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Presidency of Ronald Reagan

Ronald Reagan's tenure as the 40th president of the United States began with his first inauguration on January 20, 1981, and ended on January 20, 1989. Reagan, a Republican from California, took office following his landslide victory over Democrat incumbent president Jimmy Carter and independent congressman John B. Anderson in the 1980 presidential election. Four years later, in the 1984 presidential election, he defeated Democrat former vice president Walter Mondale, to win re-election in a larger landslide. Reagan was limited to two terms and was succeeded by his vice president, George H. W. Bush, who won the 1988 presidential election. Reagan's 1980 landslide election resulted from a dramatic conservative shift to the right in American politics, including a loss of confidence in liberal, New Deal, and Great Society programs and priorities that had dominated the national agenda since the 1930s.

Official portrait, 1981
Presidency of Ronald Reagan
January 20, 1981 – January 20, 1989
CabinetSee list
PartyRepublican
Election
SeatWhite House
Library website

Domestically, the Reagan administration enacted a major tax cut, sought to cut non-military spending, and eliminated federal regulations. The administration's economic policies, known as "Reaganomics", were inspired by supply-side economics. The combination of tax cuts and an increase in defense spending led to budget deficits, and the federal debt increased significantly during Reagan's tenure. Reagan signed the Tax Reform Act of 1986, simplifying the tax code by reducing rates and removing several tax breaks, and the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986, which enacted sweeping changes to U.S. immigration law and granted amnesty to three million illegal immigrants. Reagan also appointed more federal judges than any other president, including four Supreme Court Justices.

Reagan's foreign policy stance was resolutely anti-communist; its plan of action, known as the Reagan Doctrine, sought to roll back the global influence of the Soviet Union in an attempt to end the Cold War. Under this doctrine, the Reagan administration initiated a massive buildup of the United States military; promoted new technologies such as missile defense systems; and, in 1983, undertook an invasion of Grenada, the first major overseas action by U.S. troops since the end of the Vietnam War. The administration also created controversy by granting aid to paramilitary forces seeking to overthrow leftist governments, particularly in war-torn Central America and Afghanistan. Specifically, the Reagan administration engaged in covert arms sales to Iran to fund Contra rebels in Nicaragua that were fighting to overthrow their nation's socialist government; the resulting Iran–Contra affair led to the conviction or resignation of several administration officials. During Reagan's second term, he sought closer relations with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, and the two leaders signed a major arms control agreement known as the INF Treaty.

Historians and political scientists generally rank Reagan in the upper tier of American presidents, and consider him to be one of the most important presidents since Franklin D. Roosevelt. Supporters of Reagan's presidency have pointed to his contributions to the economic recovery of the 1980s, the peaceful end of the Cold War, and a broader restoration of American confidence. Reagan's presidency has received criticism for rising budget deficits and wealth inequality during and after his presidency, as well as for his leadership of the executive branch, particularly during the Iran–Contra affair. Due to Reagan's impact on public discourse and advocacy of American conservatism, some historians have described the period during and after his presidency as the Reagan Era.

Background edit

Conservative shift in politics edit

 
Ronald Reagan with a cowboy hat at Rancho Del Cielo.

Even prior to becoming president, Reagan was the leader of a dramatic conservative shift that undercut many of the domestic and foreign policies that had dominated the national agenda for decades.[1][2] A major factor in the rise of conservatism was the growing distrust of government in the aftermath of the Watergate scandal. While distrust of high officials had been an American characteristic for two centuries, Watergate engendered heightened levels of suspicion and encouraged the media to engage in a vigorous search for scandals.[3] An unexpected new factor was the emergence of the religious right as a cohesive political force that gave strong support to conservatism.[4][5]

Other factors in the rise of the conservative movement were the emergence of a "culture war" as a triangular battle among conservatives, traditional liberals, and the New Left, involving such issues as individual freedom, divorce, sexual freedom, abortion, and homosexuality.[6] A mass movement of population from the cities to the suburbs led to the creation of a new group of voters less attached to New Deal economic policies and machine politics.[7] Meanwhile, it became socially acceptable for conservative Southern whites, especially well educated suburbanites, to vote Republican. Though the civil rights legislation of the 1960s had been a triumphal issue for liberalism and had created a new, pro-Democratic black electorate, it had also destroyed the argument that whites had to vote Democratic to protect segregation in the South.[8] Responding to these various trends, Reagan and other conservatives successfully presented conservative ideas as an alternative to a public that had grown disillusioned with New Deal liberalism and the Democratic Party.[9] Reagan's charisma and speaking skills helped him frame conservatism as an optimistic, forward-looking vision for the country.[10]

1980 election edit

 
1980 Electoral College vote results

Reagan, who had served as Governor of California from 1967 to 1975, narrowly lost the 1976 Republican presidential primaries to incumbent President Gerald Ford. With the defeat of Ford by Democrat Jimmy Carter in the 1976 election, Reagan immediately became the front-runner for the 1980 Republican presidential nomination.[11] A darling of the conservative movement, Reagan faced more moderate Republicans such as George H. W. Bush, Howard Baker, and Bob Dole in the 1980 Republican presidential primaries. After Bush won the Iowa caucuses, he became Reagan's primary challenger, but Reagan won the New Hampshire primary and most of the following primaries, gaining an insurmountable delegate lead by the end of March 1980. Ford was Reagan's first choice for his running mate, but Reagan backed away from the idea out of the fear of a "copresidency" in which Ford would exercise an unusual degree of power. Reagan instead chose Bush, and the Reagan-Bush ticket was nominated at the 1980 Republican National Convention. Meanwhile, Carter won the Democratic nomination, defeating a primary challenge by Senator Ted Kennedy. Polls taken after the party conventions showed a tied race between Reagan and Carter, while independent candidate John B. Anderson had the support of many moderates.[12]

 
Outgoing President Jimmy Carter and President-elect Ronald Reagan with his wife Nancy in the Oval Office on November 20, 1980

The 1980 general campaign between Reagan and Carter was conducted amid a multitude of domestic concerns and the ongoing Iran hostage crisis. After winning the Republican nomination, Reagan pivoted to the center. Though he continued to champion a major tax cut, Reagan backed off of his support for free trade and the privatization of Social Security, and promised to consider arms control treaties with the Soviet Union. He instead sought to focus the race on Carter's handling of the economy. Mired with an approval rating in the low 30s, Carter also waged a negative campaign, focusing on the supposed risk of war if Reagan took office.[13]

Reagan and Carter met in one presidential debate, held just one week before election day. Reagan delivered an effective performance, asking voters, "Are you better off today than you were four years ago?"[14] In response to a characterization by Carter of his record regarding Medicare, Reagan replied with a phrase that helped define the election and endure in the political lexicon: "There you go again."

Though the race had been widely regarded as a close contest, Reagan won over the large majority of undecided voters.[15] Reagan took 50.7% of the popular vote and 489 of the 538 electoral votes. Carter won 41% of the popular vote and 49 electoral votes, while Anderson won 6.6% of the popular vote. In the concurrent congressional elections, Republicans took control of the Senate for the first time since the 1950s, while Democrats retained control of the House of Representatives.[16]

Administration edit

 
President Reagan and his cabinet in 1981
 
President Reagan and his cabinet in 1989
The Reagan cabinet
OfficeNameTerm
PresidentRonald Reagan1981–1989
Vice PresidentGeorge H. W. Bush1981–1989
Secretary of StateAlexander Haig1981–1982
George Shultz1982–1989
Secretary of the TreasuryDonald Regan1981–1985
James Baker1985–1988
Nicholas F. Brady1988–1989
Secretary of DefenseCaspar Weinberger1981–1987
Frank Carlucci1987–1989
Attorney GeneralWilliam French Smith1981–1985
Edwin Meese1985–1988
Dick Thornburgh1988–1989
Secretary of the InteriorJames G. Watt1981–1983
William P. Clark Jr.1983–1985
Donald P. Hodel1985–1989
Secretary of AgricultureJohn R. Block1981–1986
Richard Lyng1986–1989
Secretary of CommerceMalcolm Baldrige Jr.1981–1987
William Verity Jr.1987–1989
Secretary of LaborRaymond J. Donovan1981–1985
Bill Brock1985–1987
Ann Dore McLaughlin1987–1989
Secretary of Health and
Human Services
Richard Schweiker1981–1983
Margaret Heckler1983–1985
Otis Bowen1985–1989
Secretary of Housing and
Urban Development
Samuel Pierce1981–1989
Secretary of TransportationDrew Lewis1981–1983
Elizabeth Dole1983–1987
James H. Burnley IV1987–1989
Secretary of EnergyJames B. Edwards1981–1982
Donald P. Hodel1982–1985
John S. Herrington1985–1989
Secretary of EducationTerrel Bell1981–1984
William Bennett1985–1988
Lauro Cavazos1988–1989
Director of the Office of
Management and Budget
David Stockman1981–1985
James C. Miller III1985–1988
Joe Wright1988–1989
Director of Central IntelligenceWilliam J. Casey1981–1987
William H. Webster1987–1989
United States Trade RepresentativeBill Brock1981–1985
Clayton Yeutter1985–1989
Ambassador to the United NationsJeane Kirkpatrick1981–1985
Vernon A. Walters1985–1989
Counselor to the PresidentEdwin Meese1981–1985
none1985–1989

Reagan tapped James Baker, who had run Bush's 1980 campaign, as his first chief of staff. Baker, Deputy Chief of Staff Michael Deaver, and Counselor Edwin Meese formed the "troika," the key White House staffers early in Reagan's presidency.[17] Baker quickly established himself as the most powerful member of the troika and the overseer of day-to-day operations, while Meese had nominal leadership of policy development and Deaver orchestrated Reagan's public appearances.[18] Aside from the troika, other important White House staffers included Richard Darman and David Gergen.[19][20][21]

Reagan chose Alexander Haig, a former general who had served as chief of staff to Richard Nixon, as his first secretary of state. Other major Cabinet appointees included Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger, a former Nixon cabinet official who would preside over an increase in defense spending, and Secretary of the Treasury Donald Regan, a bank executive. Reagan selected David Stockman, a young congressman from Michigan, as the Director of the Office of Management and Budget.[22] CIA director William J. Casey emerged as an important figure in the administration, as the CIA would figure prominently into Reagan's Cold War initiatives. Reagan downgraded the importance of the national security advisor, and six different individuals held that position during Reagan's presidency.[23]

Haig left the cabinet in 1982 after clashing with other members of the Reagan administration, and was replaced by another former Nixon administration official, George P. Shultz.[24] By 1982, National Security Advisor William P. Clark Jr., Ambassador to the United Nations Jeane Kirkpatrick, and CIA Director Casey had established themselves as the major figures in the formulation of the administration's foreign policy.[25] Shultz eventually emerged as the administration's most influential foreign policy figure, moving the administration towards a less confrontational policy with the Soviet Union.[26]

Baker and Treasury Secretary Regan switched positions at the beginning of Reagan's second term.[27] Regan centralized power within his office, and he took on the responsibilities that had been held by Baker, Deaver, and Meese, the latter of whom succeeded William French Smith as attorney general in 1985.[28] Regan frequently clashed with First Lady Nancy Reagan, and he left the administration in the wake of the Iran–Contra affair and Republican losses in the 1986 mid-term elections. Regan was replaced by former Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker.[29]

Judicial appointments edit

Supreme Court edit

 
Reagan appointed William Rehnquist to the office of Chief Justice in 1986; he served until his death in 2005

Reagan made four successful appointments to the Supreme Court during his eight years in office. In 1981, he successfully nominated Sandra Day O'Connor to succeed Associate Justice Potter Stewart, fulfilling a campaign promise to name the first woman to the Supreme Court. Democrats, who had planned to vigorously oppose Reagan's nominations to the Supreme Court, approved of the nomination of O'Connor. However, the Christian right was astonished and dismayed with O'Connor, who they feared would not overturn the Supreme Court's decision in Roe v. Wade, which had established the constitutional right to have an abortion without undue government interference.[30][31] O'Connor served on the Supreme Court until 2006, and was generally considered to be a centrist conservative.[32]

In 1986, Reagan elevated Associate Justice William Rehnquist to the position of Chief Justice of the United States after Warren Burger chose to retire.[33] Rehnquist, a member of the conservative wing of the Court,[32] was the third sitting associate justice to be elevated to chief justice, after Edward Douglass White and Harlan F. Stone. Reagan successfully nominated Antonin Scalia to fill Rehnquist's position as an associate justice of the Supreme Court.[33] Scalia became a member of the Court's conservative wing.[32]

Reagan faced greater difficulties in filling the final Supreme Court vacancy, which arose due to the retirement of Lewis F. Powell Jr. Reagan nominated Robert Bork in July 1987, but the nomination was rejected by the Senate in October 1987.[33] Later that month, Reagan announced the nomination of Douglas H. Ginsburg, but Ginsburg withdrew from consideration in November 1987. Finally, Reagan nominated Anthony Kennedy, who won Senate confirmation in February 1988.[33] Along with O'Connor, Kennedy served as the key swing vote on the Supreme Court in the decades after Reagan left office.[34]

Other courts edit

Reagan appointed a combined total of 368 judges to the United States courts of appeals and the United States district courts, more than any other president. The vast majority of his judicial appointees were conservative white men, and many of the appointees were affiliated with the conservative Federalist Society.[35] Partly because Congress passed a law creating new federal judicial positions in 1984, Reagan had appointed nearly half of the federal judiciary by the time he left office in 1989.[36]

Assassination attempt edit

On March 30, 1981, only 69 days into the new administration, Reagan, his press secretary James Brady, Washington police officer Thomas Delahanty, and Secret Service agent Tim McCarthy were struck by gunfire from would-be assassin John Hinckley Jr. outside the Washington Hilton Hotel. Although Reagan was initially reported to be "close to death",[37] he recovered and was released from the hospital on April 11, becoming the first serving president to survive being wounded in an assassination attempt.[38] The failed assassination attempt had great influence on Reagan's popularity; polls indicated his approval rating to be around 73%.[39][40] Many pundits and journalists later described the failed assassination as a critical moment in Reagan's presidency, as his newfound popularity provided critical momentum in passing his domestic agenda.[41]

Domestic affairs edit

Reagan used his White House staff to shape major domestic policies. His Chief of Staff made heavy use of the Office of Policy Development in supervising cabinet action on the Reagan initiatives.[42]

"Reaganomics" and taxation edit

 
Outlining his plan for tax reduction legislation from the Oval Office in a televised address, July 1981

Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 edit

Reagan implemented neoliberal economic policies based on supply-side economics, advocating a laissez-faire philosophy and free-market fiscal policy.[43][44] Reagan's taxation policies resembled those instituted by President Calvin Coolidge and Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon in the 1920s. Reagan's team was also strongly influenced by contemporary economists such as Arthur Laffer, who rejected the then-dominant views of Keynesian economists.[45] Reagan relied on Laffer and other economists to argue that tax cuts would reduce inflation, which went against the prevailing Keynesian view.[46] Supply-side advocates also asserted that cutting taxes would ultimately lead to higher government revenue due to economic growth, a proposition that was challenged by many economists.[47]

Republican Congressman Jack Kemp and Republican Senator William Roth had nearly won passage of a major tax cut during Carter's presidency, but Carter had prevented passage of the bill due to concerns about the deficit.[48] Reagan made passage of the Kemp–Roth bill his top domestic priority upon taking office. As Democrats controlled the House of Representatives, passage of any bill would require the support of some House Democrats in addition to the support of congressional Republicans.[49] Reagan's victory in the 1980 presidential campaign had united Republicans around his leadership, while conservative Democrats like Phil Gramm of Texas (who later became a Republican) were eager to back some of Reagan's conservative policies.[50] Throughout 1981, Reagan frequently met with members of Congress, focusing especially on winning support from conservative Southern Democrats.[49] Reagan also benefited from a conservative majority in the House during his first two years as president, with an estimated 230 votes during the 97th Congress, although this changed after the Democratic gains in the 1982 election, with House control switching to liberals within the Democratic caucus.[51]

In July 1981, the Senate voted 89–11 in favor of the tax cut bill favored by Reagan, and the House subsequently approved the bill in a 238–195 vote.[52] The Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 cut the top marginal tax rate from 70% to 50%, lowered the capital gains tax from 28% to 20%, more than tripled the amount of inherited money exempt from the estate tax, and cut the corporate tax.[49][52] Reagan's success in passing a major tax bill and cutting the federal budget was hailed as the "Reagan Revolution" by some reporters; one columnist wrote that the Reagan's legislative success represented the "most formidable domestic initiative any president has driven through since the Hundred Days of Franklin Roosevelt."[53]

Later tax acts edit

Faced with concerns about the mounting federal debt, Reagan agreed to raise taxes, signing the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 (TEFRA).[54] Many of Reagan's conservative supporters condemned TEFRA, but Reagan argued that his administration would be unable to win further budget cuts without the tax hike.[55] Among other provisions, TEFRA doubled the federal cigarette tax and rescinded a portion of the corporate tax cuts from the 1981 tax bill.[56] By 1983, the amount of federal tax had fallen for all or almost all American taxpayers, but most strongly affected the wealthy; the proportion of income paid in taxes by the richest one percent fell from 29.8 percent to 24.8 percent.[57] Partly due to the poor economy, Reagan's legislative momentum dissipated after his first year in office, and his party lost several seats in the House in the 1982 congressional elections.[58] Compared to other midterm elections, the losses were relatively small for the party holding the presidency, but conservative Democrats were less open to Reagan's initiatives after 1982.[59] As deficits continued to be an issue, Reagan signed another bill that raised taxes, the Deficit Reduction Act of 1984.[60]

With Donald Regan taking over as Chief of Staff in 1985, the Reagan administration made simplification of the tax code the central focus of its second term domestic agenda.[61] Working with Speaker of the House Tip O'Neill, a Democrat who also favored tax reform, Reagan overcame significant opposition from members of Congress in both parties to pass the Tax Reform Act of 1986.[62] The act simplified the tax code by reducing the number of tax brackets to four and slashing a number of tax breaks. The top rate was dropped to 28%, but capital gains taxes were increased on those with the highest incomes from 20% to 28%. The increase of the lowest tax bracket from 11% to 15% was more than offset by expansion of the personal exemption, standard deduction, and earned income tax credit. The net result was the removal of six million poor Americans from the income tax roll and a reduction of income tax liability at all income levels.[63][64] The net effect of Reagan's tax bills was that overall tax burden held steady at roughly 19 percent of gross national product.[65]

Government spending edit

Federal finances and GDP during Reagan's presidency[66]
Fiscal
Year
Receipts Outlays Surplus/
Deficit
GDP Debt as a %
of GDP[67]
1981 599.3 678.2 −79.0 3,133.2 25.2
1982 617.8 745.7 −128.0 3,313.4 27.9
1983 600.6 808.4 −207.8 3,536.0 32.2
1984 666.4 851.8 −185.4 3,949.2 33.1
1985 734.0 946.3 −212.3 4,265.1 35.3
1986 769.2 990.4 −221.2 4,526.3 38.5
1987 854.3 1,004.0 −149.7 4,767.7 39.6
1988 909.2 1,064.4 −155.2 5,138.6 39.9
1989 991.1 1,143.7 −152.6 5,554.7 39.4
Ref. [68] [69] [70]

Reagan prioritized tax cuts over spending cuts, arguing that lower revenue would eventually require lower spending.[71] Nonetheless, Reagan was determined to decrease government spending and roll back or dismantle Great Society programs such as Medicaid and the Office of Economic Opportunity.[72] In August 1981, Reagan signed the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981, which cut federal funding for social programs like food stamps, school lunch programs, and Medicaid.[73] The Comprehensive Employment and Training Act, which had provided for the employment of 300,000 workers in 1980, was also repealed,[53] and the administration tightened eligibility for unemployment benefits.[74] Notably absent from the budget cuts was the Department of Defense, which saw its budget bolstered.[75]

Reagan experienced several legislative successes in his first year in office, but his attempts to cut federal domestic spending after 1981 met increasing congressional resistance.[76] Spending on programs like Supplemental Security Income, Medicaid, the earned income tax credit, and Aid to Families with Dependent Children all increased after 1982. The number of federal civilian employees rose during Reagan's tenure, from 2.9 million to 3.1 million.[77] Reagan's policy of New Federalism, which sought to shift the responsibility for most social programs to state governments, found little support in Congress.[78]

