Nixon and the Silent Majority. Expand lecture to include rise of grass-roots right in 60s.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 32: An Age of Limits
Advertisements

What is this??. Truman and Eisenhower Harry S Truman  President from 1945 to 1952  FDR’s vice president and took over when FDR died in office  Made.
Student: The New Frontier and the Great Society, 1960s
NIXON AND THE WATERGATE SCANDAL What events led to Richard Nixon’s resignation as President in 1974?
PresentationExpress. Click a subsection to advance to that particular section. Advance through the slide show using your mouse or the space bar. Nixon.
The Rise and Fall of Richard Nixon Chapter 54 (History Alive, pp )
Richard Nixon: Domestic Policy and Downfall
SOCIAL STUDIES PROJECT The Process of Presidential Impeachment.
Chapter 24: An Age of Limits
Politics and Economics
Warm Up Work on Common Vocabulary..
Nixon and the Rise of Conservatives. 1960s Turmoil Civil Rights Protests & Racial Violence Assassinations Black Power Anti-Vietnam War Protest (Flower.
THE NIXON ADMINISTRATION POLITICS AND ECONOMICS. APPEALING TO MIDDLE AMERICA Many Americans supported the government and longed for a silent majority.
UNITED STATES HISTORY AND THE CONSTITUTION South Carolina Standard USHC-8.2 Mr. Hoover Abbeville High School.
Everything You Need To Know About The Presidency of Richard Nixon To Succeed In APUSH
The 70s and After The Times They Are A ’Changin. The 1970s Era Begins 1969 is the year Richard Nixon became President of the United States 1969 is the.
Nixon  Narrow victory in ‘68  At odds with Democrat-controlled Congress  Welfare  Revenue sharing-social program compromise  Had a very tight inner.
JIMMY CARTER 39th President of the U.S Buschistory Presents – The Presidents
NIXON AND THE WATERGATE SCANDAL
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Nixon and Ford Administrations.
1 I.Vietnam II.Nixon & the World III.Politics IV.Economics V.Watergate VI.Ford NIXON PRESIDENCY.

Richard M. Nixon Presidency Republican Mr. Pearson.
The Sixties Political, Economic and Social Issues.
Copyright ©2008 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Chapter Thirty-One: The Ordeal of Liberalism.
A Time of Upheaval,  The New Left  The Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)  The Port Huron Statement  “Hell no, we won’t go”!
Nixon’s Domestic Policies-- Was he a Liberal or a Conservative?
Chapter 21: The Kennedy and Johnson Years By: Katy Zerbe and Sherry Seamands.
LATINOS OR AMERICANS OF LATIN AMERICAN DECENT WERE A DIVERSE GROUP BECAUSE:
Chapter Thirty-Nine The Stalemated Seventies,
Nixon “New Conservativism”. New Federalism Wanted to give more power to the states, decrease the size of the federal government Wanted to give more power.
PresentationExpress. Click a subsection to advance to that particular section. Advance through the slide show using your mouse or the space bar. Kennedy.
The Nixon Administration I’m not a crook. Nixon’s Goals #1 Size & Power of Federal Gov.  Limit the federal government Reduce its power Reverse Johnson’s.
Nixon Election 1968 Democratic Convention.
 Chapter 25, Section 5 and Chapter 27, Section 1.
The Great Society The Main Idea President Johnson used his political skills to push Kennedy’s proposals through Congress and expanded them with his own.
Ford & Carter Gerald Ford’s Presidency Ford takes office amid Nixon controversy Pardon of Nixon will hurt his popularity Economy Severe economic.
The Forgettable Years Unit 5 Lesson 8. Big Idea: Lasting effects of the Watergate scandal cost Gerald Ford the presidency and put DC outsider Jimmy Carter.
Kennedy’s New Frontier New Frontier is Kennedy’s plan in changing the nation. Most people in the 1960’s did not want reform. Many Southern Democrats joined.
Lyndon Johnson The Great Society Johnson Becomes President After JFK’s death, vice president Lyndon Johnson was sworn in as President Johnson.
LBJ’s Great Society SEs: 2B, 8A, 8B, 9F, 17D, 24B.
Nixon Foreign & Domestic Policy. Nixon & Communism Henry Kissinger: Nixon’s Sec. of State Realpolitik: focus on concrete national interests, not ideology.
American Presidency John F. Kennedy 1 st Catholic President Youngest Elected President “Ask not what your country can do for you, but what.
SECTION 2 Postwar Politics. Truman Faces Problems at Home. During WWII government controlled wages and prices for goods. After the war there difficulty.
32-1: The Nixon Administration. 1. Size and power of the federal government Policies: Adopted policy of New Federalism (A plan to give federal power back.
Lyndon Johnson and the Great Society Chapter 20.3.
The Nixon Administration Chapter 27, Section1 By Mr. Thomas Parsons.
Quarterly 2 Jeopardy Review “Initial” Vocabulary Civil Rights Crisis Abroad Presidential Programs & Policies VietnamMix Of Questions
The Nixon Administration Chapter 24 Section 1. Conservatism Nixon gets elected in 1968; wants to bring back conservatism to U.S. New Federalism- lessen.
The Great Society A War on Poverty The War in Vietnam The Civil Rights Act of 1964 The Voting Rights Act of 1965.
ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS: Did the U. S
1960’s Lecture Notes.
Unit 7 Section 7 The Nixon Presidency
The Nixon Administration
Johnson & Nixon: Differing Perspectives
The Nixon Administration
TRUMAN The ‘Fair Deal’ as a continuation of the legacy of the New Deal
APUSH Review: Key Concept 8.3 (Period 8: )
Presidents from
Period 3 & 7 We will examine events from the Nixon presidency that impacted Americans at home and abroad. Who was the president that was never elected?
#62 Chapter 24.1 The Nixon Administration OBJECTIVE: Describe President Nixon’s policies toward the problems facing him.
Important Notes Text a friend or family member- Outside of school Ask them “what is one thing you know about President Nixon?”
Presidential Research/HW
The Nixon Administration
60s, 70s, and 80s USH-8.2, 8.4.
Post War America Chapter 19, Section 1.
Tuesday – May 20th, 2014 Test scores Agenda
An Age of Limits, 1968 – 1980 Chapter 32 Sections 1 & 2
Section 1 Nixon Administration Domestic Policies
60s, 70s, and 80s USH-8.2, 8.4.
Presentation transcript:

