scholarly biographies of all the major players Kaufman Diane and Scott Kaufman 2013 Historical Dictionary of the Carter Era Scarecrow 2013 301 pp Krukones Michael G The campaign promises of Jimmy Carter Accomplishments and failures Presidential Studies Quarterly 1985 136 144 online Mattson Kevin What the Heck Are You Up To Mr President Jimmy Carter America s Malaise and the Speech That Should Have Changed the Country Bloomsbury 2010 Mitchell Nancy Jimmy Carter in Africa Race and the cold war Stanford UP 2018 Morris Kenneth Earl ed Jimmy Carter American Moralist University of Georgia Press 1996 Reichard Gary W Early Returns Assessing Jimmy Carter Presidential Studies Quarterly 20 3 Summer 1990 603 620 online Poe Steven C Human rights and economic aid allocation under Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter American Journal of Political Science 1992 147 167 online Quandt William B Camp David peacemaking and politics Brookings Institution Press 2015 Roessner Amber 2020 Jimmy Carter and the Birth of the Marathon Media Campaign Baton Rouge LA Louisiana State University Press ISBN 978 0807170793 Rosenbaum Herbert D and Alexej Ugrinsky eds Jimmy Carter Foreign Policy and Post Presidential Years 1994 532pp essays by experts Rosenbaum Herbert D and Alexej Ugrinsky eds The Presidency and Domestic Policies of Jimmy Carter 1994 876pp essays by experts online Sarantakes Nicholas Evan Dropping the torch Jimmy Carter the Olympic boycott and the Cold War Cambridge University Press 2010 Schmitz David F and Vanessa Walker Jimmy Carter and the Foreign Policy of Human Rights The Development of a Post Cold War Foreign Policy Diplomatic History 28 1 2004 113 143 Smith Gaddis Morality Reason and Power American diplomacy in the Carter years New York Hill and Wang 1986 Strong Robert A 2000 Working in the World Jimmy Carter and the Making of American Foreign Policy Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press ISBN 0 8071 2445 1 Thornton Richard C The Carter Years Toward a New Global Order 1991 596pp comprehensive coverage of foreign policy online Zelizer Julian E Jimmy Carter The American Presidents Series The 39th President 1977 1981 Macmillan 2010 Primary sources and memoirs Edit Kantowicz Edward R Reminiscences of a Fated Presidency Themes from the Carter Memoirs Presidential Studies Quarterly 15 4 1986 pp 651 665 online Lafeber Walter From confusion to Cold War The memoirs of the Carter administration Diplomatic History 8 1 1984 1 12 online Thomas Norman C The Carter Administration Memoirs A Review Essay Western Political Quarterly 39 2 1986 348 360 online Brzezinski Zbigniew Power and Principle Memoirs of the National Security Adviser 1977 1981 1983 Califano Jr Joseph A Governing America 1981 online Carter Jimmy Keeping faith Memoirs of a president U of Arkansas Press 1995 online Carter Jimmy A Government as Good as its People U of Arkansas Press 1996 Carter Jimmy White House diary 2011 online Carter Jimmy Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States Jimmy Carter 1977 1978 annual online Eizenstat Stuart E President Carter The White House Years 2018 Jordan Hamilton Crisis The Last Year of the Carter Presidency 1982 online Lance Bert The Truth of the Matter My Life in and out of Politics 1991 online Mondale Walter The good fight a life in liberal politics 2010 online O Neill Jr Tip and William Novak Man of the House The life and political memoirs of Speaker Tip O Neill 1987 online Powell Jody The Other Side of the Story 1984 online Thompson Kenneth W ed The Carter presidency fourteen intimate perspectives of Jimmy Carter 1990 Vance Cyrus Hard Choices Four Critical Years in Managing America s Foreign Policy 1983 online External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Presidency of Jimmy Carter Carter Library Miller Center on the Presidency at U of Virginia brief articles on Carter and his presidency Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Presidency of Jimmy Carter amp oldid 1151101309, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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