In 1981, OMB Director David Stockman won Reagan's approval to seek cuts to Social Security in 1981, but this plan was poorly-received in Congress.[79] In 1982, Reagan established the bipartisan National Commission on Social Security Reform to make recommendations to secure the long-term integrity of Social Security. The commission rejected Social Security privatization and other major changes to the program, but recommended expanding the Social Security base (by including exempt federal and nonprofit employees), raising Social Security taxes, and reducing some payments. These recommendations were enacted in the Social Security Amendments of 1983, which received bipartisan support.[80] While Reagan avoided cuts to Social Security and Medicare for most individuals,[81] his administration attempted to purge many people from the Social Security disability rolls.[82] Reagan's inability to implement major cuts to Social Security solidified its status as the "third rail" of U.S. politics, and future administrations would be reluctant to propose cuts to the popular program.[83]

Deficits edit

As Reagan was unwilling to match his tax cuts with cuts to defense spending or Social Security, rising deficits became an issue.[84] These deficits were exacerbated by the early 1980s recession, which cut into federal revenue.[85] Unable to win further domestic spending cuts, and pressured to address the deficit, Reagan was forced to raise taxes after 1981.[86] Nonetheless, the national debt more than tripled between fiscal year 1980 and fiscal year 1989, going from $914 billion to $2.7 trillion, while national debt as a percentage of GDP rose from 33 percent in 1981 to 53 percent in 1989. Reagan never submitted a balanced budget during his time in office.[87]

In an effort to lower the national debt, Congress passed the Gramm–Rudman–Hollings Balanced Budget Act, which called for automatic spending cuts if Congress was unable to eliminate deficits through the regular budget-making process.[36] However, Congress found ways around the automatic cuts and deficits continued to rise, ultimately leading to the passage of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990.[88]

Economy edit

Reagan took office in the midst of poor economic conditions, as the country experienced stagflation, a phenomenon in which both inflation and unemployment were high.[89] The economy experienced a brief period of growth early in Reagan's first year in office, but plunged into a recession in July 1981.[90] As the recession continued in the first two years of Reagan's presidency, many within Reagan's administration blamed the policies of Paul Volcker, the Chair of the Federal Reserve. But Reagan himself never criticized Volcker.[91] Volcker sought to fight inflation by pursuing a policy of "tight money" in which interest rates were set at a high level.[92] High interest rates would restrict lending and investment, which would in turn lower inflation, raise unemployment and, at least in the short term, reduce economic growth.[93] Unemployment reached a high of nearly 11% in 1982,[92] poverty rate rose from 11.7 percent to 15 percent.[74] The country emerged from recession in 1983,[94] but not all shared equally in the economic recovery, and economic inequality and the number of homeless individuals both increased during the 1980s.[95][96] Fearful of damaging confidence in the economic recovery, Reagan nominated Volcker to a second term in 1983, and Volcker remained in office until 1987.[97] Inflation dropped to approximately 3.5% in 1985, while the unemployment rate fell to about 5% in 1988.[58] In 1987, Reagan appointed conservative economist Alan Greenspan to succeed Volcker, and Greenspan would lead the Federal Reserve until 2006. Greenspan raised interest rates in another attempt to curb inflation, setting off a stock market crash in October 1987 known as "Black Monday," but the markets stabilized and recovered in the following weeks.[97]

Labor edit

 
Income inequality and union participation have had a distinctly inverse relationship, with the disparity increasing since the 1980s.[98]

In August 1981, the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO), which consisted of federal employees, voted to go on a labor strike in hopes of receiving better pay and benefits. After the vote, Reagan announced that the strikers would be fired if they did not return to work within forty-eight hours. Federal law forbid government employees from striking. After the deadline passed, Reagan fired over 10,000 air traffic controllers, while approximately 40 percent of the union members returned to work. Reagan's handling of the strike was strongly criticized by union leaders, but it won the approval of his conservative base of voters and others in the public.[99][100] The breaking of the PATCO strike demoralized organized labor, and the number of strikes fell dramatically in the 1980s.[99] Many of the strikes that did occur, including the Arizona copper mine strike of 1983, the 1983 Greyhound bus driver strike, and the 1985–86 Hormel strike, ended with dismissal of the strikers. With the assent of Reagan's sympathetic National Labor Relations Board appointees, many companies also won wage and benefit cutbacks from unions, especially in the manufacturing sector.[101] During Reagan's time in office, the share of employees who were part of a labor union dropped from approximately one-fourth of the total workforce to approximately one-sixth of the total workforce.[102]

Deregulation edit

Reagan sought to loosen federal regulation of economic activities, and he appointed key officials who shared this agenda. According to historian William Leuchtenburg, by 1986, the Reagan administration eliminated almost half of the federal regulations that had existed in 1981.[103] The Federal Communications Commission aggressively deregulated the broadcasting industry, eliminating the Fairness Doctrine and other restrictions.[104] The 1982 Garn–St. Germain Depository Institutions Act deregulated savings and loan associations and allowed banks to provide adjustable-rate mortgages. Reagan also eliminated numerous government positions and dismissed numerous federal employees, including the entire staff of the Employment and Training Administration. Secretary of the Interior James G. Watt implemented policies designed to open up federal territories to oil drilling and surface mining. Under EPA Director Anne Gorsuch, the EPA's budget was dramatically reduced and the EPA loosely enforced environmental regulations.[103]

Savings and loan crisis edit

After the passage of the Garn–St. Germain Depository Institutions Act, savings and loans associations engaged in riskier activities, and the leaders of some institutions embezzled funds.[105] In what became known as the Savings and loan crisis, a total of 747 financial institutions failed and needed to be rescued with $160 billion in taxpayer dollars.[106] As an indication of this scandal's size, Martin Mayer wrote at the time, "The theft from the taxpayer by the community that fattened on the growth of the savings and loan (S&L) industry in the 1980s is the worst public scandal in American history...Measuring by money, [or] by the misallocation of national resources...the S&L outrage makes Teapot Dome and Credit Mobilier seem minor episodes."[107]

Immigration edit

The 1980s saw the highest rate of immigration to the United States since the 1910s, and the proportion of the foreign-born population reached its highest level since the 1940s.[108] Reagan did not make immigration a focus of his administration, but he came to support a package of reforms sponsored by Republican Senator Alan Simpson and Democratic Congressman Romano Mazzoli, which he signed into law as the Immigration Reform and Control Act in November 1986.[109] The act made it illegal to knowingly hire or recruit illegal immigrants, required employers to attest to their employees' immigration status, and granted amnesty to approximately three million illegal immigrants who had entered the United States before January 1, 1982, and had lived in the country continuously. The bill was also contained provisions designed to enhance security measures at the Mexico–United States border.[110] Upon signing the act at a ceremony held beside the newly refurbished Statue of Liberty, Reagan said, "The legalization provisions in this act will go far to improve the lives of a class of individuals who now must hide in the shadows, without access to many of the benefits of a free and open society. Very soon many of these men and women will be able to step into the sunlight and, ultimately, if they choose, they may become Americans."[111] The bill was largely unsuccessful at halting illegal immigration, and the population of illegal immigrants rose from 5 million in 1986 to 11.1 million in 2013.[110]

Criminal and anti-drug policy edit

 
First Lady Nancy Reagan at a Just Say No rally at the White House
 
Graph demonstrating increases in U.S. incarceration rate

Not long after being sworn into office, Reagan declared more militant policies in the "War on Drugs".[112][113] He promised a "planned, concerted campaign" against all drugs,[114] in hopes of decreasing drug use, particularly among adolescents.[115][116] The "crack epidemic," which saw a large number of individuals become addicted to crack cocaine and may have played a role in numerous murders, emerged as a major area of public concern.[117] First Lady Nancy Reagan made the War on Drugs her main cause as First Lady, founding the "Just Say No" drug awareness campaign.[118]

Concerns about drug use prompted Congress to pass legislation such as the Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984[119] and the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986, the latter of which granted $1.7 billion to fight drugs and established a mandatory minimum penalties for drug offenses.[118] Reagan also signed the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988, which further increased criminal penalties for drug use and established the Office of National Drug Control Policy.[120] Critics charged that Reagan's policies promoted significant racial disparities in the prison population,[118] were ineffective in reducing the availability of drugs or crime on the street, and came at a great financial and human cost for American society.[121] Supporters argued that the numbers for adolescent drug users declined during Reagan's years in office.[116]

Social policies and civil rights edit

 
The Reagan administration has been criticized both contemporaneously, as seen in this 1988 poster from ACT-UP, and retrospectively for its response to the AIDS epidemic.

Reagan was largely unable to enact his ambitious social policy agenda, which included a federal ban on abortions and an end to desegregation busing.[122] Despite the lack of major social policy legislation, Reagan was able to influence social policy through regulations and the appointment of conservative Supreme Court Justices.[122]

With Reagan's support, conservative Republican Senator Jesse Helms led an effort to prevent the Supreme Court from reviewing state and local laws mandating school prayer, but Republican senators like Lowell Weicker and Barry Goldwater blocked passage of Helms' bill.[123] Reagan campaigned vigorously to restore organized prayer to the schools, first as a moment of prayer and later as a moment of silence.[124] His election reflected an opposition[125] to Engel v. Vitale, which prohibited state officials from composing an official state prayer and requiring that it be recited in the public schools.[126] In 1981, he proposed a constitutional amendment on school prayer,[125] which stated: "Nothing in this Constitution shall be construed to prohibit individual or group prayer in public schools or other public institutions. No person shall be required by the United States or by any state to participate in prayer." In 1984, he again raised the issue to Congress.[127] In 1985, he expressed his disappointment that the Supreme Court ruling still banned a moment of silence for public schools, and said that efforts to reinstitute prayer in public schools were "an uphill battle".[128] In 1987, he renewed his call for Congress to support voluntary prayer in schools.[129]

In 1982, Reagan signed a bill extending the Voting Rights Act for 25 years after a grass-roots lobbying and legislative campaign forced him to abandon his plan to ease that law's restrictions.[130] He also reluctantly accepted the continuation of affirmative action programs[131] and the establishment of Martin Luther King Jr. Day as a federal holiday.[132] The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the Justice Department both prosecuted far fewer civil rights cases per year than they had under Carter.[133] In 1988, Reagan vetoed the Civil Rights Restoration Act, but his veto was overridden by Congress. Reagan had argued that the legislation infringed on states' rights and the rights of churches and business owners.[134]

No civil rights legislation for gay individuals passed during Reagan's tenure. Many in the Reagan administration, including Communications Director Pat Buchanan, were hostile to the gay community, as were many religious leaders who were important allies to the administration.[135] Gay rights and the growing HIV/AIDS emerged as an important matter of public concern in 1985 after it was disclosed that actor Rock Hudson, a personal friend of President Reagan, was receiving treatment for AIDS. As public anxiety over AIDS rose, the Supreme Court upheld a state law that criminalized homosexuality in the case of Bowers v. Hardwick.[136] Though Surgeon General C. Everett Koop advocated for a public health campaign designed to reduce the spread of AIDS by raising awareness and promoting the use of condoms, Reagan rejected Koop's proposals in favor of abstinence-only sex education.[137] By 1989, approximately 60,000 Americans had died of AIDS, and liberals strongly criticized Reagan's response to the HIV/AIDS crisis.[138] On the 1980 campaign trail, Reagan spoke of the gay rights movement:

My criticism is that [the gay movement] isn't just asking for civil rights; it's asking for recognition and acceptance of an alternative lifestyle which I do not believe society can condone, nor can I.[139]

Environmental policy edit

Reagan's strong preferences for limited federal involvement and deregulation extended to the environment. His main goal was to lessen the burden of regulation on businesses to promote more economic activity in the United States. Because of this policy, Reagan refused to renew the Clean Air Act during his administration.[140] Reagan lessened existing regulations on pollution, cut funding to government environmental agencies, and appointed known anti-environmentalist individuals to key positions presiding over these organizations.[141]

When Reagan took office in 1981, he "attempted to reduce" money that was directed towards studying the burgeoning field of global warming and human-driven climate change.[142] In the early 1980s, the study of the intersection between human activity and climate change was still in its infancy and scientists were far from a consensus on the topic.[143]

In 1987, the Reagan administration signed the Montreal Protocol in an effort to reduce emissions that damage the ozone layer.[144]

Mass surveillance edit

Citing national security concerns, the president's national security team pressed for more surveillance power early during Reagan's first term. Their recommendations were based upon the premise that the federal government's intelligence and counterintelligence capabilities had been weakened by presidents Carter and Ford.[145] On December 4, 1981, Reagan signed Executive Order 12333. This presidential directive broadened the power of the government's intelligence community; mandated rules for spying on United States citizens, permanent residents, and on anyone within the United States; and also directed the Attorney General and others to create further policies and procedures for what information intelligence agencies can collect, retain, and share.[146]

Foreign affairs edit

Escalation of the Cold War edit

 
Reagan made 24 international trips to 26 different countries during his presidency.[147]
 
As the first U.S. president invited to speak before the British Parliament (June 8, 1982), Reagan predicted Marxism-Leninism would end up on the "ash heap of history"[148]

Reagan escalated the Cold War, accelerating a reversal from the policy of détente which had begun in 1979 after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.[149] Reagan feared that the Soviet Union had gained a military advantage over the United States, and the Reagan administration hoped that heightened military spending would grant the U.S. military superiority and weaken the Soviet economy.[150] Reagan ordered a massive buildup of the United States Armed Forces, directing funding to the B-1 Lancer bomber, the B-2 Spirit bomber, cruise missiles, the MX missile, and the 600-ship Navy.[151] In response to Soviet deployment of the SS-20, Reagan oversaw NATO's deployment of the Pershing missile in West Germany.[152] The president also strongly denounced the Soviet Union and Communism in moral terms,[153] describing the Soviet Union as an "evil empire."[154] Despite this heavy rhetoric,[155] the Reagan administration continued arms control talks with the Soviet Union in the form of "START". Unlike the "SALT" treaties of the 1970s, which set upper limits on the size of nuclear arsenals, the proposed START treaty would require both sides to reduce their existing nuclear arsenals.[156]

 
Meeting with leaders of the Afghan Mujahideen in the Oval Office, 1983

In March 1983, Reagan introduced the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), a defense project that would have used ground- and space-based systems to protect the United States from attack by strategic nuclear ballistic missiles. Reagan believed that this defense shield could make nuclear war impossible.[157] Many scientists and national security experts criticized the project as costly and technologically infeasible, and critics dubbed SDI as "Star Wars" in reference to a popular film series of the same name.[158] Ultimately, the SDI would be canceled in 1993 due to concerns about its cost and effectiveness as well as a changing international situation.[159] However, the Soviets became concerned about the possible effects SDI would have and viewed its development as a violation of the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty.[160] In protest of SDI, the Soviet Union broke off arms control talks, and U.S.-Soviet relations descended to their lowest point since the early 1960s.[161] The Cold War tensions influenced works of popular culture such as the films The Day After and WarGames (both 1983), and the song "99 Luftballons" (1983) by Nena, each of which exhibited the rising public anxiety for the possibility of a nuclear war.[162]

Reagan Doctrine edit

Under a policy that came to be known as the Reagan Doctrine, the Reagan administration provided overt and covert aid to anti-communist resistance movements in an effort to "rollback" Soviet-backed communist governments in Africa, Asia, and Latin America.[163] In Eastern Europe, the CIA provided support to the Polish opposition group, Solidarity, ensuring that it stayed afloat during a period of martial law.[164] Reagan deployed the CIA's Special Activities Division to Afghanistan and Pakistan, and the CIA was instrumental in training, equipping, and leading Mujahideen forces against the Soviet Army in the Soviet–Afghan War.[165][166] By 1987, the United States was sending over $600 million a year, as well as weapons, intelligence, and combat expertise to Afghanistan. The Soviet Union announced it would withdraw from Afghanistan in 1987, but the U.S. was subjected to blowback in the form of the Taliban and al-Qaeda, two groups that arose out of the Mujahideen and that would oppose the United States in future conflicts.[164]

Although leading conservatives argued that Reagan's foreign policy strategy was essential to protecting their security interests, critics labeled the initiatives as aggressive and imperialistic, and chided them as "warmongering".[167] Reagan was also heavily criticized for backing anti-communist leaders accused of severe human rights violations, such as Hissène Habré[168] and Efraín Ríos Montt.[169][170] Montt was the president of Guatemala and the Guatemalan military was accused of genocide for massacres of members of the Ixil people and other indigenous groups.[171] Reagan had said that Montt was getting a "bum rap",[172] and described him as "a man of great personal integrity".[173] Previous human rights violations had prompted the United States to cut off aid to the Guatemalan government, but the Reagan administration unsuccessfully appealed to Congress to restart military aid. However, the administration successfully provided nonmilitary assistance such as the United States Agency for International Development.[172][174]

Central America and the Caribbean edit

 
Reagan meets with Prime Minister Eugenia Charles of Dominica in the Oval Office about ongoing events in Grenada

The Reagan administration placed a high priority on the Central America and the Caribbean Sea, which it saw as a key front in the Cold War. Reagan and his foreign policy team were particularly concerned about the potential influence of Cuba on countries such as Grenada, Nicaragua, and El Salvador. To counter the influence of Cuba and the Soviet Union, Reagan launched the Caribbean Basin Initiative, an economic program designed to aid countries opposed to Communism. He also authorized covert measures, such as the arming of Nicaragua's Contras, to minimize Cuban and Soviet influence in the region.[175] The administration provided support to right-wing governments throughout Latin America, disregarding humans rights abuses in countries like Argentina and El Salvador.[176]

Tensions rose between the left-wing Grenadan government of Maurice Bishop and the U.S. because Cuban construction workers were building an airfield on the island. On October 16, 1983, pro-Communist forces of Hudson Austin led a coup against Bishop, who was subsequently arrested and executed. Reagan dispatched approximately 5,000 U.S. soldiers to invade Grenada nine days after. After two days of fighting that resulted in the deaths of nineteen Americans, forty-five Grenadans, and twenty-four Cubans, Austin's government was overthrown.[177] Reagan then declared, "Our days of weakness are over. Our military forces are back on their feet and standing tall."[178] While the invasion enjoyed public support in the United States and Grenada,[179][180] it was criticized by the United Kingdom, Canada and the United Nations General Assembly as "a flagrant violation of international law".[181]

Iran–Contra affair edit

In 1979, a group of left-wing rebels in Nicaragua known as the Sandinistas overthrew the president of Nicaragua and installed Daniel Ortega as the country's leader.[182] Fearing that Communists would take over Nicaragua if it remained under the leadership of the Sandinistas, the Reagan administration authorized CIA Director William J. Casey to arm the right-wing Contras. Congress, which favored negotiations between the Contras and Sandinista, passed the 1982 Boland Amendment, prohibiting the CIA and Defense Department from using their budgets to provide aid to the Contras. Still intent on supporting the Contras, the Reagan administration raised funds for the Contras from private donors and foreign governments.[183] When Congress learned that the CIA had secretly placed naval mines in Nicaraguan harbors, Congress passed a second Boland Amendment that barred granting any assistance to the Contras.[184]

During his second term, Reagan sought to find a way procure the release of seven American hostages held by Hezbollah, a Lebanese paramilitary group supported by Iran. The Reagan administration decided to sell American arms to Iran, then engaged in the Iran–Iraq War, in hopes that Iran would pressure Hezbollah to release the hostages.[185] Secretary of Defense Weinberger and Secretary of State Shultz both opposed the arrangement, so it was handled by National Security Advisor Robert McFarlane and McFarlane's successor, John Poindexter.[186] The Reagan administration sold over 2000 missiles to Iran without informing Congress; Hezbollah released four hostages but captured an additional six Americans. On the initiative of Oliver North, an aide on the National Security Council, the Reagan administration redirected the proceeds from the missile sales to the Contras.[185] The transactions became public knowledge by early November 1986. Reagan initially denied any wrongdoing, but on November 25 he announced that Poindexter and North had left the administration and that he would form the Tower Commission to investigate the transactions. A few weeks later, Reagan asked a panel of federal judges to appoint a special prosecutor who would conduct a separate investigation, and the panel chose Lawrence Walsh.[187]

