In the 1980 national elections, |
Edward Kennedy challenged incumbent President Carter for the nomination of the Democratic party. |
Liberal Democrats complained that Jimmy Carter |
had failed to control inflation. |
Edward Kennedy’s campaign to take the presidential nomination away from Jimmy Carter in 1980 was handicapped by |
lingering suspicions about his involvement in an automobile accident in which a young woman was killed. |
The "new right" movement that helped to elect Ronald Reagan was spearheaded by |
evangelical Christians. |
Many "new right" activists were most concerned about |
cultural or social issues. |
Which of the these social issues was not a primary concern for the new right? |
birth control. |
The neoconservatives of the 1980s believed in all of the following except |
détente with the Soviet Union. |
Ronald Reagan was similar to Franklin D. Roosevelt in that both men |
championed the "common man" against vast, impersonal menaces |
Ronald Reagan differed from Franklin D. Roosevelt in that Roosevelt |
branded big business as the enemy of the common man, while Reagan depicted big government as the foe |
Ronald Reagan began to abandon his liberal New Deal political philosophy and to espouse a conservative, antigovernment line |
when he became a spokesman for General Electric |
The strong "tax revolt" against extensive government programs and spending was spurred by the passage of Proposition 13 in __________. |
California. |
Despite his failure in the White House, President Jimmy Carter earned widespread admiration in his post-presidential years for his |
humanitarian and human rights activities. |
Ronald Reagan’s essential domestic goal as president was to |
dismantle the welfare state and shrink the size of the federal government. |
Conservative Democrats who helped Ronald Reagan to pass his budget and tax-cutting legislation were called |
boll weevils |
Besides cutting the federal budget, Reagan’s other main domestic initiative when he took office was |
cut taxes by about 25 percent |
Ronald Reagan’s "supply side" economic advisers assured him that the combination of budgetary discipline and tax reduction would do all of the following except |
produce a recession proof economy. |
The first results of Reagan’s supply-side economics in 1982 was |
a sharp recession and rise in unemployment. |
The term "yuppies" was slang applied to |
high-living young people who practiced "conspicuous consumption" |
In the 1980s, for the first time in the twentieth century, |
income gaps widened between the richest and the poorest. |
One consequence of the record-high deficits and high interest rates of the 1980s was |
a soaring value of the dollar. |
To President Reagan, "the focus of evil in the modem world." was |
the Soviet Union. |
first woman to receive the vice-presidential nomination of a major political party was |
Geraldine Ferraro |
For the Soviet Union’s new policies of glasnost (openness) and perestroika (restructuring) to work, it was essential that the |
Cold War end. |
The Iran-contra investigations revealed Ronald Reagan as a president who |
napped through cabinet meetings. |
One of the greatest consequences of Reagan’s expansion of the federal debt was |
to make new social spending practically and politically impossible. |
In 1986 Congress passed legislation mandating |
a balanced budget by 1991 |
Ronald Reagan’s highest political objective as president was |
the containment and then shrinkage of the welfare state. |
The "new right" developed many of its tactical approaches by imitating the methods of |
the New Left. |
In the cases of Webster v. Reproductive Health Services and Planned Parenthood v. Casey, the Supreme Court |
permitted states to put some restrictions on the abortion while fundamentally upholding the abortion rights decision of Roe v. Wade. |
The Democrats’ hopes for the 1988 election rose sharply because of major scandals in the Reagan administration involving |
the Iran Contra affair and savings and loans bank. |
"Solidarity" was |
a massive working class labor union of Polish dissidents |
As one consequence of the demise of the Soviet Union, |
long suppressed ethnic hatreds flared in the former Soviet republics. |
All of the following issues or developments in the 1992 political campaign revealed popular disgust with incumbents except |
the debate over "family values". |
Modem conservatism springs from |
a disapproval of priorities and strategies from the Great Society. |
Which of the following was not among the ways that the "New Right" of the 1980s imitated the tactics and approaches of the "New Left" of the 1960s? |
seizing control of colleges and universities. |
The Supreme Court cases of Webster v. Reproductive Health Services and Planned Parenthood v. Casey |
permitted states to place some restrictions on abortion. |
Among the Democrats whom Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis defeated for the party’s nomination to run against George Bush in 1988 were |
Gary Hart and Jesse Jackson. |
In response to the collapse of the Soviet Union, President George Bush called for a "new world order" where |
democracy would reign supreme and diplomacy would replace weaponry. |
The United States joined its allies in the Persian Gulf War in order to |
roll back Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait. |
The result of the Persian Gulf War was that |
Kuwait was liberated but Saddam Hussein stayed in power. |
The explosive Senate hearings that nearly prevented Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas from being confirmed involved charges that Thomas was guilty of |
sexual harassment. |
APUSH 40
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