Nixon and the Silent Majority

Expand lecture to include rise of grass-roots right in 60s

The Voting Rights Act, 1965 “I think we just gave the South to the Republicans for your lifetime and mine”

The Grass-roots Right Strength in West and South Suburban communities Focus on school boards, local organisation Inheriting the language of McCarthyism: subversion, conspiracy plus Christianity, individualism, patriotism, military strength Intellectual foundations: William F. Buckley’s National Review Organisational inspiration: The John Birch Society

William F. Buckley, Jr.

The Grass-roots Right “The power of individuals is limitless. The time has come for people to cease looking for great organizations afar off and to begin looking for things that can be done close to home. Every man who invites a friend into his home, gives him literature to read, and informs him of the danger, is helping to thwart the Communist program.”

Contexts for emergence of grass- roots right marginalisation of conservatives in national politics and in GOP Civil Rights movement Great Society Cuban revolution Supreme Court: school prayer UN and internationalism

Nixon’s conservatism Silent Majority strategy Conservative appointment to Supreme Court: Berger, Rehnquist, Blackmun, Powell New Federalism OEO abolished, many War on Poverty programmess slashed

RN’s liberal credentials? Environmental Protection Agency Occupational Safety and Health Administration Consumer Products Safety Commission Proposed Family Assistance Plan (influence of D. P. Moynihan) Economic Stabilisation Act, 1970 – freeze on prices and wages in autumn 1971

Foreign Policy

Nixon in China, 1972

Détente with the Soviets

“McGovern has an aura of conviction and simplicity” (Time magazine)

House elections 1972

John Mitchell John Dean H. R. Haldeman John Ehrlichman

I have never been a quitter. To leave office before my term is completed is abhorrent to every instinct in my body. But as President, I must put the interest of America first. America needs a full-time President and a full-time Congress, particularly at this time with problems we face at home and abroad. To continue to fight through the months ahead for my personal vindication would almost totally absorb the time and attention of both the President and the Congress in a period when our entire focus should be on the great issues of peace abroad and prosperity without inflation at home. Therefore, I shall resign the Presidency effective at noon tomorrow. Vice President Ford will be sworn in as President at that hour in this office. August 8, 1974.

“Our long national nightmare is over”