The Tower Commission, chaired by former Republican Senator John Tower, released a report in February 1987 that confirmed that the administration had traded arms for hostages and sent the proceeds of the weapons sales to the Contras. The report laid most of the blame for the operation on North, Poindexter, and McFarlane, but it was also critical of Regan and other White House staffers.[188] In response to the Tower Commission report, Reagan stated, "Its findings are honest, convincing and highly critical...As angry as I may be about activities undertaken without my knowledge, I am still accountable for those activities."[189] The Iran–Contra scandal, as it became known, did serious damage to the Reagan presidency, raising questions about Reagan's competency and the wisdom of conservative policies.[190] A poll taken in March 1987 showed that 85 percent of respondents believed that the Reagan administration had engaged in an organized cover-up, and half of the respondents believed that Reagan had been personally involved. The administration's credibility was also badly damaged on the international stage, as it had violated its own arms embargo on Iran.[191] Congressional Democrats considered impeaching, but decided that it would be an unwise use of political capital against a weakened president; Democrats were also somewhat mollified by Reagan's decision to replace Chief of Staff Regan with Howard Baker.[192]

The investigations into the Iran–Contra scandal continued after Reagan left office, but were effectively halted when President George H. W. Bush pardoned Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger before his trial began.[193] Investigators did not find conclusive proof that Reagan had known about the aid provided to the Contras, but Walsh's report noted that Reagan had "created the conditions which made possible the crimes committed by others" and had "knowingly participated or acquiesced in covering up the scandal."[194]

End of the Cold War edit

 
Gorbachev and Reagan sign the INF Treaty at the White House, 1987

Three different Soviet leaders died between 1982 and 1985, leaving the Soviets with an unstable leadership until Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in 1985.[195] Although the Soviet Union had not accelerated military spending during Reagan's military buildup,[196] their large military expenses, in combination with collectivized agriculture and inefficient planned manufacturing, were a heavy burden for the Soviet economy.[197] Gorbachev was less ideologically rigid than his predecessors, and he believed that the Soviet Union urgently needed economic and political reforms.[195] In 1986, he introduced his twin reforms of perestroika and glasnost, which would change the political and economic conditions of the Soviet Union.[198] Seeking to reduce military expenditures and minimize the possibility of nuclear war, he also sought to re-open negotiations with the United States over arms control.[195]

As his influence on domestic affairs waned during his second term, Reagan increasingly focused on relations with the Soviet Union.[199] Reagan recognized the change in the direction of the Soviet leadership under Gorbachev, and shifted to diplomacy, with a view to encourage the Soviet leader to pursue substantial arms agreements. Reagan's personal mission was to achieve a world free of nuclear weapons, which according to Jack F. Matlock Jr., Reagan's ambassador to Moscow, he regarded as "totally irrational, totally inhumane, good for nothing but killing, possibly destructive of life on earth and civilization."[200] Gorbachev and Reagan agreed to meet at the 1985 Geneva Summit, where they issued a joint statement indicating that neither the U.S. nor the Soviet Union would "seek to achieve military superiority."[201] The two leaders began a private correspondence after the summit, and each became increasingly optimistic about arms control negotiations.[202] Reagan's willingness to negotiate with the Soviets was opposed by many conservatives, including Weinberger; conservative columnist George Will wrote that Reagan was "elevating wishful thinking to the status of a political philosophy."[203]

Various issues, including intelligence operations performed by both countries and tensions in Germany and Afghanistan, threatened to forestall the possibility of an agreement between the United States and the Soviet Union. Nonetheless, both Gorbachev and Reagan agreed to continue arms control negotiations at the October 1986 Reykjavík Summit.[204] At the summit, Gorbachev and Reagan closed in on an agreement to greatly reduce or eliminate the nuclear stockpiles of both the U.S. and the Soviet Union over a ten-year period, but the deal collapsed due to disagreements regarding SDI development.[205] Reagan attacked Gorbachev in a 1987 speech delivered in West Berlin, but negotiations continued.[206] Gorbachev and Reagan broke the impasse by agreeing to negotiate separate treaties on intermediate nuclear forces (such as intermediate-range ballistic missiles) and strategic arms (such as intercontinental ballistic missiles).[207]

With the framework for an agreement in place, Reagan and Gorbachev met at the 1987 Washington Summit.[208] They signed the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF Treaty), which committed both signatories to the total abolition of their respective short-range and medium-range missile stockpiles.[206] The agreement marked the first time that the United States and the Soviet Union had committed to the elimination of a type of nuclear weapon, though it provided for the dismantlement of only about one-twentieth of the worldwide nuclear weapon arsenal. The treaty also established an inspections regime designed to ensure that both parties honored the agreement.[209] In addition to the INF Treaty, Reagan and Gorbachev discussed a potential strategic arms treaty, known as START, but SDI continued to be a major point of contention.[210] In May 1988, the Senate voted 93-to-5 in favor of ratifying the INF Treaty.[211]

President Reagan's Trip to USSR, Walking in Red Square with Mikhail Gorbachev, Moscow, May 31, 1988

Though it was attacked by conservatives like Jesse Helms, the INF Treaty provided a major boost to Reagan's popularity in the aftermath of the Iran–Contra Affair. A new era of trade and openness between the two powers commenced, and the U.S. and the Soviet Union cooperated on international issues such as the Iran–Iraq War.[212] When Reagan visited Moscow for a fourth summit with Gorbachev in 1988, he was viewed as a celebrity by the Soviets. A journalist asked the president if he still considered the Soviet Union the evil empire. "No," he replied, "I was talking about another time, another era."[213] At Gorbachev's request, Reagan gave a speech on free markets at the Moscow State University.[214] In December 1988, Gorbachev effectively renounced the Brezhnev Doctrine, paving the way for democratization in Eastern Europe.[215] In November 1989, ten months after Reagan left office, the Berlin Wall fell. The Cold War was unofficially declared over at the Malta Summit the following month.[216]

Honoring German war dead at Bitburg, Germany edit

Reagan came under much criticism in 1985 when he was accused of honoring Nazi war criminals at a cemetery in West Germany.[217] In February 1985, the administration accepted an invitation for Reagan to visit a German military cemetery in Bitburg and to place a wreath alongside West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl. Deaver was given assurances by a German head of protocol that no war criminals were buried there. It was later determined that the cemetery held the graves of 49 members of the Waffen-SS. What neither Deaver nor other administration officials initially realized was that many Germans distinguished the regular SS, who typically were composed of Nazi true believers, and the Waffen-SS which were attached to military units and composed of conscripted soldiers.[218]

As the controversy brewed in April 1985, Reagan issued a statement that called the Nazi soldiers buried in that cemetery as themselves "victims," a designation which ignited a stir over whether Reagan had equated the SS men to victims of the Holocaust.[219] Pat Buchanan, Reagan's Director of Communications, argued that the president did not equate the SS members with the actual Holocaust, but as victims of the ideology of Nazism.[220] Now strongly urged to cancel the visit,[221] the president responded that it would be wrong to back down on a promise he had made to Chancellor Kohl. On May 5, 1985, President Reagan and Chancellor Kohl first visited the site of the former Nazi Bergen-Belsen concentration camp and then the Bitburg cemetery where, along with two military generals, they did place a wreath.[222][223]

Middle East edit

 
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat with Reagan in a joint press conference at the White House, 1981

Lebanon edit

A civil war had broken out in Lebanon in 1975, and both Israel and Syria undertook military action within Lebanon in 1982.[224] After Israel invaded Southern Lebanon, Reagan faced domestic and international pressure to oppose the Israeli invasion, but Reagan was reluctant to openly break Israel. Reagan sympathized with Israeli's desire to defeat PLO forces that had struck Israel from Lebanon, but he pressured Israel to end its invasion as casualties mounted and Israeli forces approached the Lebanese capital of Beirut.[225] American diplomat Philip Habib arranged a cease-fire in which Israel, Syria, and the PLO, all agreed to evacuate their forces from Lebanon. As Israel delayed a full withdrawal and violence continued in Lebanon, Reagan arranged for a multinational force, including U.S. Marines, to serve as peacekeepers in Lebanon.[226] In October 1983, two nearly-simultaneous bombings in Beirut killed 241 American Marines and 58 French soldiers.[227] The international peacekeeping force was withdrawn from Lebanon in 1984. In reaction to the role Israel and the United States played in the Lebanese Civil War, a Shia militant group known as Hezbollah began to take American hostages, holding eight Americans by the middle of 1985.[228] The Reagan administration's attempts to release these hostages would be a major component of the Iran-Contra Scandal. In response to the U.S. intervention in Lebanon, the Defense Department developed the "Powell Doctrine," which stated that the U.S. should intervene militarily as a last resort and should set clear and limited goals in such interventions.[229] Though termed the Powell doctrine, the policy was originally developed by Secretary of Defense Weinberger, who was influenced not only by Lebanon but also by the experience of the Vietnam War.[230]

Libya bombing edit

 
British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher (here walking with President Reagan at Camp David in 1986) granted the U.S. use of British airbases to launch the Libya attack

Relations between Libya and the United States under President Reagan were continually contentious, beginning with the Gulf of Sidra incident in 1981; by 1982, Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi was considered by the CIA to be, along with USSR leader Leonid Brezhnev and Cuban leader Fidel Castro, part of a group known as the "unholy trinity" and was also labeled as "our international public enemy number one" by a CIA official.[231] These tensions were later revived in early April 1986, when a bomb exploded in a West Berlin discothèque, resulting in the injury of 63 American military personnel and death of one serviceman. Stating that there was "irrefutable proof" that Libya had directed the "terrorist bombing," Reagan authorized the use of force against the country. In the late evening of April 15, 1986, the United States launched a series of airstrikes on ground targets in Libya.[232][233]

 
Chadian president Hissène Habré at the White House. Habré was supported by the Reagan administration as an ally against Gaddafi's Libya[234]

Britain's prime minister, Margaret Thatcher, allowed the U.S. Air Force to use Britain's air bases to launch the attack, on the justification that the UK was supporting America's right to self-defense under Article 51 of the United Nations Charter.[233] The attack was designed to halt Gaddafi's "ability to export terrorism," offering him "incentives and reasons to alter his criminal behavior."[235] The president addressed the nation from the Oval Office after the attacks had commenced, stating, "When our citizens are attacked or abused anywhere in the world on the direct orders of hostile regimes, we will respond so long as I'm in this office."[233] The attack was condemned by many countries. By a vote of 79 in favor to 28 against with 33 abstentions, the United Nations General Assembly adopted resolution 41/38 which "condemns the military attack perpetrated against the Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya on April 15, 1986, which constitutes a violation of the Charter of the United Nations and of international law."[236]

South Africa edit

 
President Reagan meeting with South African anti-apartheid activist Desmond Tutu in 1984

During Ronald Reagan's presidency South Africa continued to use a non-democratic system of government based on racial discrimination, known as apartheid, in which the minority of white South Africans exerted nearly complete legal control over the lives of the non-white majority of the citizens. In the early 1980s the issue had moved to the center of international attention as a result of events in the townships and outcry at the death of Stephen Biko. Reagan administration policy called for "constructive engagement" with the apartheid government of South Africa. In opposition to the condemnations issued by the U.S. Congress and public demands for diplomatic or economic sanctions, Reagan made relatively minor criticisms of the regime, which was otherwise internationally isolated, and the U.S. granted recognition to the government. South Africa's military was then engaged in an occupation of Namibia and proxy wars in several neighboring countries, in alliance with Savimbi's UNITA. Reagan administration officials saw the apartheid government as a key anti-communist ally.[237]

Finding the Reagan Administration unresponsive to its calls for more stringent economic sanctions, anti-apartheid activists undertook a divestment campaign, aimed at moving individuals and institutions to sell their holdings in companies doing business in South Africa. By late 1985, facing escalating public and congressional opposition to his administration's tolerant attitude toward the South African government's policy of apartheid, Reagan made an "abrupt reversal" on the issue and proposed sanctions on the South African government, including an arms embargo.[238] However, these sanctions were seen as weak by anti-apartheid activists,[239] and as insufficient by the president's opponents in Congress, including 81 House Republicans. In August 1986, Congress approved the Comprehensive Anti-Apartheid Act, which included tougher sanctions. Reagan vetoed the act, but this was overridden by a bipartisan effort in Congress.[240] By 1990, under Reagan's successor George H. W. Bush, the new South African government of F. W. de Klerk was introducing widespread reforms, though the Bush administration argued that this was not a result of the tougher sanctions.[241]

Free trade edit

During his 1980 presidential campaign, Reagan proposed the creation of a common market in North America. Once in office, Reagan signed the Trade and Tariff Act of 1984, which granted the president "fast track" authority in negotiating free trade agreements.[242] In 1985, Reagan signed the Israel–United States Free Trade Agreement, the first bilateral free trade agreement in U.S. history.[243] In 1988, Reagan and Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney signed the Canada–United States Free Trade Agreement, which greatly reduced trade barriers between the United States and Canada. This trade pact would serve as the foundation for the North American Free Trade Agreement among the United States, Canada, and Mexico.[242]

Age and health edit

At the time, Reagan was the oldest person to have served as U.S. president.[244][245] Reagan's health became a concern[to whom?] at times during his presidency.[citation needed]

Early in his presidency, Reagan started wearing a custom-made, technologically advanced hearing aid, first in his right ear[246] and later in his left ear as well.[247] His decision to go public in 1983 regarding his wearing the small, audio-amplifying device boosted their sales.[248]

On July 13, 1985, Reagan underwent surgery to remove a section of his colon due to colorectal cancer.[249] He relinquished presidential power to the vice president for eight hours in a similar procedure as outlined in the 25th Amendment, which he specifically avoided invoking.[250] The surgery lasted just under three hours and was successful.[251] Reagan resumed the powers of the presidency later that day.[252] In August of that year, he underwent an operation to remove skin cancer cells from his nose.[253] In October, more skin cancer cells were detected on his nose and removed.[254]

Former White House correspondent Lesley Stahl later wrote that in 1986, she and other reporters noticed what might have been early symptoms of Reagan's later Alzheimer's disease. She said that on her last day on the beat, Reagan spoke to her for a few moments and did not seem to know who she was before returning to his normal behavior.[255] However, Reagan's primary physician, John Hutton, has said that Reagan "absolutely" did not "show any signs of dementia or Alzheimer's" during his presidency.[256] His doctors have noted that he began exhibiting Alzheimer's symptoms only after he left the White House.[257]

In January 1987, Reagan underwent surgery for an enlarged prostate that caused further worries about his health. No cancerous growths were found, and he was not sedated during the operation.[258] In July of that year, he underwent a third skin cancer operation on his nose.[259]

On January 7, 1989, Reagan underwent surgery to repair a Dupuytren's contracture of the ring finger of his left hand.[260]

Elections during the Reagan presidency edit

Republican seats in Congress
Congress Senate House
97th[a] 53 192
98th 54 166
99th 53 182
100th 46 177
101st[a] 45 175

1982 mid-term elections edit

In the 1982 mid-term elections, Democrats retained a majority of the House while Republicans retained control of the Senate. Democratic gains in the House put a check on Reagan's policies, as the incoming Congress was significantly less open to Reagan's conservative policies. Despite the Democratic electoral gains, the election represented the first time since the 1928 elections that the Republican Party successfully defended a majority in either chamber of Congress.[261]

1984 re-election campaign edit

 
President Reagan defeated Democrat Walter Mondale in the 1984 presidential election. President Reagan was reelected in one of the largest landslide election victories in American history, winning 59% of the popular vote, receiving 54,455,472 votes to Mondale's 37,577,352 votes. President Reagan won an even larger Electoral College victory, winning 525 electoral votes to 13 for Mondale.

Reagan's approval ratings fell after his first year in office, but they bounced back when the United States began to emerge from recession in 1983.[262] The leading candidates in the 1984 Democratic presidential primaries were former Vice President Walter Mondale, Senator Gary Hart of Colorado, and African-American civil rights activist Jesse Jackson. Though Hart won several primaries, Mondale ultimately won the nomination. Down in the polls, Mondale selected Congresswoman Geraldine Ferraro as his running mate in hopes of galvanizing support for his campaign, thus making Ferraro the first female major party vice presidential nominee in U.S. history.[263] In accepting the Democratic nomination, Mondale attacked Reagan's policies regarding the environment, Social Security, nuclear arms, civil rights, and other issues, stating that the Reagan administration was "of the rich, by the rich, and for the rich."[264] He also criticized the federal debt accumulated under Reagan, stating, "...The budget will be squeezed. Taxes will go up. And anyone who says they won't is not telling the truth to the American people."[94]

Reagan, meanwhile, generally declined to offer new legislative proposals for his re-election campaign, instead focusing on events like the U.S.-hosted 1984 Summer Olympics and the 40th anniversary of the Normandy landings.[265] Reagan's ability to perform the duties of president for another term was questioned by some observers, especially after a weak performance in the first presidential debate. His apparent confused and forgetful behavior was evident to his supporters; they had previously known him clever and witty. Rumors began to circulate that he had Alzheimer's disease.[266][267] Reagan rebounded in the second debate, and confronted questions about his age, quipping, "I will not make age an issue of this campaign. I am not going to exploit, for political purposes, my opponent's youth and inexperience," which generated applause and laughter, even from Mondale himself.[268]

Public opinion polling consistently showed a Reagan lead in the 1984 campaign, and Mondale was unable to shake up the race.[269] In the end, Reagan won re-election, winning 49 of 50 states.[270] Mondale carried only his home state of Minnesota and the District of Columbia. Reagan won a record 525 electoral votes,[271] and received 59% of the popular vote to Mondale's 41%.[270] Compared to 1980, Reagan's strongest gains came among white Southern voters, and he also performed particularly well among Catholic voters, voters between the ages of eighteen and twenty-nine, and voters over the age of sixty.[272] In the concurrent congressional elections, Republicans retained control of the Senate and Democrats retained control of the House.

1986 mid-term elections edit

Congressional party leaders
Senate leaders House leaders
Congress Year Majority Minority Speaker Minority
97th 1981–1982 Baker Byrd O'Neill Michel
98th 1983–1984 Baker Byrd O'Neill Michel
99th 1985–1986 Dole Byrd O'Neill Michel
100th 1987–1988 Byrd Dole Wright Michel
101st[a] 1989 Mitchell Dole Wright Michel

In the 1986 mid-term elections, Democrats retained a majority of the House and won control of the Senate for the first time since the 1980 elections. Reagan campaigned hard for congressional Republicans, and an October 1986 New York Times/CBS News Poll had found that Reagan had a 67 percent approval rating. However, Senate Republicans faced a difficult map that year, as they had to defend 22 of the 34 seats up for election. Republican losses in the Senate were concentrated in the South and in the farm states.[273] The Republican loss of the Senate precluded the possibility of further major conservative legislation during the Reagan administration.[274]

1988 presidential election edit

 
Republican George H. W. Bush defeated Democrat Michael Dukakis in the 1988 presidential election.

Reagan remained publicly neutral in the 1988 Republican presidential primaries, but privately supported Vice President Bush over Senator Bob Dole. The 1988 Republican National Convention, which nominated Bush for president, also acted as a celebration of Reagan's presidency.[275] Democrats nominated Michael Dukakis, the liberal Governor of Massachusetts. Following the 1988 Democratic National Convention, Dukakis led the polls by seventeen points, but Bush, aided by the INF Treaty and the strong economy, closed the gap as the election neared. Democrats tried to link Bush to the Iran–Contra Scandal, but Bush claimed that he had not been involved. The GOP effectively cast Dukakis as "soft" on crime and foreign policy issues, seizing on Dukakis's pardon of Willie Horton and his dispassionate response to a question regarding the death penalty. In the 1988 presidential election, Bush soundly defeated Dukakis, taking 53.4 percent of the popular vote and 426 electoral votes.[276] The election saw the lowest turnout of eligible voters in any presidential election since 1948.[277] In the concurrent congressional elections, Democrats retained control of the House and the Senate.[276] In large part due to his handling of relations with the Soviet Union, Reagan left office with an approval rating of sixty-eight percent,[278] matching the approval ratings of Franklin Roosevelt and later Bill Clinton as the highest rating for a departing president in the modern era.[279]

Evaluation and legacy edit

 
Graph of Reagan's approval ratings in Gallup polls

Since Reagan left office in 1989, substantial debate has occurred among scholars, historians, and the general public surrounding his legacy.[280] Supporters have pointed to a more efficient and prosperous economy as a result of Reagan's economic policies,[281] foreign policy triumphs including a peaceful end to the Cold War,[282] and a restoration of American pride and morale.[283] Proponents also argue Reagan restored faith in the American Dream[284] after a decline in American confidence and self-respect under Jimmy Carter's perceived weak leadership, particularly during the Iran hostage crisis.[285] Reagan remains an important symbol of American conservatism, much in the same way that Franklin Roosevelt continued to serve as a symbol of liberalism long after his own death.[286]

Critics contend that Reagan's economic policies resulted in rising budget deficits,[287] a wider gap in wealth, and an increase in homelessness.[288] Liberals especially disapproved of Reagan's simultaneous tax cuts for the wealthy and benefit cuts for the poor.[289] Some critics assert that the Iran–Contra affair lowered American credibility.[290] In his popular book, The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers, historian Paul Kennedy argued that Reagan's high level of defense would eventually lead to the decline of the United States as a great power.[291] Reagan's leadership and understanding of issues has also been questioned, and even some members of the administration criticized Reagan's passive demeanor during meetings with staff and cabinet members.[292] Richard Pipes, a member of the National Security Council, criticized Reagan as "really lost, out of his depth, uncomfortable" at NSC meetings.[293] Another NSC member, Colin Powell, criticized Reagan's "passive management style [that] placed a tremendous burden on us."[294]

Despite the continuing debate surrounding his legacy, many conservative and liberal scholars agree that Reagan has been one of the most influential presidents since Franklin Roosevelt, leaving his imprint on American politics, diplomacy, culture, and economics through his effective communication, dedicated patriotism and pragmatic compromising.[295] Since he left office, historians have reached a consensus,[296] as summarized by British historian M. J. Heale, who finds that scholars now concur that Reagan rehabilitated conservatism, turned the nation to the right, practiced a considerably pragmatic conservatism that balanced ideology and the constraints of politics, revived faith in the presidency and in American exceptionalism, and contributed to victory in the Cold War.[297] Hugh Heclo argues that Reagan himself failed to roll back the welfare state, but that he contributed to a shift in attitudes that led to the defeat of efforts to further expand the welfare state.[298] Heclo further argues that Reagan's presidency made American voters and political leaders more tolerant of deficits and more opposed to taxation.[299]

In 2017, a C-SPAN survey of scholars ranked Reagan as the ninth greatest president.[300][301] A 2018 poll of the American Political Science Association's presidents and Executive Politics section also ranked Reagan as the ninth greatest president.[302] In terms of the worst mistake made by a sitting president, a 2006 poll of historians ranked the Iran-Contra affair as the ninth worst.[303]

See also edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ a b c 17 days of the 97th Congress (January 3, 1981 – January 19, 1981) took place under President Carter, and 17 days of the 101st Congress (January 3, 1989 – January 19, 1989) took place during Reagan's second term.

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Bruce J. Schulman and Julian E. Zelizer, eds. Rightward Bound: Making America Conservative in the 1970s (Harvard UP, 2008) pp 1–10.
  2. ^ Andrew Busch, Reagan's victory: the presidential election of 1980 and the rise of the right (UP of Kansas, 2005).
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  290. ^ Patterson 2005, p. 202.
  291. ^ Patterson 2005, pp. 160–161.
  292. ^ Leffler 2017, p. 349.
  293. ^ Pemberton 1997, p. 151.
  294. ^ . Archived from the original on October 11, 2014. Retrieved October 7, 2014.
  295. ^ Henry, David (December 2009). "Ronald Reagan and the 1980s: Perceptions, Policies, Legacies. Ed. by Cheryl Hudson and Gareth Davies. (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. xiv, 268 pp. $84.95, ISBN 978-0-230-60302-8.)". The Journal of American History. 96 (3): 933–934. doi:10.1093/jahist/96.3.933. JSTOR 25622627.
  296. ^ Heale, M.J. in Cheryl Hudson and Gareth Davies, eds. Ronald Reagan and the 1980s: Perceptions, Policies, Legacies (2008) Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 0-230-60302-5 p. 250
  297. ^ Heclo 2008, pp. 558–560.
  298. ^ Heclo 2008, pp. 562–563.
  299. ^ See "S-SPAN 2017 Survey of Presidential Leadership" C-SPAN
  300. ^ Andrew L. Johns, ed. (2015). A Companion to Ronald Reagan. Wiley. pp. 1–2. ISBN 9781118607824.
  301. ^ Rottinghaus, Brandon; Vaughn, Justin S. (February 19, 2018). "How Does Trump Stack Up Against the Best — and Worst — Presidents?". The New York Times. Retrieved May 14, 2018.
  302. ^ "Scholars rate worst presidential errors". USA Today. AP. February 18, 2006. Retrieved August 31, 2018.

Works cited edit

  • Brands, H.W. (2015). Reagan: The Life. New York: Doubleday.
  • Beschloss, Michael (2007). Presidential Courage: Brave Leaders and How They Changed America 1789–1989. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 9780684857053.
  • Cannon, Lou (2000) [1991]. President Reagan: The Role of a Lifetime. New York: Public Affairs. ISBN 1-891620-91-6.
  • Cannon, Lou; Michael Beschloss (2001). Ronald Reagan: The Presidential Portfolio: A History Illustrated from the Collection of the Ronald Reagan Library and Museum. PublicAffairs. ISBN 1-891620-84-3.
  • Heclo, Hugh (2008). "The Mixed Legacies of Ronald Reagan". Presidential Studies Quarterly. 38 (4): 555–574. doi:10.1111/j.1741-5705.2008.02664.x. JSTOR 41219701.
  • Herring, George C. (2008). From Colony to Superpower; U.S. Foreign Relations Since 1776. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-507822-0.
  • Leffler, Melvyn P. (2007). For the Soul of Mankind: the United States, the Soviet Union, and the Cold War. Hill and Wang. ISBN 9780809097173.
  • Leuchtenburg, William E. (2015). The American President: From Teddy Roosevelt to Bill Clinton. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195176162.
  • Patterson, James (2005). Restless Giant: The United States from Watergate to Bush v. Gore. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195122169.
  • Pemberton, William E. (1997). Exit with Honor: The Life and Presidency of Ronald Reagan. Routledge.
  • Reagan, Ronald (1990). An American Life. New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 0-7434-0025-9.
  • Rossinow, Douglas C. (2015). The Reagan Era: A History of the 1980s. Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231538657.
  • Weisberg, Jacob (2016). Ronald Reagan. Times Books. ISBN 978-0-8050-9728-3.
  • Wilentz, Sean (2008). The Age of Reagan: A History, 1974-2008. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-074480-9.
  • Joint Chiefs of Staff (January 17, 2017). JP 3-0, Joint Operations (Report). Homeland Security Digital Library. Retrieved September 27, 2023.
  • Tucker, Spencer C. (November 21, 2012). Almanac of American Military History [4 volumes]: [4 volumes]. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. ISBN 978-1-59884-531-0.

Further reading edit

  • Brandt, Karl Gerard. Ronald Reagan and the House Democrats: Gridlock, Partisanship, and the Fiscal Crisis (University of Missouri Press, 2009).
  • Brownlee, W. Elliot and Hugh Davis Graham, eds. The Reagan Presidency: Pragmatic Conservatism and Its Legacies (2003)
  • Coleman, Bradley Lynn and Kyle Longley, eds. Reagan and the World: Leadership and National Security, 1981–1989 (University Press of Kentucky, 2017), 319 pp. essays by scholars
  • Diggins, John Patrick (2007). Ronald Reagan: Fate, Freedom, and the Making of History. New York: W. W. Norton. ISBN 9780393060225.
  • Ehrman, John. The Eighties: America in the Age of Reagan. (2005)
  • Graff, Henry F., ed. The presidents: A Reference History (3rd ed. 2002)
  • Hayward, Steven F. The Age of Reagan: The Conservative Counterrevolution, 1980–1989 (2010), highly favorable
  • Hertsgaard, Mark. (1988) On Bended Knee: The Press and the Reagan Presidency. New York, New York: Farrar Straus and Giroux.
  • Hill, Dilys M. and Raymond A. Moore, eds. The Reagan Presidency (Palgrave Macmillan, 1990) essays by scholars; 252pp.
  • 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. 304–325. online
  • La Barca, Giuseppe. International Trade under President Reagan: US Trade Policy in the 1980s (Bloomsbury, 2023). ISBN 978-1-350-27141-8
  • Levy, Peter, ed. Encyclopedia of the Reagan-Bush years (1996) online
  • Matlock, Jack (2004). Reagan and Gorbachev: How the Cold War Ended. New York: Random House. ISBN 0-679-46323-2.
  • Reagan, Nancy. My Turn: The Memoirs of Nancy Reagan (1989), with William Novak. H. W. Brands in Reagan: The Life (2015) on p. 743 says "she wrote one of the most candid and at times self-critical memoirs in recent American political history."
  • Reeves, Richard (2005). President Reagan: The Triumph of Imagination. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-7432-3022-1.
  • Shultz, George P. Turmoil and Triumph: My Years as Secretary of State (1993), covers 1982–1989.
  • Service, Robert. The End of the Cold War: 1985–1991 (2015) excerpt
  • Spitz, Bob. Reagan: An American Journey (2018), 880pp; detailed biography.
  • Thompson, Kenneth W., ed. Foreign policy in the Reagan presidency: nine intimate perspectives (1993)
  • Walsh, Kenneth (1997). Ronald Reagan. New York: Random House Value Publishing. ISBN 0-517-20078-3.

Historiography edit

  • Johns, Andrew L., ed. A Companion to Ronald Reagan (Wiley-Blackwell, 2015). xiv, 682 pp.; topical essays by scholars emphasizing historiography; contents free at many libraries
  • Kengor, Paul. "Reagan Among the Professors: His Surprising Reputation". Policy Review 98 (1999): 15+. Reports that "many articles in the top journals have been fair, as have a number of influential books...from respected historians, presidential scholars, and political scientists – people who were not Reagan supporters and are certainly not right-wingers."

External links edit

  • Reagan Library
  • in-depth coverage by Miller Center at University Virginia
  • Reagan Era study guide, timeline, quotes, trivia, teacher resources

presidency, ronald, reagan, chronological, guide, timeline, ronald, reagan, presidency, ronald, reagan, tenure, 40th, president, united, states, began, with, first, inauguration, january, 1981, ended, january, 1989, reagan, republican, from, california, took, . For a chronological guide see Timeline of the Ronald Reagan presidency Ronald Reagan s tenure as the 40th president of the United States began with his first inauguration on January 20 1981 and ended on January 20 1989 Reagan a Republican from California took office following his landslide victory over Democrat incumbent president Jimmy Carter and independent congressman John B Anderson in the 1980 presidential election Four years later in the 1984 presidential election he defeated Democrat former vice president Walter Mondale to win re election in a larger landslide Reagan was limited to two terms and was succeeded by his vice president George H W Bush who won the 1988 presidential election Reagan s 1980 landslide election resulted from a dramatic conservative shift to the right in American politics including a loss of confidence in liberal New Deal and Great Society programs and priorities that had dominated the national agenda since the 1930s Official portrait 1981Presidency of Ronald Reagan January 20 1981 January 20 1989CabinetSee listPartyRepublicanElection19801984SeatWhite House Jimmy CarterGeorge H W Bush Seal of the presidentLibrary websiteDomestically the Reagan administration enacted a major tax cut sought to cut non military spending and eliminated federal regulations The administration s economic policies known as Reaganomics were inspired by supply side economics The combination of tax cuts and an increase in defense spending led to budget deficits and the federal debt increased significantly during Reagan s tenure Reagan signed the Tax Reform Act of 1986 simplifying the tax code by reducing rates and removing several tax breaks and the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 which enacted sweeping changes to U S immigration law and granted amnesty to three million illegal immigrants Reagan also appointed more federal judges than any other president including four Supreme Court Justices Reagan s foreign policy stance was resolutely anti communist its plan of action known as the Reagan Doctrine sought to roll back the global influence of the Soviet Union in an attempt to end the Cold War Under this doctrine the Reagan administration initiated a massive buildup of the United States military promoted new technologies such as missile defense systems and in 1983 undertook an invasion of Grenada the first major overseas action by U S troops since the end of the Vietnam War The administration also created controversy by granting aid to paramilitary forces seeking to overthrow leftist governments particularly in war torn Central America and Afghanistan Specifically the Reagan administration engaged in covert arms sales to Iran to fund Contra rebels in Nicaragua that were fighting to overthrow their nation s socialist government the resulting Iran Contra affair led to the conviction or resignation of several administration officials During Reagan s second term he sought closer relations with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and the two leaders signed a major arms control agreement known as the INF Treaty Historians and political scientists generally rank Reagan in the upper tier of American presidents and consider him to be one of the most important presidents since Franklin D Roosevelt Supporters of Reagan s presidency have pointed to his contributions to the economic recovery of the 1980s the peaceful end of the Cold War and a broader restoration of American confidence Reagan s presidency has received criticism for rising budget deficits and wealth inequality during and after his presidency as well as for his leadership of the executive branch particularly during the Iran Contra affair Due to Reagan s impact on public discourse and advocacy of American conservatism some historians have described the period during and after his presidency as the Reagan Era Contents 1 Background 1 1 Conservative shift in politics 1 2 1980 election 2 Administration 3 Judicial appointments 3 1 Supreme Court 3 2 Other courts 4 Assassination attempt 5 Domestic affairs 5 1 Reaganomics and taxation 5 1 1 Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 5 1 2 Later tax acts 5 2 Government spending 5 3 Deficits 5 4 Economy 5 5 Labor 5 6 Deregulation 5 6 1 Savings and loan crisis 5 7 Immigration 5 8 Criminal and anti drug policy 5 9 Social policies and civil rights 5 10 Environmental policy 5 11 Mass surveillance 6 Foreign affairs 6 1 Escalation of the Cold War 6 2 Reagan Doctrine 6 3 Central America and the Caribbean 6 4 Iran Contra affair 6 5 End of the Cold War 6 6 Honoring German war dead at Bitburg Germany 6 7 Middle East 6 7 1 Lebanon 6 7 2 Libya bombing 6 8 South Africa 6 9 Free trade 7 Age and health 8 Elections during the Reagan presidency 8 1 1982 mid term elections 8 2 1984 re election campaign 8 3 1986 mid term elections 8 4 1988 presidential election 9 Evaluation and legacy 10 See also 11 Explanatory notes 12 References 12 1 Citations 12 2 Works cited 13 Further reading 13 1 Historiography 14 External linksBackground editConservative shift in politics edit Further information Conservatism in the United States and Reagan era nbsp Ronald Reagan with a cowboy hat at Rancho Del Cielo Even prior to becoming president Reagan was the leader of a dramatic conservative shift that undercut many of the domestic and foreign policies that had dominated the national agenda for decades 1 2 A major factor in the rise of conservatism was the growing distrust of government in the aftermath of the Watergate scandal While distrust of high officials had been an American characteristic for two centuries Watergate engendered heightened levels of suspicion and encouraged the media to engage in a vigorous search for scandals 3 An unexpected new factor was the emergence of the religious right as a cohesive political force that gave strong support to conservatism 4 5 Other factors in the rise of the conservative movement were the emergence of a culture war as a triangular battle among conservatives traditional liberals and the New Left involving such issues as individual freedom divorce sexual freedom abortion and homosexuality 6 A mass movement of population from the cities to the suburbs led to the creation of a new group of voters less attached to New Deal economic policies and machine politics 7 Meanwhile it became socially acceptable for conservative Southern whites especially well educated suburbanites to vote Republican Though the civil rights legislation of the 1960s had been a triumphal issue for liberalism and had created a new pro Democratic black electorate it had also destroyed the argument that whites had to vote Democratic to protect segregation in the South 8 Responding to these various trends Reagan and other conservatives successfully presented conservative ideas as an alternative to a public that had grown disillusioned with New Deal liberalism and the Democratic Party 9 Reagan s charisma and speaking skills helped him frame conservatism as an optimistic forward looking vision for the country 10 1980 election edit Main articles Ronald Reagan 1980 presidential campaign and 1980 United States presidential election Further information 1980 United States elections 1980 Republican Party presidential primaries and 1980 Republican National Convention nbsp 1980 Electoral College vote resultsReagan who had served as Governor of California from 1967 to 1975 narrowly lost the 1976 Republican presidential primaries to incumbent President Gerald Ford With the defeat of Ford by Democrat Jimmy Carter in the 1976 election Reagan immediately became the front runner for the 1980 Republican presidential nomination 11 A darling of the conservative movement Reagan faced more moderate Republicans such as George H W Bush Howard Baker and Bob Dole in the 1980 Republican presidential primaries After Bush won the Iowa caucuses he became Reagan s primary challenger but Reagan won the New Hampshire primary and most of the following primaries gaining an insurmountable delegate lead by the end of March 1980 Ford was Reagan s first choice for his running mate but Reagan backed away from the idea out of the fear of a copresidency in which Ford would exercise an unusual degree of power Reagan instead chose Bush and the Reagan Bush ticket was nominated at the 1980 Republican National Convention Meanwhile Carter won the Democratic nomination defeating a primary challenge by Senator Ted Kennedy Polls taken after the party conventions showed a tied race between Reagan and Carter while independent candidate John B Anderson had the support of many moderates 12 nbsp Outgoing President Jimmy Carter and President elect Ronald Reagan with his wife Nancy in the Oval Office on November 20 1980The 1980 general campaign between Reagan and Carter was conducted amid a multitude of domestic concerns and the ongoing Iran hostage crisis After winning the Republican nomination Reagan pivoted to the center Though he continued to champion a major tax cut Reagan backed off of his support for free trade and the privatization of Social Security and promised to consider arms control treaties with the Soviet Union He instead sought to focus the race on Carter s handling of the economy Mired with an approval rating in the low 30s Carter also waged a negative campaign focusing on the supposed risk of war if Reagan took office 13 Reagan and Carter met in one presidential debate held just one week before election day Reagan delivered an effective performance asking voters Are you better off today than you were four years ago 14 In response to a characterization by Carter of his record regarding Medicare Reagan replied with a phrase that helped define the election and endure in the political lexicon There you go again Though the race had been widely regarded as a close contest Reagan won over the large majority of undecided voters 15 Reagan took 50 7 of the popular vote and 489 of the 538 electoral votes Carter won 41 of the popular vote and 49 electoral votes while Anderson won 6 6 of the popular vote In the concurrent congressional elections Republicans took control of the Senate for the first time since the 1950s while Democrats retained control of the House of Representatives 16 Administration editSee also Presidential transition of Ronald Reagan nbsp President Reagan and his cabinet in 1981 nbsp President Reagan and his cabinet in 1989 The Reagan cabinetOfficeNameTermPresidentRonald Reagan1981 1989Vice PresidentGeorge H W Bush1981 1989Secretary of StateAlexander Haig1981 1982George Shultz1982 1989Secretary of the TreasuryDonald Regan1981 1985James Baker1985 1988Nicholas F Brady1988 1989Secretary of DefenseCaspar Weinberger1981 1987Frank Carlucci1987 1989Attorney GeneralWilliam French Smith1981 1985Edwin Meese1985 1988Dick Thornburgh1988 1989Secretary of the InteriorJames G Watt1981 1983William P Clark Jr 1983 1985Donald P Hodel1985 1989Secretary of AgricultureJohn R Block1981 1986Richard Lyng1986 1989Secretary of CommerceMalcolm Baldrige Jr 1981 1987William Verity Jr 1987 1989Secretary of LaborRaymond J Donovan1981 1985Bill Brock1985 1987Ann Dore McLaughlin1987 1989Secretary of Health andHuman ServicesRichard Schweiker1981 1983Margaret Heckler1983 1985Otis Bowen1985 1989Secretary of Housing andUrban DevelopmentSamuel Pierce1981 1989Secretary of TransportationDrew Lewis1981 1983Elizabeth Dole1983 1987James H Burnley IV1987 1989Secretary of EnergyJames B Edwards1981 1982Donald P Hodel1982 1985John S Herrington1985 1989Secretary of EducationTerrel Bell1981 1984William Bennett1985 1988Lauro Cavazos1988 1989Director of the Office ofManagement and BudgetDavid Stockman1981 1985James C Miller III1985 1988Joe Wright1988 1989Director of Central IntelligenceWilliam J Casey1981 1987William H Webster1987 1989United States Trade RepresentativeBill Brock1981 1985Clayton Yeutter1985 1989Ambassador to the United NationsJeane Kirkpatrick1981 1985Vernon A Walters1985 1989Counselor to the PresidentEdwin Meese1981 1985none1985 1989Reagan tapped James Baker who had run Bush s 1980 campaign as his first chief of staff Baker Deputy Chief of Staff Michael Deaver and Counselor Edwin Meese formed the troika the key White House staffers early in Reagan s presidency 17 Baker quickly established himself as the most powerful member of the troika and the overseer of day to day operations while Meese had nominal leadership of policy development and Deaver orchestrated Reagan s public appearances 18 Aside from the troika other important White House staffers included Richard Darman and David Gergen 19 20 21 Reagan chose Alexander Haig a former general who had served as chief of staff to Richard Nixon as his first secretary of state Other major Cabinet appointees included Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger a former Nixon cabinet official who would preside over an increase in defense spending and Secretary of the Treasury Donald Regan a bank executive Reagan selected David Stockman a young congressman from Michigan as the Director of the Office of Management and Budget 22 CIA director William J Casey emerged as an important figure in the administration as the CIA would figure prominently into Reagan s Cold War initiatives Reagan downgraded the importance of the national security advisor and six different individuals held that position during Reagan s presidency 23 Haig left the cabinet in 1982 after clashing with other members of the Reagan administration and was replaced by another former Nixon administration official George P Shultz 24 By 1982 National Security Advisor William P Clark Jr Ambassador to the United Nations Jeane Kirkpatrick and CIA Director Casey had established themselves as the major figures in the formulation of the administration s foreign policy 25 Shultz eventually emerged as the administration s most influential foreign policy figure moving the administration towards a less confrontational policy with the Soviet Union 26 Baker and Treasury Secretary Regan switched positions at the beginning of Reagan s second term 27 Regan centralized power within his office and he took on the responsibilities that had been held by Baker Deaver and Meese the latter of whom succeeded William French Smith as attorney general in 1985 28 Regan frequently clashed with First Lady Nancy Reagan and he left the administration in the wake of the Iran Contra affair and Republican losses in the 1986 mid term elections Regan was replaced by former Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker 29 Judicial appointments editSupreme Court edit Main article Ronald Reagan Supreme Court candidates nbsp Reagan appointed William Rehnquist to the office of Chief Justice in 1986 he served until his death in 2005Reagan made four successful appointments to the Supreme Court during his eight years in office In 1981 he successfully nominated Sandra Day O Connor to succeed Associate Justice Potter Stewart fulfilling a campaign promise to name the first woman to the Supreme Court Democrats who had planned to vigorously oppose Reagan s nominations to the Supreme Court approved of the nomination of O Connor However the Christian right was astonished and dismayed with O Connor who they feared would not overturn the Supreme Court s decision in Roe v Wade which had established the constitutional right to have an abortion without undue government interference 30 31 O Connor served on the Supreme Court until 2006 and was generally considered to be a centrist conservative 32 In 1986 Reagan elevated Associate Justice William Rehnquist to the position of Chief Justice of the United States after Warren Burger chose to retire 33 Rehnquist a member of the conservative wing of the Court 32 was the third sitting associate justice to be elevated to chief justice after Edward Douglass White and Harlan F Stone Reagan successfully nominated Antonin Scalia to fill Rehnquist s position as an associate justice of the Supreme Court 33 Scalia became a member of the Court s conservative wing 32 Reagan faced greater difficulties in filling the final Supreme Court vacancy which arose due to the retirement of Lewis F Powell Jr Reagan nominated Robert Bork in July 1987 but the nomination was rejected by the Senate in October 1987 33 Later that month Reagan announced the nomination of Douglas H Ginsburg but Ginsburg withdrew from consideration in November 1987 Finally Reagan nominated Anthony Kennedy who won Senate confirmation in February 1988 33 Along with O Connor Kennedy served as the key swing vote on the Supreme Court in the decades after Reagan left office 34 Other courts edit Further information List of federal judges appointed by Ronald Reagan and Ronald Reagan judicial appointment controversies Reagan appointed a combined total of 368 judges to the United States courts of appeals and the United States district courts more than any other president The vast majority of his judicial appointees were conservative white men and many of the appointees were affiliated with the conservative Federalist Society 35 Partly because Congress passed a law creating new federal judicial positions in 1984 Reagan had appointed nearly half of the federal judiciary by the time he left office in 1989 36 Assassination attempt editMain article Attempted assassination of Ronald Reagan On March 30 1981 only 69 days into the new administration Reagan his press secretary James Brady Washington police officer Thomas Delahanty and Secret Service agent Tim McCarthy were struck by gunfire from would be assassin John Hinckley Jr outside the Washington Hilton Hotel Although Reagan was initially reported to be close to death 37 he recovered and was released from the hospital on April 11 becoming the first serving president to survive being wounded in an assassination attempt 38 The failed assassination attempt had great influence on Reagan s popularity polls indicated his approval rating to be around 73 39 40 Many pundits and journalists later described the failed assassination as a critical moment in Reagan s presidency as his newfound popularity provided critical momentum in passing his domestic agenda 41 Domestic affairs editMain article Domestic policy of the Ronald Reagan administration Reagan used his White House staff to shape major domestic policies His Chief of Staff made heavy use of the Office of Policy Development in supervising cabinet action on the Reagan initiatives 42 Reaganomics and taxation edit Main article Reaganomics nbsp Outlining his plan for tax reduction legislation from the Oval Office in a televised address July 1981Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 edit Reagan implemented neoliberal economic policies based on supply side economics advocating a laissez faire philosophy and free market fiscal policy 43 44 Reagan s taxation policies resembled those instituted by President Calvin Coolidge and Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon in the 1920s Reagan s team was also strongly influenced by contemporary economists such as Arthur Laffer who rejected the then dominant views of Keynesian economists 45 Reagan relied on Laffer and other economists to argue that tax cuts would reduce inflation which went against the prevailing Keynesian view 46 Supply side advocates also asserted that cutting taxes would ultimately lead to higher government revenue due to economic growth a proposition that was challenged by many economists 47 Republican Congressman Jack Kemp and Republican Senator William Roth had nearly won passage of a major tax cut during Carter s presidency but Carter had prevented passage of the bill due to concerns about the deficit 48 Reagan made passage of the Kemp Roth bill his top domestic priority upon taking office As Democrats controlled the House of Representatives passage of any bill would require the support of some House Democrats in addition to the support of congressional Republicans 49 Reagan s victory in the 1980 presidential campaign had united Republicans around his leadership while conservative Democrats like Phil Gramm of Texas who later became a Republican were eager to back some of Reagan s conservative policies 50 Throughout 1981 Reagan frequently met with members of Congress focusing especially on winning support from conservative Southern Democrats 49 Reagan also benefited from a conservative majority in the House during his first two years as president with an estimated 230 votes during the 97th Congress although this changed after the Democratic gains in the 1982 election with House control switching to liberals within the Democratic caucus 51 In July 1981 the Senate voted 89 11 in favor of the tax cut bill favored by Reagan and the House subsequently approved the bill in a 238 195 vote 52 The Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 cut the top marginal tax rate from 70 to 50 lowered the capital gains tax from 28 to 20 more than tripled the amount of inherited money exempt from the estate tax and cut the corporate tax 49 52 Reagan s success in passing a major tax bill and cutting the federal budget was hailed as the Reagan Revolution by some reporters one columnist wrote that the Reagan s legislative success represented the most formidable domestic initiative any president has driven through since the Hundred Days of Franklin Roosevelt 53 Later tax acts edit Faced with concerns about the mounting federal debt Reagan agreed to raise taxes signing the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 TEFRA 54 Many of Reagan s conservative supporters condemned TEFRA but Reagan argued that his administration would be unable to win further budget cuts without the tax hike 55 Among other provisions TEFRA doubled the federal cigarette tax and rescinded a portion of the corporate tax cuts from the 1981 tax bill 56 By 1983 the amount of federal tax had fallen for all or almost all American taxpayers but most strongly affected the wealthy the proportion of income paid in taxes by the richest one percent fell from 29 8 percent to 24 8 percent 57 Partly due to the poor economy Reagan s legislative momentum dissipated after his first year in office and his party lost several seats in the House in the 1982 congressional elections 58 Compared to other midterm elections the losses were relatively small for the party holding the presidency but conservative Democrats were less open to Reagan s initiatives after 1982 59 As deficits continued to be an issue Reagan signed another bill that raised taxes the Deficit Reduction Act of 1984 60 With Donald Regan taking over as Chief of Staff in 1985 the Reagan administration made simplification of the tax code the central focus of its second term domestic agenda 61 Working with Speaker of the House Tip O Neill a Democrat who also favored tax reform Reagan overcame significant opposition from members of Congress in both parties to pass the Tax Reform Act of 1986 62 The act simplified the tax code by reducing the number of tax brackets to four and slashing a number of tax breaks The top rate was dropped to 28 but capital gains taxes were increased on those with the highest incomes from 20 to 28 The increase of the lowest tax bracket from 11 to 15 was more than offset by expansion of the personal exemption standard deduction and earned income tax credit The net result was the removal of six million poor Americans from the income tax roll and a reduction of income tax liability at all income levels 63 64 The net effect of Reagan s tax bills was that overall tax burden held steady at roughly 19 percent of gross national product 65 Government spending edit Federal finances and GDP during Reagan s presidency 66 FiscalYear Receipts Outlays Surplus Deficit GDP Debt as a of GDP 67 1981 599 3 678 2 79 0 3 133 2 25 21982 617 8 745 7 128 0 3 313 4 27 91983 600 6 808 4 207 8 3 536 0 32 21984 666 4 851 8 185 4 3 949 2 33 11985 734 0 946 3 212 3 4 265 1 35 31986 769 2 990 4 221 2 4 526 3 38 51987 854 3 1 004 0 149 7 4 767 7 39 61988 909 2 1 064 4 155 2 5 138 6 39 91989 991 1 1 143 7 152 6 5 554 7 39 4Ref 68 69 70 Reagan prioritized tax cuts over spending cuts arguing that lower revenue would eventually require lower spending 71 Nonetheless Reagan was determined to decrease government spending and roll back or dismantle Great Society programs such as Medicaid and the Office of Economic Opportunity 72 In August 1981 Reagan signed the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981 which cut federal funding for social programs like food stamps school lunch programs and Medicaid 73 The Comprehensive Employment and Training Act which had provided for the employment of 300 000 workers in 1980 was also repealed 53 and the administration tightened eligibility for unemployment benefits 74 Notably absent from the budget cuts was the Department of Defense which saw its budget bolstered 75 Reagan experienced several legislative successes in his first year in office but his attempts to cut federal domestic spending after 1981 met increasing congressional resistance 76 Spending on programs like Supplemental Security Income Medicaid the earned income tax credit and Aid to Families with Dependent Children all increased after 1982 The number of federal civilian employees rose during Reagan s tenure from 2 9 million to 3 1 million 77 Reagan s policy of New Federalism which sought to shift the responsibility for most social programs to state governments found little support in Congress 78 In 1981 OMB Director David Stockman won Reagan s approval to seek cuts to Social Security in 1981 but this plan was poorly received in Congress 79 In 1982 Reagan established the bipartisan National Commission on Social Security Reform to make recommendations to secure the long term integrity of Social Security The commission rejected Social Security privatization and other major changes to the program but recommended expanding the Social Security base by including exempt federal and nonprofit employees raising Social Security taxes and reducing some payments These recommendations were enacted in the Social Security Amendments of 1983 which received bipartisan support 80 While Reagan avoided cuts to Social Security and Medicare for most individuals 81 his administration attempted to purge many people from the Social Security disability rolls 82 Reagan s inability to implement major cuts to Social Security solidified its status as the third rail of U S politics and future administrations would be reluctant to propose cuts to the popular program 83 Deficits edit As Reagan was unwilling to match his tax cuts with cuts to defense spending or Social Security rising deficits became an issue 84 These deficits were exacerbated by the early 1980s recession which cut into federal revenue 85 Unable to win further domestic spending cuts and pressured to address the deficit Reagan was forced to raise taxes after 1981 86 Nonetheless the national debt more than tripled between fiscal year 1980 and fiscal year 1989 going from 914 billion to 2 7 trillion while national debt as a percentage of GDP rose from 33 percent in 1981 to 53 percent in 1989 Reagan never submitted a balanced budget during his time in office 87 In an effort to lower the national debt Congress passed the Gramm Rudman Hollings Balanced Budget Act which called for automatic spending cuts if Congress was unable to eliminate deficits through the regular budget making process 36 However Congress found ways around the automatic cuts and deficits continued to rise ultimately leading to the passage of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990 88 Economy edit Reagan took office in the midst of poor economic conditions as the country experienced stagflation a phenomenon in which both inflation and unemployment were high 89 The economy experienced a brief period of growth early in Reagan s first year in office but plunged into a recession in July 1981 90 As the recession continued in the first two years of Reagan s presidency many within Reagan s administration blamed the policies of Paul Volcker the Chair of the Federal Reserve But Reagan himself never criticized Volcker 91 Volcker sought to fight inflation by pursuing a policy of tight money in which interest rates were set at a high level 92 High interest rates would restrict lending and investment which would in turn lower inflation raise unemployment and at least in the short term reduce economic growth 93 Unemployment reached a high of nearly 11 in 1982 92 poverty rate rose from 11 7 percent to 15 percent 74 The country emerged from recession in 1983 94 but not all shared equally in the economic recovery and economic inequality and the number of homeless individuals both increased during the 1980s 95 96 Fearful of damaging confidence in the economic recovery Reagan nominated Volcker to a second term in 1983 and Volcker remained in office until 1987 97 Inflation dropped to approximately 3 5 in 1985 while the unemployment rate fell to about 5 in 1988 58 In 1987 Reagan appointed conservative economist Alan Greenspan to succeed Volcker and Greenspan would lead the Federal Reserve until 2006 Greenspan raised interest rates in another attempt to curb inflation setting off a stock market crash in October 1987 known as Black Monday but the markets stabilized and recovered in the following weeks 97 Labor edit nbsp Income inequality and union participation have had a distinctly inverse relationship with the disparity increasing since the 1980s 98 In August 1981 the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization PATCO which consisted of federal employees voted to go on a labor strike in hopes of receiving better pay and benefits After the vote Reagan announced that the strikers would be fired if they did not return to work within forty eight hours Federal law forbid government employees from striking After the deadline passed Reagan fired over 10 000 air traffic controllers while approximately 40 percent of the union members returned to work Reagan s handling of the strike was strongly criticized by union leaders but it won the approval of his conservative base of voters and others in the public 99 100 The breaking of the PATCO strike demoralized organized labor and the number of strikes fell dramatically in the 1980s 99 Many of the strikes that did occur including the Arizona copper mine strike of 1983 the 1983 Greyhound bus driver strike and the 1985 86 Hormel strike ended with dismissal of the strikers With the assent of Reagan s sympathetic National Labor Relations Board appointees many companies also won wage and benefit cutbacks from unions especially in the manufacturing sector 101 During Reagan s time in office the share of employees who were part of a labor union dropped from approximately one fourth of the total workforce to approximately one sixth of the total workforce 102 Deregulation edit Reagan sought to loosen federal regulation of economic activities and he appointed key officials who shared this agenda According to historian William Leuchtenburg by 1986 the Reagan administration eliminated almost half of the federal regulations that had existed in 1981 103 The Federal Communications Commission aggressively deregulated the broadcasting industry eliminating the Fairness Doctrine and other restrictions 104 The 1982 Garn St Germain Depository Institutions Act deregulated savings and loan associations and allowed banks to provide adjustable rate mortgages Reagan also eliminated numerous government positions and dismissed numerous federal employees including the entire staff of the Employment and Training Administration Secretary of the Interior James G Watt implemented policies designed to open up federal territories to oil drilling and surface mining Under EPA Director Anne Gorsuch the EPA s budget was dramatically reduced and the EPA loosely enforced environmental regulations 103 Savings and loan crisis edit After the passage of the Garn St Germain Depository Institutions Act savings and loans associations engaged in riskier activities and the leaders of some institutions embezzled funds 105 In what became known as the Savings and loan crisis a total of 747 financial institutions failed and needed to be rescued with 160 billion in taxpayer dollars 106 As an indication of this scandal s size Martin Mayer wrote at the time The theft from the taxpayer by the community that fattened on the growth of the savings and loan S amp L industry in the 1980s is the worst public scandal in American history Measuring by money or by the misallocation of national resources the S amp L outrage makes Teapot Dome and Credit Mobilier seem minor episodes 107 Immigration edit See also Immigration to the United States The 1980s saw the highest rate of immigration to the United States since the 1910s and the proportion of the foreign born population reached its highest level since the 1940s 108 Reagan did not make immigration a focus of his administration but he came to support a package of reforms sponsored by Republican Senator Alan Simpson and Democratic Congressman Romano Mazzoli which he signed into law as the Immigration Reform and Control Act in November 1986 109 The act made it illegal to knowingly hire or recruit illegal immigrants required employers to attest to their employees immigration status and granted amnesty to approximately three million illegal immigrants who had entered the United States before January 1 1982 and had lived in the country continuously The bill was also contained provisions designed to enhance security measures at the Mexico United States border 110 Upon signing the act at a ceremony held beside the newly refurbished Statue of Liberty Reagan said The legalization provisions in this act will go far to improve the lives of a class of individuals who now must hide in the shadows without access to many of the benefits of a free and open society Very soon many of these men and women will be able to step into the sunlight and ultimately if they choose they may become Americans 111 The bill was largely unsuccessful at halting illegal immigration and the population of illegal immigrants rose from 5 million in 1986 to 11 1 million in 2013 110 Criminal and anti drug policy edit nbsp First Lady Nancy Reagan at a Just Say No rally at the White House nbsp Graph demonstrating increases in U S incarceration rateNot long after being sworn into office Reagan declared more militant policies in the War on Drugs 112 113 He promised a planned concerted campaign against all drugs 114 in hopes of decreasing drug use particularly among adolescents 115 116 The crack epidemic which saw a large number of individuals become addicted to crack cocaine and may have played a role in numerous murders emerged as a major area of public concern 117 First Lady Nancy Reagan made the War on Drugs her main cause as First Lady founding the Just Say No drug awareness campaign 118 Concerns about drug use prompted Congress to pass legislation such as the Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984 119 and the Anti Drug Abuse Act of 1986 the latter of which granted 1 7 billion to fight drugs and established a mandatory minimum penalties for drug offenses 118 Reagan also signed the Anti Drug Abuse Act of 1988 which further increased criminal penalties for drug use and established the Office of National Drug Control Policy 120 Critics charged that Reagan s policies promoted significant racial disparities in the prison population 118 were ineffective in reducing the availability of drugs or crime on the street and came at a great financial and human cost for American society 121 Supporters argued that the numbers for adolescent drug users declined during Reagan s years in office 116 Social policies and civil rights edit nbsp The Reagan administration has been criticized both contemporaneously as seen in this 1988 poster from ACT UP and retrospectively for its response to the AIDS epidemic Reagan was largely unable to enact his ambitious social policy agenda which included a federal ban on abortions and an end to desegregation busing 122 Despite the lack of major social policy legislation Reagan was able to influence social policy through regulations and the appointment of conservative Supreme Court Justices 122 With Reagan s support conservative Republican Senator Jesse Helms led an effort to prevent the Supreme Court from reviewing state and local laws mandating school prayer but Republican senators like Lowell Weicker and Barry Goldwater blocked passage of Helms bill 123 Reagan campaigned vigorously to restore organized prayer to the schools first as a moment of prayer and later as a moment of silence 124 His election reflected an opposition 125 to Engel v Vitale which prohibited state officials from composing an official state prayer and requiring that it be recited in the public schools 126 In 1981 he proposed a constitutional amendment on school prayer 125 which stated Nothing in this Constitution shall be construed to prohibit individual or group prayer in public schools or other public institutions No person shall be required by the United States or by any state to participate in prayer In 1984 he again raised the issue to Congress 127 In 1985 he expressed his disappointment that the Supreme Court ruling still banned a moment of silence for public schools and said that efforts to reinstitute prayer in public schools were an uphill battle 128 In 1987 he renewed his call for Congress to support voluntary prayer in schools 129 In 1982 Reagan signed a bill extending the Voting Rights Act for 25 years after a grass roots lobbying and legislative campaign forced him to abandon his plan to ease that law s restrictions 130 He also reluctantly accepted the continuation of affirmative action programs 131 and the establishment of Martin Luther King Jr Day as a federal holiday 132 The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the Justice Department both prosecuted far fewer civil rights cases per year than they had under Carter 133 In 1988 Reagan vetoed the Civil Rights Restoration Act but his veto was overridden by Congress Reagan had argued that the legislation infringed on states rights and the rights of churches and business owners 134 No civil rights legislation for gay individuals passed during Reagan s tenure Many in the Reagan administration including Communications Director Pat Buchanan were hostile to the gay community as were many religious leaders who were important allies to the administration 135 Gay rights and the growing HIV AIDS emerged as an important matter of public concern in 1985 after it was disclosed that actor Rock Hudson a personal friend of President Reagan was receiving treatment for AIDS As public anxiety over AIDS rose the Supreme Court upheld a state law that criminalized homosexuality in the case of Bowers v Hardwick 136 Though Surgeon General C Everett Koop advocated for a public health campaign designed to reduce the spread of AIDS by raising awareness and promoting the use of condoms Reagan rejected Koop s proposals in favor of abstinence only sex education 137 By 1989 approximately 60 000 Americans had died of AIDS and liberals strongly criticized Reagan s response to the HIV AIDS crisis 138 On the 1980 campaign trail Reagan spoke of the gay rights movement My criticism is that the gay movement isn t just asking for civil rights it s asking for recognition and acceptance of an alternative lifestyle which I do not believe society can condone nor can I 139 Environmental policy edit Reagan s strong preferences for limited federal involvement and deregulation extended to the environment His main goal was to lessen the burden of regulation on businesses to promote more economic activity in the United States Because of this policy Reagan refused to renew the Clean Air Act during his administration 140 Reagan lessened existing regulations on pollution cut funding to government environmental agencies and appointed known anti environmentalist individuals to key positions presiding over these organizations 141 When Reagan took office in 1981 he attempted to reduce money that was directed towards studying the burgeoning field of global warming and human driven climate change 142 In the early 1980s the study of the intersection between human activity and climate change was still in its infancy and scientists were far from a consensus on the topic 143 In 1987 the Reagan administration signed the Montreal Protocol in an effort to reduce emissions that damage the ozone layer 144 Mass surveillance edit Citing national security concerns the president s national security team pressed for more surveillance power early during Reagan s first term Their recommendations were based upon the premise that the federal government s intelligence and counterintelligence capabilities had been weakened by presidents Carter and Ford 145 On December 4 1981 Reagan signed Executive Order 12333 This presidential directive broadened the power of the government s intelligence community mandated rules for spying on United States citizens permanent residents and on anyone within the United States and also directed the Attorney General and others to create further policies and procedures for what information intelligence agencies can collect retain and share 146 Foreign affairs editMain article Foreign policy of the Ronald Reagan administration Escalation of the Cold War edit See also Cold War 1979 1985 nbsp Reagan made 24 international trips to 26 different countries during his presidency 147 nbsp As the first U S president invited to speak before the British Parliament June 8 1982 Reagan predicted Marxism Leninism would end up on the ash heap of history 148 Reagan escalated the Cold War accelerating a reversal from the policy of detente which had begun in 1979 after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan 149 Reagan feared that the Soviet Union had gained a military advantage over the United States and the Reagan administration hoped that heightened military spending would grant the U S military superiority and weaken the Soviet economy 150 Reagan ordered a massive buildup of the United States Armed Forces directing funding to the B 1 Lancer bomber the B 2 Spirit bomber cruise missiles the MX missile and the 600 ship Navy 151 In response to Soviet deployment of the SS 20 Reagan oversaw NATO s deployment of the Pershing missile in West Germany 152 The president also strongly denounced the Soviet Union and Communism in moral terms 153 describing the Soviet Union as an evil empire 154 Despite this heavy rhetoric 155 the Reagan administration continued arms control talks with the Soviet Union in the form of START Unlike the SALT treaties of the 1970s which set upper limits on the size of nuclear arsenals the proposed START treaty would require both sides to reduce their existing nuclear arsenals 156 nbsp Meeting with leaders of the Afghan Mujahideen in the Oval Office 1983In March 1983 Reagan introduced the Strategic Defense Initiative SDI a defense project that would have used ground and space based systems to protect the United States from attack by strategic nuclear ballistic missiles Reagan believed that this defense shield could make nuclear war impossible 157 Many scientists and national security experts criticized the project as costly and technologically infeasible and critics dubbed SDI as Star Wars in reference to a popular film series of the same name 158 Ultimately the SDI would be canceled in 1993 due to concerns about its cost and effectiveness as well as a changing international situation 159 However the Soviets became concerned about the possible effects SDI would have and viewed its development as a violation of the Anti Ballistic Missile Treaty 160 In protest of SDI the Soviet Union broke off arms control talks and U S Soviet relations descended to their lowest point since the early 1960s 161 The Cold War tensions influenced works of popular culture such as the films The Day After and WarGames both 1983 and the song 99 Luftballons 1983 by Nena each of which exhibited the rising public anxiety for the possibility of a nuclear war 162 Reagan Doctrine edit Main article Reagan Doctrine Under a policy that came to be known as the Reagan Doctrine the Reagan administration provided overt and covert aid to anti communist resistance movements in an effort to rollback Soviet backed communist governments in Africa Asia and Latin America 163 In Eastern Europe the CIA provided support to the Polish opposition group Solidarity ensuring that it stayed afloat during a period of martial law 164 Reagan deployed the CIA s Special Activities Division to Afghanistan and Pakistan and the CIA was instrumental in training equipping and leading Mujahideen forces against the Soviet Army in the Soviet Afghan War 165 166 By 1987 the United States was sending over 600 million a year as well as weapons intelligence and combat expertise to Afghanistan The Soviet Union announced it would withdraw from Afghanistan in 1987 but the U S was subjected to blowback in the form of the Taliban and al Qaeda two groups that arose out of the Mujahideen and that would oppose the United States in future conflicts 164 Although leading conservatives argued that Reagan s foreign policy strategy was essential to protecting their security interests critics labeled the initiatives as aggressive and imperialistic and chided them as warmongering 167 Reagan was also heavily criticized for backing anti communist leaders accused of severe human rights violations such as Hissene Habre 168 and Efrain Rios Montt 169 170 Montt was the president of Guatemala and the Guatemalan military was accused of genocide for massacres of members of the Ixil people and other indigenous groups 171 Reagan had said that Montt was getting a bum rap 172 and described him as a man of great personal integrity 173 Previous human rights violations had prompted the United States to cut off aid to the Guatemalan government but the Reagan administration unsuccessfully appealed to Congress to restart military aid However the administration successfully provided nonmilitary assistance such as the United States Agency for International Development 172 174 Central America and the Caribbean edit See also Latin America United States relations nbsp Reagan meets with Prime Minister Eugenia Charles of Dominica in the Oval Office about ongoing events in GrenadaThe Reagan administration placed a high priority on the Central America and the Caribbean Sea which it saw as a key front in the Cold War Reagan and his foreign policy team were particularly concerned about the potential influence of Cuba on countries such as Grenada Nicaragua and El Salvador To counter the influence of Cuba and the Soviet Union Reagan launched the Caribbean Basin Initiative an economic program designed to aid countries opposed to Communism He also authorized covert measures such as the arming of Nicaragua s Contras to minimize Cuban and Soviet influence in the region 175 The administration provided support to right wing governments throughout Latin America disregarding humans rights abuses in countries like Argentina and El Salvador 176 Tensions rose between the left wing Grenadan government of Maurice Bishop and the U S because Cuban construction workers were building an airfield on the island On October 16 1983 pro Communist forces of Hudson Austin led a coup against Bishop who was subsequently arrested and executed Reagan dispatched approximately 5 000 U S soldiers to invade Grenada nine days after After two days of fighting that resulted in the deaths of nineteen Americans forty five Grenadans and twenty four Cubans Austin s government was overthrown 177 Reagan then declared Our days of weakness are over Our military forces are back on their feet and standing tall 178 While the invasion enjoyed public support in the United States and Grenada 179 180 it was criticized by the United Kingdom Canada and the United Nations General Assembly as a flagrant violation of international law 181 Iran Contra affair edit Main article Iran Contra affair See also Reagan administration scandals In 1979 a group of left wing rebels in Nicaragua known as the Sandinistas overthrew the president of Nicaragua and installed Daniel Ortega as the country s leader 182 Fearing that Communists would take over Nicaragua if it remained under the leadership of the Sandinistas the Reagan administration authorized CIA Director William J Casey to arm the right wing Contras Congress which favored negotiations between the Contras and Sandinista passed the 1982 Boland Amendment prohibiting the CIA and Defense Department from using their budgets to provide aid to the Contras Still intent on supporting the Contras the Reagan administration raised funds for the Contras from private donors and foreign governments 183 When Congress learned that the CIA had secretly placed naval mines in Nicaraguan harbors Congress passed a second Boland Amendment that barred granting any assistance to the Contras 184 During his second term Reagan sought to find a way procure the release of seven American hostages held by Hezbollah a Lebanese paramilitary group supported by Iran The Reagan administration decided to sell American arms to Iran then engaged in the Iran Iraq War in hopes that Iran would pressure Hezbollah to release the hostages 185 Secretary of Defense Weinberger and Secretary of State Shultz both opposed the arrangement so it was handled by National Security Advisor Robert McFarlane and McFarlane s successor John Poindexter 186 The Reagan administration sold over 2000 missiles to Iran without informing Congress Hezbollah released four hostages but captured an additional six Americans On the initiative of Oliver North an aide on the National Security Council the Reagan administration redirected the proceeds from the missile sales to the Contras 185 The transactions became public knowledge by early November 1986 Reagan initially denied any wrongdoing but on November 25 he announced that Poindexter and North had left the administration and that he would form the Tower Commission to investigate the transactions A few weeks later Reagan asked a panel of federal judges to appoint a special prosecutor who would conduct a separate investigation and the panel chose Lawrence Walsh 187 The Tower Commission chaired by former Republican Senator John Tower released a report in February 1987 that confirmed that the administration had traded arms for hostages and sent the proceeds of the weapons sales to the Contras The report laid most of the blame for the operation on North Poindexter and McFarlane but it was also critical of Regan and other White House staffers 188 In response to the Tower Commission report Reagan stated Its findings are honest convincing and highly critical As angry as I may be about activities undertaken without my knowledge I am still accountable for those activities 189 The Iran Contra scandal as it became known did serious damage to the Reagan presidency raising questions about Reagan s competency and the wisdom of conservative policies 190 A poll taken in March 1987 showed that 85 percent of respondents believed that the Reagan administration had engaged in an organized cover up and half of the respondents believed that Reagan had been personally involved The administration s credibility was also badly damaged on the international stage as it had violated its own arms embargo on Iran 191 Congressional Democrats considered impeaching but decided that it would be an unwise use of political capital against a weakened president Democrats were also somewhat mollified by Reagan s decision to replace Chief of Staff Regan with Howard Baker 192 The investigations into the Iran Contra scandal continued after Reagan left office but were effectively halted when President George H W Bush pardoned Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger before his trial began 193 Investigators did not find conclusive proof that Reagan had known about the aid provided to the Contras but Walsh s report noted that Reagan had created the conditions which made possible the crimes committed by others and had knowingly participated or acquiesced in covering up the scandal 194 End of the Cold War edit See also Cold War 1985 1991 nbsp Gorbachev and Reagan sign the INF Treaty at the White House 1987Three different Soviet leaders died between 1982 and 1985 leaving the Soviets with an unstable leadership until Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in 1985 195 Although the Soviet Union had not accelerated military spending during Reagan s military buildup 196 their large military expenses in combination with collectivized agriculture and inefficient planned manufacturing were a heavy burden for the Soviet economy 197 Gorbachev was less ideologically rigid than his predecessors and he believed that the Soviet Union urgently needed economic and political reforms 195 In 1986 he introduced his twin reforms of perestroika and glasnost which would change the political and economic conditions of the Soviet Union 198 Seeking to reduce military expenditures and minimize the possibility of nuclear war he also sought to re open negotiations with the United States over arms control 195 As his influence on domestic affairs waned during his second term Reagan increasingly focused on relations with the Soviet Union 199 Reagan recognized the change in the direction of the Soviet leadership under Gorbachev and shifted to diplomacy with a view to encourage the Soviet leader to pursue substantial arms agreements Reagan s personal mission was to achieve a world free of nuclear weapons which according to Jack F Matlock Jr Reagan s ambassador to Moscow he regarded as totally irrational totally inhumane good for nothing but killing possibly destructive of life on earth and civilization 200 Gorbachev and Reagan agreed to meet at the 1985 Geneva Summit where they issued a joint statement indicating that neither the U S nor the Soviet Union would seek to achieve military superiority 201 The two leaders began a private correspondence after the summit and each became increasingly optimistic about arms control negotiations 202 Reagan s willingness to negotiate with the Soviets was opposed by many conservatives including Weinberger conservative columnist George Will wrote that Reagan was elevating wishful thinking to the status of a political philosophy 203 Various issues including intelligence operations performed by both countries and tensions in Germany and Afghanistan threatened to forestall the possibility of an agreement between the United States and the Soviet Union Nonetheless both Gorbachev and Reagan agreed to continue arms control negotiations at the October 1986 Reykjavik Summit 204 At the summit Gorbachev and Reagan closed in on an agreement to greatly reduce or eliminate the nuclear stockpiles of both the U S and the Soviet Union over a ten year period but the deal collapsed due to disagreements regarding SDI development 205 Reagan attacked Gorbachev in a 1987 speech delivered in West Berlin but negotiations continued 206 Gorbachev and Reagan broke the impasse by agreeing to negotiate separate treaties on intermediate nuclear forces such as intermediate range ballistic missiles and strategic arms such as intercontinental ballistic missiles 207 With the framework for an agreement in place Reagan and Gorbachev met at the 1987 Washington Summit 208 They signed the Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces Treaty INF Treaty which committed both signatories to the total abolition of their respective short range and medium range missile stockpiles 206 The agreement marked the first time that the United States and the Soviet Union had committed to the elimination of a type of nuclear weapon though it provided for the dismantlement of only about one twentieth of the worldwide nuclear weapon arsenal The treaty also established an inspections regime designed to ensure that both parties honored the agreement 209 In addition to the INF Treaty Reagan and Gorbachev discussed a potential strategic arms treaty known as START but SDI continued to be a major point of contention 210 In May 1988 the Senate voted 93 to 5 in favor of ratifying the INF Treaty 211 source source source source source source President Reagan s Trip to USSR Walking in Red Square with Mikhail Gorbachev Moscow May 31 1988Though it was attacked by conservatives like Jesse Helms the INF Treaty provided a major boost to Reagan s popularity in the aftermath of the Iran Contra Affair A new era of trade and openness between the two powers commenced and the U S and the Soviet Union cooperated on international issues such as the Iran Iraq War 212 When Reagan visited Moscow for a fourth summit with Gorbachev in 1988 he was viewed as a celebrity by the Soviets A journalist asked the president if he still considered the Soviet Union the evil empire No he replied I was talking about another time another era 213 At Gorbachev s request Reagan gave a speech on free markets at the Moscow State University 214 In December 1988 Gorbachev effectively renounced the Brezhnev Doctrine paving the way for democratization in Eastern Europe 215 In November 1989 ten months after Reagan left office the Berlin Wall fell The Cold War was unofficially declared over at the Malta Summit the following month 216 Honoring German war dead at Bitburg Germany edit Main article Bitburg controversy Reagan came under much criticism in 1985 when he was accused of honoring Nazi war criminals at a cemetery in West Germany 217 In February 1985 the administration accepted an invitation for Reagan to visit a German military cemetery in Bitburg and to place a wreath alongside West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl Deaver was given assurances by a German head of protocol that no war criminals were buried there It was later determined that the cemetery held the graves of 49 members of the Waffen SS What neither Deaver nor other administration officials initially realized was that many Germans distinguished the regular SS who typically were composed of Nazi true believers and the Waffen SS which were attached to military units and composed of conscripted soldiers 218 As the controversy brewed in April 1985 Reagan issued a statement that called the Nazi soldiers buried in that cemetery as themselves victims a designation which ignited a stir over whether Reagan had equated the SS men to victims of the Holocaust 219 Pat Buchanan Reagan s Director of Communications argued that the president did not equate the SS members with the actual Holocaust but as victims of the ideology of Nazism 220 Now strongly urged to cancel the visit 221 the president responded that it would be wrong to back down on a promise he had made to Chancellor Kohl On May 5 1985 President Reagan and Chancellor Kohl first visited the site of the former Nazi Bergen Belsen concentration camp and then the Bitburg cemetery where along with two military generals they did place a wreath 222 223 Middle East edit nbsp Egyptian President Anwar Sadat with Reagan in a joint press conference at the White House 1981Lebanon edit A civil war had broken out in Lebanon in 1975 and both Israel and Syria undertook military action within Lebanon in 1982 224 After Israel invaded Southern Lebanon Reagan faced domestic and international pressure to oppose the Israeli invasion but Reagan was reluctant to openly break Israel Reagan sympathized with Israeli s desire to defeat PLO forces that had struck Israel from Lebanon but he pressured Israel to end its invasion as casualties mounted and Israeli forces approached the Lebanese capital of Beirut 225 American diplomat Philip Habib arranged a cease fire in which Israel Syria and the PLO all agreed to evacuate their forces from Lebanon As Israel delayed a full withdrawal and violence continued in Lebanon Reagan arranged for a multinational force including U S Marines to serve as peacekeepers in Lebanon 226 In October 1983 two nearly simultaneous bombings in Beirut killed 241 American Marines and 58 French soldiers 227 The international peacekeeping force was withdrawn from Lebanon in 1984 In reaction to the role Israel and the United States played in the Lebanese Civil War a Shia militant group known as Hezbollah began to take American hostages holding eight Americans by the middle of 1985 228 The Reagan administration s attempts to release these hostages would be a major component of the Iran Contra Scandal In response to the U S intervention in Lebanon the Defense Department developed the Powell Doctrine which stated that the U S should intervene militarily as a last resort and should set clear and limited goals in such interventions 229 Though termed the Powell doctrine the policy was originally developed by Secretary of Defense Weinberger who was influenced not only by Lebanon but also by the experience of the Vietnam War 230 Libya bombing edit Main article 1986 United States bombing of Libya nbsp British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher here walking with President Reagan at Camp David in 1986 granted the U S use of British airbases to launch the Libya attackRelations between Libya and the United States under President Reagan were continually contentious beginning with the Gulf of Sidra incident in 1981 by 1982 Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi was considered by the CIA to be along with USSR leader Leonid Brezhnev and Cuban leader Fidel Castro part of a group known as the unholy trinity and was also labeled as our international public enemy number one by a CIA official 231 These tensions were later revived in early April 1986 when a bomb exploded in a West Berlin discotheque resulting in the injury of 63 American military personnel and death of one serviceman Stating that there was irrefutable proof that Libya had directed the terrorist bombing Reagan authorized the use of force against the country In the late evening of April 15 1986 the United States launched a series of airstrikes on ground targets in Libya 232 233 nbsp Chadian president Hissene Habre at the White House Habre was supported by the Reagan administration as an ally against Gaddafi s Libya 234 Britain s prime minister Margaret Thatcher allowed the U S Air Force to use Britain s air bases to launch the attack on the justification that the UK was supporting America s right to self defense under Article 51 of the United Nations Charter 233 The attack was designed to halt Gaddafi s ability to export terrorism offering him incentives and reasons to alter his criminal behavior 235 The president addressed the nation from the Oval Office after the attacks had commenced stating When our citizens are attacked or abused anywhere in the world on the direct orders of hostile regimes we will respond so long as I m in this office 233 The attack was condemned by many countries By a vote of 79 in favor to 28 against with 33 abstentions the United Nations General Assembly adopted resolution 41 38 which condemns the military attack perpetrated against the Socialist People s Libyan Arab Jamahiriya on April 15 1986 which constitutes a violation of the Charter of the United Nations and of international law 236 South Africa edit nbsp President Reagan meeting with South African anti apartheid activist Desmond Tutu in 1984During Ronald Reagan s presidency South Africa continued to use a non democratic system of government based on racial discrimination known as apartheid in which the minority of white South Africans exerted nearly complete legal control over the lives of the non white majority of the citizens In the early 1980s the issue had moved to the center of international attention as a result of events in the townships and outcry at the death of Stephen Biko Reagan administration policy called for constructive engagement with the apartheid government of South Africa In opposition to the condemnations issued by the U S Congress and public demands for diplomatic or economic sanctions Reagan made relatively minor criticisms of the regime which was otherwise internationally isolated and the U S granted recognition to the government South Africa s military was then engaged in an occupation of Namibia and proxy wars in several neighboring countries in alliance with Savimbi s UNITA Reagan administration officials saw the apartheid government as a key anti communist ally 237 Finding the Reagan Administration unresponsive to its calls for more stringent economic sanctions anti apartheid activists undertook a divestment campaign aimed at moving individuals and institutions to sell their holdings in companies doing business in South Africa By late 1985 facing escalating public and congressional opposition to his administration s tolerant attitude toward the South African government s policy of apartheid Reagan made an abrupt reversal on the issue and proposed sanctions on the South African government including an arms embargo 238 However these sanctions were seen as weak by anti apartheid activists 239 and as insufficient by the president s opponents in Congress including 81 House Republicans In August 1986 Congress approved the Comprehensive Anti Apartheid Act which included tougher sanctions Reagan vetoed the act but this was overridden by a bipartisan effort in Congress 240 By 1990 under Reagan s successor George H W Bush the new South African government of F W de Klerk was introducing widespread reforms though the Bush administration argued that this was not a result of the tougher sanctions 241 Free trade edit During his 1980 presidential campaign Reagan proposed the creation of a common market in North America Once in office Reagan signed the Trade and Tariff Act of 1984 which granted the president fast track authority in negotiating free trade agreements 242 In 1985 Reagan signed the Israel United States Free Trade Agreement the first bilateral free trade agreement in U S history 243 In 1988 Reagan and Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney signed the Canada United States Free Trade Agreement which greatly reduced trade barriers between the United States and Canada This trade pact would serve as the foundation for the North American Free Trade Agreement among the United States Canada and Mexico 242 Age and health editAt the time Reagan was the oldest person to have served as U S president 244 245 Reagan s health became a concern to whom at times during his presidency citation needed Early in his presidency Reagan started wearing a custom made technologically advanced hearing aid first in his right ear 246 and later in his left ear as well 247 His decision to go public in 1983 regarding his wearing the small audio amplifying device boosted their sales 248 On July 13 1985 Reagan underwent surgery to remove a section of his colon due to colorectal cancer 249 He relinquished presidential power to the vice president for eight hours in a similar procedure as outlined in the 25th Amendment which he specifically avoided invoking 250 The surgery lasted just under three hours and was successful 251 Reagan resumed the powers of the presidency later that day 252 In August of that year he underwent an operation to remove skin cancer cells from his nose 253 In October more skin cancer cells were detected on his nose and removed 254 Former White House correspondent Lesley Stahl later wrote that in 1986 she and other reporters noticed what might have been early symptoms of Reagan s later Alzheimer s disease She said that on her last day on the beat Reagan spoke to her for a few moments and did not seem to know who she was before returning to his normal behavior 255 However Reagan s primary physician John Hutton has said that Reagan absolutely did not show any signs of dementia or Alzheimer s during his presidency 256 His doctors have noted that he began exhibiting Alzheimer s symptoms only after he left the White House 257 In January 1987 Reagan underwent surgery for an enlarged prostate that caused further worries about his health No cancerous growths were found and he was not sedated during the operation 258 In July of that year he underwent a third skin cancer operation on his nose 259 On January 7 1989 Reagan underwent surgery to repair a Dupuytren s contracture of the ring finger of his left hand 260 Elections during the Reagan presidency editRepublican seats in Congress Congress Senate House97th a 53 19298th 54 16699th 53 182100th 46 177101st a 45 1751982 mid term elections edit Main article 1982 United States elections In the 1982 mid term elections Democrats retained a majority of the House while Republicans retained control of the Senate Democratic gains in the House put a check on Reagan s policies as the incoming Congress was significantly less open to Reagan s conservative policies Despite the Democratic electoral gains the election represented the first time since the 1928 elections that the Republican Party successfully defended a majority in either chamber of Congress 261 1984 re election campaign edit Main articles Ronald Reagan 1984 presidential campaign and 1984 United States presidential election Further information 1984 United States elections 1984 Republican Party presidential primaries and 1984 Republican National Convention nbsp President Reagan defeated Democrat Walter Mondale in the 1984 presidential election President Reagan was reelected in one of the largest landslide election victories in American history winning 59 of the popular vote receiving 54 455 472 votes to Mondale s 37 577 352 votes President Reagan won an even larger Electoral College victory winning 525 electoral votes to 13 for Mondale Reagan s approval ratings fell after his first year in office but they bounced back when the United States began to emerge from recession in 1983 262 The leading candidates in the 1984 Democratic presidential primaries were former Vice President Walter Mondale Senator Gary Hart of Colorado and African American civil rights activist Jesse Jackson Though Hart won several primaries Mondale ultimately won the nomination Down in the polls Mondale selected Congresswoman Geraldine Ferraro as his running mate in hopes of galvanizing support for his campaign thus making Ferraro the first female major party vice presidential nominee in U S history 263 In accepting the Democratic nomination Mondale attacked Reagan s policies regarding the environment Social Security nuclear arms civil rights and other issues stating that the Reagan administration was of the rich by the rich and for the rich 264 He also criticized the federal debt accumulated under Reagan stating The budget will be squeezed Taxes will go up And anyone who says they won t is not telling the truth to the American people 94 Reagan meanwhile generally declined to offer new legislative proposals for his re election campaign instead focusing on events like the U S hosted 1984 Summer Olympics and the 40th anniversary of the Normandy landings 265 Reagan s ability to perform the duties of president for another term was questioned by some observers especially after a weak performance in the first presidential debate His apparent confused and forgetful behavior was evident to his supporters they had previously known him clever and witty Rumors began to circulate that he had Alzheimer s disease 266 267 Reagan rebounded in the second debate and confronted questions about his age quipping I will not make age an issue of this campaign I am not going to exploit for political purposes my opponent s youth and inexperience which generated applause and laughter even from Mondale himself 268 Public opinion polling consistently showed a Reagan lead in the 1984 campaign and Mondale was unable to shake up the race 269 In the end Reagan won re election winning 49 of 50 states 270 Mondale carried only his home state of Minnesota and the District of Columbia Reagan won a record 525 electoral votes 271 and received 59 of the popular vote to Mondale s 41 270 Compared to 1980 Reagan s strongest gains came among white Southern voters and he also performed particularly well among Catholic voters voters between the ages of eighteen and twenty nine and voters over the age of sixty 272 In the concurrent congressional elections Republicans retained control of the Senate and Democrats retained control of the House 1986 mid term elections edit Main article 1986 United States elections Congressional party leaders Senate leaders House leadersCongress Year Majority Minority Speaker Minority97th 1981 1982 Baker Byrd O Neill Michel98th 1983 1984 Baker Byrd O Neill Michel99th 1985 1986 Dole Byrd O Neill Michel100th 1987 1988 Byrd Dole Wright Michel101st a 1989 Mitchell Dole Wright MichelIn the 1986 mid term elections Democrats retained a majority of the House and won control of the Senate for the first time since the 1980 elections Reagan campaigned hard for congressional Republicans and an October 1986 New York Times CBS News Poll had found that Reagan had a 67 percent approval rating However Senate Republicans faced a difficult map that year as they had to defend 22 of the 34 seats up for election Republican losses in the Senate were concentrated in the South and in the farm states 273 The Republican loss of the Senate precluded the possibility of further major conservative legislation during the Reagan administration 274 1988 presidential election edit Main article 1988 United States elections Further information 1988 United States presidential election and Presidential transition of George H W Bush nbsp Republican George H W Bush defeated Democrat Michael Dukakis in the 1988 presidential election Reagan remained publicly neutral in the 1988 Republican presidential primaries but privately supported Vice President Bush over Senator Bob Dole The 1988 Republican National Convention which nominated Bush for president also acted as a celebration of Reagan s presidency 275 Democrats nominated Michael Dukakis the liberal Governor of Massachusetts Following the 1988 Democratic National Convention Dukakis led the polls by seventeen points but Bush aided by the INF Treaty and the strong economy closed the gap as the election neared Democrats tried to link Bush to the Iran Contra Scandal but Bush claimed that he had not been involved The GOP effectively cast Dukakis as soft on crime and foreign policy issues seizing on Dukakis s pardon of Willie Horton and his dispassionate response to a question regarding the death penalty In the 1988 presidential election Bush soundly defeated Dukakis taking 53 4 percent of the popular vote and 426 electoral votes 276 The election saw the lowest turnout of eligible voters in any presidential election since 1948 277 In the concurrent congressional elections Democrats retained control of the House and the Senate 276 In large part due to his handling of relations with the Soviet Union Reagan left office with an approval rating of sixty eight percent 278 matching the approval ratings of Franklin Roosevelt and later Bill Clinton as the highest rating for a departing president in the modern era 279 Evaluation and legacy edit nbsp Graph of Reagan s approval ratings in Gallup pollsSince Reagan left office in 1989 substantial debate has occurred among scholars historians and the general public surrounding his legacy 280 Supporters have pointed to a more efficient and prosperous economy as a result of Reagan s economic policies 281 foreign policy triumphs including a peaceful end to the Cold War 282 and a restoration of American pride and morale 283 Proponents also argue Reagan restored faith in the American Dream 284 after a decline in American confidence and self respect under Jimmy Carter s perceived weak leadership particularly during the Iran hostage crisis 285 Reagan remains an important symbol of American conservatism much in the same way that Franklin Roosevelt continued to serve as a symbol of liberalism long after his own death 286 Critics contend that Reagan s economic policies resulted in rising budget deficits 287 a wider gap in wealth and an increase in homelessness 288 Liberals especially disapproved of Reagan s simultaneous tax cuts for the wealthy and benefit cuts for the poor 289 Some critics assert that the Iran Contra affair lowered American credibility 290 In his popular book The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers historian Paul Kennedy argued that Reagan s high level of defense would eventually lead to the decline of the United States as a great power 291 Reagan s leadership and understanding of issues has also been questioned and even some members of the administration criticized Reagan s passive demeanor during meetings with staff and cabinet members 292 Richard Pipes a member of the National Security Council criticized Reagan as really lost out of his depth uncomfortable at NSC meetings 293 Another NSC member Colin Powell criticized Reagan s passive management style that placed a tremendous burden on us 294 Despite the continuing debate surrounding his legacy many conservative and liberal scholars agree that Reagan has been one of the most influential presidents since Franklin Roosevelt leaving his imprint on American politics diplomacy culture and economics through his effective communication dedicated patriotism and pragmatic compromising 295 Since he left office historians have reached a consensus 296 as summarized by British historian M J Heale who finds that scholars now concur that Reagan rehabilitated conservatism turned the nation to the right practiced a considerably pragmatic conservatism that balanced ideology and the constraints of politics revived faith in the presidency and in American exceptionalism and contributed to victory in the Cold War 297 Hugh Heclo argues that Reagan himself failed to roll back the welfare state but that he contributed to a shift in attitudes that led to the defeat of efforts to further expand the welfare state 298 Heclo further argues that Reagan s presidency made American voters and political leaders more tolerant of deficits and more opposed to taxation 299 In 2017 a C SPAN survey of scholars ranked Reagan as the ninth greatest president 300 301 A 2018 poll of the American Political Science Association s presidents and Executive Politics section also ranked Reagan as the ninth greatest president 302 In terms of the worst mistake made by a sitting president a 2006 poll of historians ranked the Iran Contra affair as the ninth worst 303 See also edit nbsp 1980s portal nbsp United States portal nbsp Politics portal nbsp Conservatism portalHistory of the United States 1980 1991 Premiership of Margaret Thatcher Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Simi Valley CaliforniaExplanatory notes edit a b c 17 days of the 97th Congress January 3 1981 January 19 1981 took place under President Carter and 17 days of the 101st Congress January 3 1989 January 19 1989 took place during Reagan s second term References editCitations edit Bruce J Schulman and Julian E Zelizer eds Rightward Bound Making America Conservative in the 1970s Harvard UP 2008 pp 1 10 Andrew Busch Reagan s victory the presidential election of 1980 and the rise of the right UP of Kansas 2005 J Lull and S Hinerman The search for scandal in J Lull amp S Hinerman eds Media scandals Morality and desire in the popular culture marketplace 1997 pp 1 33 Paul Boyer The Evangelical Resurgence in 1970s American Protestantism in Schulman and Zelizer eds Rightward bound pp 29 51 Stephen D Johnson and Joseph B Tamney The Christian Right and the 1980 presidential election Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 1982 21 2 123 131 online James Davison Hunter Culture wars The struggle to control the family art education law and politics in America 1992 Wilentz 2008 pp 23 24 Earl Black and Merle Black Politics and Society in the South 1989 p 249 Wilentz 2008 pp 4 7 Wilentz 2008 pp 137 138 Weisberg 2016 pp 56 57 Weisberg 2016 pp 61 63 Rossinow 2015 pp 23 27 Schulte Bret Ronald Reagan v Jimmy Carter Are You Better Off Than You Were Four Years Ago Retrieved January 28 2022 Rossinow 2015 pp 27 28 Patterson 2005 pp 149 151 Brands 2015 pp 241 246 Rossinow 2015 pp 51 52 Rossinow 2015 pp 52 John H Kessel The structures of the Reagan White House American Journal of Political Science 1984 231 258 online David B Cohen From the fabulous baker boys to the master of disaster The White House chief of staff in the Reagan and GHW Bush administrations Presidential Studies Quarterly 32 3 2002 463 482 Brands 2015 pp 246 248 Herring 2008 pp 864 866 Brands 2015 pp 376 381 Rossinow 2015 pp 81 82 Rossinow 2015 pp 103 104 Brands 2015 pp 472 474 Wilentz 2008 pp 178 180 Brands 2015 pp 645 649 Prudence Flowers A Prolife Disaster The Reagan Administration and the Nomination of Sandra Day O Connor Journal of Contemporary History 53 2 2018 391 414 Wilentz 2008 pp 189 190 a b c Biskupic Joan September 4 2005 Rehnquist left Supreme Court with conservative legacy USA Today Retrieved February 27 2016 a b c d U S Senate Supreme Court Nominations 1789 Present www senate gov Retrieved June 15 2017 Parlapiano Alicia Patel Jugal K June 27 2018 With Kennedy s Retirement the Supreme Court Loses Its Center The New York Times Retrieved July 20 2018 Weisberg 2016 pp 116 117 a b Rossinow 2015 p 178 Remembering the Assassination Attempt on Ronald Reagan CNN March 30 2001 Retrieved December 19 2007 D Souza Dinesh June 8 2004 Purpose National Review Retrieved February 16 2009 Langer Gary June 7 2004 Reagan s Ratings Great Communicator s Appeal Is Greater in Retrospect ABC Retrieved May 30 2008 Leuchtenburg 2015 pp 597 598 Leuchtenburg 2015 pp 598 599 Shirley Anne Warshaw White House Control of Domestic Policy Making The Reagan Years Public Administration Review 55 3 1995 pp 247 53 online Gerstle Gary 2022 The Rise and Fall of the Neoliberal Order America and the World in the Free Market Era Oxford University Press pp 106 108 121 128 ISBN 978 0197519646 Karaagac John 2000 Ronald Reagan and Conservative Reformism Lexington Books p 113 ISBN 0 7391 0296 6 Leuchtenburg 2015 pp 595 596 Brands 2015 pp 271 272 Patterson 2005 pp 154 155 Rossinow 2015 p 20 a b c Leuchtenburg pp 599 601 Rossinow 2015 pp 48 49 Movers amp Shakers Congressional Leaders in the 1980 John B Shlaes Eric M Licht 1985 P 17 a b Rossinow 2015 pp 61 62 a b Patterson 2005 p 157 Brands 2015 pp 346 349 Wilentz 2008 pp 148 149 Rossinow 2015 pp 62 63 Rossinow 2015 p 63 a b Patterson 2005 pp 162 163 Rossinow 2015 pp 97 98 164 Shapiro Bernard M March 1 1993 Presidential Politics And Deficit Reduction The Landscape Of Tax Policy In The 1980S And 1990S Washington and Lee Law Review 50 2 Brands 2015 pp 540 541 Brands 2015 pp 542 544 Brownlee Elliot Graham Hugh Davis 2003 The Reagan Presidency Pragmatic Conservatism amp Its Legacies Lawrence Kansas University of Kansas Press pp 172 173 Steuerle C Eugene 1992 The Tax Decade How Taxes Came to Dominate the Public Agenda Washington D C The Urban Institute Press p 122 ISBN 0 87766 523 0 Patterson 2005 p 166 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 Brands 2015 pp 263 264 Leuchtenburg 2015 pp 594 595 Rossinow 2015 pp 58 60 a b Rossinow 2015 p 85 Brands 2015 pp 266 267 Leuchtenburg 2015 pp 615 616 Patterson 2005 p 165 Leuchtenburg 2015 pp 618 619 Brands 2015 pp 300 303 Brands 2015 pp 425 427 The Reagan Presidency Reagan Presidential Foundation Archived from the original on May 17 2008 Retrieved August 4 2008 Pear Robert April 19 1992 U S to Reconsider Denial of Benefits to Many Disabled The New York Times Retrieved May 23 2008 Wilentz 2008 pp 149 150 Weisberg 2016 pp 75 76 Leuchtenburg 2015 pp 605 606 Brands 2015 pp 346 347 Patterson 2005 pp 158 159 Cline Seth March 1 2013 What Happened Last Time We Had a Budget Sequester U S News amp World Report Retrieved May 18 2017 Brands 2015 pp 221 222 Rossinow 2015 pp 90 91 Commanding Heights Paul Volcker Interview PBS September 26 2000 Retrieved March 20 2020 a b Brands pp 317 319 Rossinow 2015 pp 88 90 a b Brands 2015 pp 452 453 Patterson 2005 pp 166 167 Rossinow 2015 p 145 a b Brands 2015 pp 668 671 Leonhardt David July 7 2023 How Elba Makes a Living Wage The New York Times Archived from the original on July 8 2023 a b Patterson pp 157 158 Rossinow 2015 pp 86 87 Rossinow 2015 p 87 88 Patterson 2005 p 170 a b Leuchtenburg 2015 pp 601 604 Donnelly H 1987 Broadcasting Deregulation CQ Press Retrieved November 29 2017 Patterson 2005 p 175 Timothy Curry and Lynn Shibut The Cost of the Savings and Loan Crisis Truth and Consequences FDIC December 2000 The Greatest Ever Bank Robbery The Collapse of the Savings and Loan Industry by Martin Mayer Scribner s Rossinow 2015 pp 158 159 Brands 2015 pp 544 545 a b Plumer Brad January 30 2013 Congress tried to fix immigration back in 1986 Why did it fail The Washington Post Retrieved November 27 2017 Reagan Ronald November 6 1986 Statement on Signing the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 Archived December 31 2006 at the Wayback Machine Collected Speeches Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Retrieved August 15 2007 The War on Drugs pbs org May 10 2001 Retrieved April 4 2007 NIDA InfoFacts High School and Youth Trends National Institute on Drug Abuse NIH Retrieved April 4 2007 Randall Vernellia R April 18 2006 The Drug War as Race War The University of Dayton School of Law Retrieved April 11 2007 Interview Dr Herbert Kleber PBS Retrieved June 12 2007 The politics of the Reagan years and the Bush years probably made it somewhat harder to get treatment expanded but at the same time it probably had a good effect in terms of decreasing initiation and use For example marijuana went from thirty three percent of high school seniors in 1980 to twelve percent in 1991 a b Bachman Gerald G et al The Decline of Substance Use in Young Adulthood The Regents of the University of Michigan Retrieved April 4 2007 Rossinow 2015 pp 122 124 a b c Thirty Years of America s Drug War PBS Retrieved April 4 2007 Rossinow 2015 p 124 Johnson Julie November 19 1988 REAGAN SIGNS BILL TO CURB DRUG USE The New York Times Retrieved December 7 2017 The Reagan Era Drug War Legacy stopthedrugwar org June 11 2004 Retrieved April 4 2007 a b Roberts Steven V September 11 1988 THE NATION Reagan s Social Issues Gone but Not Forgotten The New York Times Retrieved December 7 2017 Rossinow 2015 pp 95 96 Reagan Urges School Moment of Silence Lodi News Sentinel July 12 1984 a b Ackerman David M 2001 The Law of Church and State Developments in the Supreme Court Since 1980 Nova Publishers ISBN 978 1 59033 122 4 U S Supreme Court Engel v Vitale 370 U S 421 1962 Retrieved July 30 2016 Address Before a Joint Session of the Congress on the State of the Union The American Presidency Project presidency ucsb edu Retrieved January 5 2022 George de Lama Reagan Sees An Uphill Battle For Prayer In Public Schools June 7 1985 Chicago Tribune Taylor Stuart Jr January 28 1987 High Court Accepts Appeal of Moment of Silence Law The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 5 2022 Raines Howell June 30 1982 Voting Rights Act Signed by Reagan The New York Times Retrieved May 10 2015 Patterson 2005 p 171 Rossinow 2015 pp 163 164 Rossinow 2015 pp 42 43 Shull Steven A 1999 American Civil Rights Policy from Truman to Clinton The Role of Presidential Leadership M E Sharpe p 94 ISBN 9780765603944 Wilentz 2008 pp 185 186 Rossinow 2015 pp 132 134 Rossinow 2015 pp 212 214 Patterson 2005 pp 179 182 Scheer Robert 2006 Playing President My Close Ecounters with Nixon Carter Bush I Reagan and Clinton and How They Did Not Prepare Me for George W Bush Akashic Books p 154 ISBN 978 1 933354 01 9 Daynes B W amp Sussman G 2010 White House Politics and the Environment Franklin D Roosevelt to George W Bush College Station Texas A amp M Univ Press Kline Benjamin 2011 First Along the River a Brief History of the U S Environmental Movement 4th ed Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers Daynes B W White House Politics and the Environment p 176 Miller Norman 2009 Environmental Politics Stakeholders Interests and Policymaking 2nd ed New York Routledge Daynes B W White House Politics and the Environment p 185 Farivar Cyrus August 27 2014 The executive order that led to mass spying as told by NSA alumni Feds call it twelve triple three whistleblower says it s the heart of the problem Ars Technica Retrieved December 23 2017 Jaycox Mark June 2 2014 A Primer on Executive Order 12333 The Mass Surveillance Starlet San Francisco California Electronic Frontier Foundation Retrieved December 23 2017 Travels of President Ronald Reagan U S Department of State Office of the Historian Archived from the original on August 15 2023 Retrieved December 15 2023 Reagan Ronald June 8 1982 Ronald Reagan Address to British Parliament The History Place Retrieved April 19 2006 Towards an International History of the War in Afghanistan 1979 89 The Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars 2002 Archived from the original on October 11 2007 Retrieved May 16 2007 Rossinow 2015 pp 66 67 Patterson 2005 p 200 Patterson 2005 pp 205 Rossinow 2015 p 67 Cannon 1991 pp 314 317 sfn error no target CITEREFCannon1991 help G Thomas Goodnight Ronald Reagan s re formulation of the rhetoric of war Analysis of the zero option evil empire and star wars addresses Quarterly Journal of Speech 72 4 1986 390 414 Herring 2008 pp 868 869 Beschloss 2007 p 293 Herring 2008 pp 870 871 Brands 2015 pp 725 726 Brands 2015 pp 581 585 Herring 2008 pp 869 870 Rossinow 2015 pp 116 117 Stephen S Rosenfeld Spring 1986 The Reagan Doctrine The Guns of July Foreign Affairs 64 4 Archived from the original on September 30 2007 a b Herring 2008 pp 883 884 Crile George 2003 Charlie Wilson s War The Extraordinary Story of the Largest Covert Operation in History Atlantic Monthly Press ISBN 0 87113 854 9 Pach Chester 2006 The Reagan Doctrine Principle Pragmatism and Policy Presidential Studies Quarterly 36 1 75 88 doi 10 1111 j 1741 5705 2006 00288 x JSTOR 27552748 Foreign Affairs Ronald Reagan PBS Archived from the original on June 16 2007 Retrieved June 6 2007 From U S Ally to Convicted War Criminal Inside Chad s Hissene Habre s Close Ties to Reagan Admin Democracy Now Retrieved January 5 2022 Critics question Reagan legacy June 9 2004 Retrieved January 5 2022 What Guilt Does the U S Bear in Guatemala The New York Times Retrieved January 5 2022 Gen Efrain Rios Montt obituary The Guardian April 2 2018 Retrieved January 3 2023 a b Did Reagan Finance Genocide in Guatemala ABC News Retrieved January 5 2022 Allan Nairn After Rios Montt Verdict Time for U S to Account for Its Role in Guatemalan Genocide Democracy Now Retrieved January 5 2022 Culpepper Miles March 24 2015 Ronald Reagan s genocidal secret A true story of right wing impunity in Guatemala Salon Brands 2015 pp 350 357 Rossinow 2015 pp 73 77 79 Patterson 2005 pp 205 206 Clines Francis X December 13 1983 Military of U S Standing Tall Reagan Asserts The New York Times Retrieved March 31 2023 Magnuson Ed November 21 1983 Getting Back to Normal Time Archived from the original on February 14 2008 Steven F Hayward 2009 The Age of Reagan The Conservative Counterrevolution 1980 1989 Crown Forum ISBN 978 1 4000 5357 5 United Nations General Assembly resolution 38 7 page 19 United Nations November 2 1983 Patterson 2005 pp 207 208 Weisberg 2016 pp 128 129 Patterson 2005 pp 208 209 a b Weisberg 2016 pp 129 134 Patterson 2005 pp 209 210 Patterson 2005 pp 210 211 Brands 2015 pp 646 649 Brands 2015 pp 650 653 Rossinow 2015 pp 202 204 Brands 2015 pp 653 674 Rossinow 2015 pp 216 217 Brinkley A 2009 American History A Survey Vol II p 887 New York McGraw Hill Patterson 2005 pp 211 212 a b c Herring 2008 p 894 Lebow Richard Ned amp Stein Janice Gross February 1994 Reagan and the Russians The Atlantic Retrieved May 28 2010 Gaidar Yegor 2007 Collapse of an Empire Lessons for Modern Russia in Russian Brookings Institution Press pp 190 205 ISBN 978 5 8243 0759 7 Brands 2015 pp 675 676 Rossinow 2015 pp 225 226 Paul Vorbeck Lettow 2006 Ronald Reagan And His Quest to Abolish Nuclear Weapons Random House Publishing p 133 ISBN 9780812973266 Rossinow 2015 pp 225 227 Herring 2008 pp 895 896 Patterson 2005 pp 214 215 Rossinow 2015 pp 228 230 Brands 2015 pp 596 604 a b Patterson 2005 p 215 Brands 2015 pp 676 677 Rossinow 2015 pp 234 235 Rossinow 2015 p 236 Brands 2015 pp 682 685 Patterson 2005 p 216 Herring 2008 pp 897 898 Talbott Strobe August 5 1991 The Summit Goodfellas Time Archived from the original on February 17 2010 Retrieved January 26 2008 Reagan 1990 p 713 Herring 2008 pp 898 899 1989 Malta summit ends Cold War BBC News December 3 1984 Retrieved August 12 2011 Richard J Jensen Reagan at Bergen Belsen and Bitburg Texas A amp M University Press 2007 Cannon 2000 pp 507 08 Reagan Defends Cemetery Visit Says German Dead Are Also Victims of Nazis Los Angeles Times Don Shannon April 19 1985 Buchanan Pat 1999 Pat Buchanan s Response to Norman Podhoretz s OP ED The Internet Brigade Archived from the original on September 27 2007 Retrieved September 3 2007 Reeves 2005 p 249 Reagan Joins Kohl in Brief Memorial at Bitburg Graves New York Times Bernard Weinraub May 6 1985 Reeves 2005 p 255 Brands 2015 pp 366 367 Brands 2015 pp 382 385 Brands 2015 pp 386 389 Brands 2015 pp 394 395 Brands 2015 pp 488 491 Herring 2008 p 875 Patterson 2005 pp 200 201 Libya Fury in the Isolation Ward Time August 23 1982 Archived from the original on November 7 2012 Retrieved August 12 2011 Tucker 2012 p 2102 a b c 1986 US Launches air strike on Libya BBC News April 15 2008 Retrieved April 19 2008 Enabling a Dictator The United States and Chad s Hissene Habre 1982 1990 Human Rights Watch June 28 2016 Retrieved December 24 2022 Joint Chiefs of Staff 2017 p VII 5 A RES 41 38 November 20 1986 United Nations Retrieved April 14 2014 1 Archived July 1 2009 at the Wayback Machine Smith William E September 16 1985 South Africa Reagan s Abrupt Reversal TIME Archived from the original on April 28 2010 Retrieved April 14 2014 The Deseret News Google News Archive Search news google com Glass Andrew September 27 2017 House overrides Reagan apartheid veto Sept 29 1986 Politico Retrieved August 3 2019 George Gedda Analysts differ on sanctions tie to apartheid news google com The Free Lance Star July 11 1991 a b Amadeo Kimberly History of NAFTA and Its Purpose The Balance Retrieved November 28 2017 Tolchin Martin April 23 1985 U S Signs Trade Pact With Israel The New York Times Retrieved November 28 2017 The Reagan Presidency Ronald Reagan Presidential Library National Archives and Records Administration www reaganlibrary gov Retrieved November 27 2019 Peter Josh November 5 2020 Joe Biden will become the oldest president in American history a title previously held by Ronald Reagan USA Today Retrieved November 18 2020 Weisman Steven R September 8 1983 Reagan Begins to Wear a Hearing Aid in Public The New York Times Retrieved June 13 2008 Reagan Begins Using A Second Hearing Aid The New York Times United Press International March 21 1985 Retrieved June 13 2008 Friess Steve August 9 2006 He amplifies hearing aids USA Today Retrieved June 13 2008 Sorensen Robert H Farnsworth G Strider Roberts Jared E Welling David R Rich Norman M 2014 President Reagan s Life Saving Colectomy and Subsequent Historical Implications Military Medicine 179 7 704 707 doi 10 7205 milmed d 14 00034 PMID 25003852 What is the 25th Amendment and When Has It Been Invoked History News Network Retrieved June 6 2007 Bumgarner p 285 full citation needed Bumgarner p 204 Boyd Gerald M August 2 1985 Irritated Skin is Removed from Side of Reagan s Nose The New York Times Retrieved June 13 2008 Herron Caroline Rand amp Michael Wright October 13 1987 Balancing the Budget and Politics More Cancer on Reagan s Nose The New York Times Retrieved June 13 2008 Rouse Robert March 15 2006 Happy Anniversary to the first scheduled presidential press conference 93 years young American Chronicle Archived from the original on November 23 2012 Retrieved November 12 2008 Altman Lawrence K M D October 5 1997 Reagan s Twilight A special report A President Fades into a World Apart The New York Times Retrieved June 18 2008 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Altman Lawrence K M D June 15 2004 The Doctors World A Recollection of Early Questions About Reagan s Health The New York Times Retrieved November 11 2008 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Altman Lawrence K January 6 1987 President is Well after Operation to Ease Prostate The New York Times Retrieved June 13 2008 Herron Caroline Rand amp Martha A Miles August 2 1987 The Nation Cancer Found on Reagan s Nose The New York Times Retrieved June 13 2008 Statement by Assistant to the President for Press Relations Fitzwater on the President s Hand Surgery Ronald Reagan Presidential Library January 7 1989 Archived from the original on August 18 2016 Retrieved June 14 2016 Busch Andrew 1999 Horses in Midstream University of Pittsburgh Press pp 126 135 Leuchtenburg 2015 pp 620 621 Rossinow 2015 pp 166 169 173 Rossinow 2015 pp 171 172 Rossinow 2015 pp 169 170 176 The Debate Mondale vs Reagan National Review October 4 2004 Archived from the original on April 16 2007 Retrieved May 25 2007 Reaction to first Mondale Reagan debate PBS October 8 1984 Archived from the original on February 18 2001 Retrieved December 31 2007 1984 Presidential Debates CNN Archived from the original on March 8 2007 Retrieved May 25 2007 Rossinow 2015 p 173 a b 1984 Presidential Election Results David Leip Retrieved May 25 2007 The Reagan Presidency Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation Archived from the original on May 17 2008 Retrieved April 19 2008 Rossinow 2015 pp 173 174 Dionne E J Jr 1986 ELECTIONS DEMOCRATS GAIN CONTROL OF SENATE DRAWING VOTES OF REAGAN S BACKERS CUOMO AND D AMATO ARE EASY VICTORS WHAT AWAITS CONGRESS BROAD G O P LOSSES The New York Times Retrieved May 13 2018 Busch Andrew 1999 Horses in Midstream University of Pittsburgh Press pp 126 135 Brands 2015 pp 697 698 a b Patterson 2005 pp 220 225 National General Election VEP Turnout Rates 1789 Present United States Elections Project Retrieved November 8 2020 Patterson 2005 p 217 A Look Back At The Polls CBS News June 7 2004 Retrieved May 15 2015 Andrew L Johns ed A Companion to Ronald Reagan Wiley Blackwell 2015 Hayward 2010 pp 635 638 sfn error no target CITEREFHayward2010 help Beschloss 2007 p 324 Cannon 2000 p 746 Ronald Reagan restored faith in America Retrieved October 7 2014 Lipset Seymour Martin Schneider William The Decline of Confidence in American Institutions PDF Political Science Quarterly Archived from the original PDF on August 22 2016 Retrieved July 18 2016 Rossinow 2015 p 293 Cannon 2001 p 128 sfn error no target CITEREFCannon2001 help Dreier Peter February 4 2011 Reagan s Real Legacy The Nation Retrieved April 7 2018 Patterson 2005 p 158 Gilman Larry Iran Contra Affair Advameg Retrieved August 23 2007 Patterson 2005 p 202 Patterson 2005 pp 160 161 Leffler 2017 p 349 sfn error no target CITEREFLeffler2017 help Pemberton 1997 p 151 American President Archived from the original on October 11 2014 Retrieved October 7 2014 Henry David December 2009 Ronald Reagan and the 1980s Perceptions Policies Legacies Ed by Cheryl Hudson and Gareth Davies New York Palgrave Macmillan 2008 xiv 268 pp 84 95 ISBN 978 0 230 60302 8 The Journal of American History 96 3 933 934 doi 10 1093 jahist 96 3 933 JSTOR 25622627 Heale M J in Cheryl Hudson and Gareth Davies eds Ronald Reagan and the 1980s Perceptions Policies Legacies 2008 Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 0 230 60302 5 p 250 Heclo 2008 pp 558 560 Heclo 2008 pp 562 563 See S SPAN 2017 Survey of Presidential Leadership C SPAN Andrew L Johns ed 2015 A Companion to Ronald Reagan Wiley pp 1 2 ISBN 9781118607824 Rottinghaus Brandon Vaughn Justin S February 19 2018 How Does Trump Stack Up Against the Best and Worst Presidents The New York Times Retrieved May 14 2018 Scholars rate worst presidential errors USA Today AP February 18 2006 Retrieved August 31 2018 Works cited edit Brands H W 2015 Reagan The Life New York Doubleday Beschloss Michael 2007 Presidential Courage Brave Leaders and How They Changed America 1789 1989 Simon amp Schuster ISBN 9780684857053 Cannon Lou 2000 1991 President Reagan The Role of a Lifetime New York Public Affairs ISBN 1 891620 91 6 Cannon Lou Michael Beschloss 2001 Ronald Reagan The Presidential Portfolio A History Illustrated from the Collection of the Ronald Reagan Library and Museum PublicAffairs ISBN 1 891620 84 3 Heclo Hugh 2008 The Mixed Legacies of Ronald Reagan Presidential Studies Quarterly 38 4 555 574 doi 10 1111 j 1741 5705 2008 02664 x JSTOR 41219701 Herring George C 2008 From Colony to Superpower U S Foreign Relations Since 1776 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 507822 0 Leffler Melvyn P 2007 For the Soul of Mankind the United States the Soviet Union and the Cold War Hill and Wang ISBN 9780809097173 Leuchtenburg William E 2015 The American President From Teddy Roosevelt to Bill Clinton Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195176162 Patterson James 2005 Restless Giant The United States from Watergate to Bush v Gore Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195122169 Pemberton William E 1997 Exit with Honor The Life and Presidency of Ronald Reagan Routledge Reagan Ronald 1990 An American Life New York Simon and Schuster ISBN 0 7434 0025 9 Rossinow Douglas C 2015 The Reagan Era A History of the 1980s Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231538657 Weisberg Jacob 2016 Ronald Reagan Times Books ISBN 978 0 8050 9728 3 Wilentz Sean 2008 The Age of Reagan A History 1974 2008 HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 074480 9 Joint Chiefs of Staff January 17 2017 JP 3 0 Joint Operations Report Homeland Security Digital Library Retrieved September 27 2023 Tucker Spencer C November 21 2012 Almanac of American Military History 4 volumes 4 volumes Bloomsbury Publishing USA ISBN 978 1 59884 531 0 Further reading editMain article Bibliography of Ronald Reagan Brandt Karl Gerard Ronald Reagan and the House Democrats Gridlock Partisanship and the Fiscal Crisis University of Missouri Press 2009 Brownlee W Elliot and Hugh Davis Graham eds The Reagan Presidency Pragmatic Conservatism and Its Legacies 2003 Coleman Bradley Lynn and Kyle Longley eds Reagan and the World Leadership and National Security 1981 1989 University Press of Kentucky 2017 319 pp essays by scholars Diggins John Patrick 2007 Ronald Reagan Fate Freedom and the Making of History New York W W Norton ISBN 9780393060225 Ehrman John The Eighties America in the Age of Reagan 2005 Graff Henry F ed The presidents A Reference History 3rd ed 2002 Hayward Steven F The Age of Reagan The Conservative Counterrevolution 1980 1989 2010 highly favorable Hertsgaard Mark 1988 On Bended Knee The Press and the Reagan Presidency New York New York Farrar Straus and Giroux Hill Dilys M and Raymond A Moore eds The Reagan Presidency Palgrave Macmillan 1990 essays by scholars 252pp 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 304 325 online La Barca Giuseppe International Trade under President Reagan US Trade Policy in the 1980s Bloomsbury 2023 ISBN 978 1 350 27141 8 Levy Peter ed Encyclopedia of the Reagan Bush years 1996 online Matlock Jack 2004 Reagan and Gorbachev How the Cold War Ended New York Random House ISBN 0 679 46323 2 Reagan Nancy My Turn The Memoirs of Nancy Reagan 1989 with William Novak H W Brands in Reagan The Life 2015 on p 743 says she wrote one of the most candid and at times self critical memoirs in recent American political history Reeves Richard 2005 President Reagan The Triumph of Imagination New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 7432 3022 1 Shultz George P Turmoil and Triumph My Years as Secretary of State 1993 covers 1982 1989 Service Robert The End of the Cold War 1985 1991 2015 excerpt Spitz Bob Reagan An American Journey 2018 880pp detailed biography Thompson Kenneth W ed Foreign policy in the Reagan presidency nine intimate perspectives 1993 Walsh Kenneth 1997 Ronald Reagan New York Random House Value Publishing ISBN 0 517 20078 3 Historiography edit Johns Andrew L ed A Companion to Ronald Reagan Wiley Blackwell 2015 xiv 682 pp topical essays by scholars emphasizing historiography contents free at many libraries Kengor Paul Reagan Among the Professors His Surprising Reputation Policy Review 98 1999 15 Reports that many articles in the top journals have been fair as have a number of influential books from respected historians presidential scholars and political scientists people who were not Reagan supporters and are certainly not right wingers External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Presidency of Ronald Reagan Reagan Library in depth coverage by Miller Center at University Virginia Reagan Era study guide timeline quotes trivia teacher resources Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Presidency of Ronald Reagan amp oldid 1205525936, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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