Period 9 Terms Flashcards
Jimmy Carter
Thirty-ninth President. The former governor of Georgia, he ran as an outsider in the 1976 Presidential election. Served one term. Carter pardoned Vietnam War draft dodgers, established the Departments of Energy and Education, and returned the Panama Canal to Panama. Internationally, he oversaw the Camp David Accords, ended détente in response to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, and was dogged by the Iranian Hostage Crisis
Ronald Reagan
Fortieth President. Served 1981–1989. Former two-term governor of California, he heralded a shift within the Republican Party toward an ideological conservatism. Domestically, he oversaw massive tax cuts, economic deregulation, and increased defense spending. Internationally, he took a hawkish line with the Soviet Union while also negotiating arms limitations. His final years in office were dogged by the Iran-Contra scandal.
Reagan Revolution
A significant pivot point in U.S. political history, where the New Deal ideology of the 1930s was replaced by a socially conservative, free market ideology. Began with the 1980 election of Ronald Reagan. The “New Democrats” of the 1990s were a response to the Reagan Revolution, as leftwing policies were perceived to be unpopular with modern voters.
Sandra Day O’Connor
The first female Justice of the Supreme Court. Appointed by Ronald Reagan in 1981, she was a moderate Republican regarded as a swing vote, favoring narrow rulings. Retired in 2006 and replaced by Samuel Alito.
Iran-Contra Scandal
A scandal where the Reagan administration secretly sold arms to Iran in exchange for the release of Americans held hostage, and then used the profits from that sale to illegally support right-wing insurgents in Nicaragua. Led to calls for Reagan’s impeachment. In late 1992, President George H. W. Bush pardoned those under trial for their part in Iran-Contra.
Star Wars (Strategic Defense Initiative)
A proposal by Ronald Reagan to intercept incoming nuclear missiles using lasers fired from orbital platforms. Popularly known as “Star Wars,” it was considered technologically infeasible by scientists.
Mikhail Gorbachev
Eighth and final leader of the Soviet Union (1985–1991). He sought reform with his glasnost and perestroika policies. Oversaw the democratisation of Eastern Europe. However, the revival of nationalism throughout the Warsaw Pact proved problematic for him. The failed August Coup of 1991 by hardline communists fatally wounded his power base. Resigned on December 25, 1991. Transferred power over Russia to Boris Yeltsin.
Glasnost
(“openness”) A policy instituted by Gorbachev, it allowed Soviet citizens to publicly criticize the government and discuss social problems in the hope of finding solutions.
Perestroika
(“restructuring”) A policy instituted by Gorbachev, it introduced limited free market reforms to the Soviet Union’s socialist planned economy. A key aspect of the Soviet Union’s fall.
George H. W. Bush
Forty-first President. Served 1989–1993. Considered a moderate Republican, his presidency was defined by the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War. He pushed for international cooperation in a “New World Order,” such as in Operation Desert Storm. Signed but did not ratify the NAFTA treaty. Breaking his “Read my lips: no new taxes” promise alienated conservatives ahead of the 1992 election.
Boris Yeltsin
First President of the Russian Federation (1991–1999). Russian nationalist. Engineered his country’s transition from a socialist to capitalist economy via “shock therapy” reforms, such as rapid large-scale privatization. This effort led to massive social upheaval and a rise in powerful business oligarchs. Appointed Vladimir Putin as his successor.
Bill Clinton
Forty-second President. Served 1993–2001. Clinton advocated for centrist reform as a “New Democrat,” signing NAFTA and welfare reform into law, but notably failed to reform health care. Intervened in the Kosovo War. Helped broker the Good Friday Agreement. Impeached in 1998 over allegations arising from his affair with Monica Lewinsky; he was not convicted.
Contract with America
A pledge that listed specific conservative policies the GOP would enact if they gained control of the House of Representatives in the 1994 midterm elections.
Newt Gingrich
Former Speaker of the House (1995–1999). He helped draft the Contract with America, which led to the 1994 Republican Revolution. Oversaw welfare reform, the 1995–1996 government shutdown, and the Clinton impeachment. Officially reprimanded for ethics violations, he resigned his seat in 1999.
Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996
More commonly referred to as “welfare reform,” Bill Clinton signed it into law. It stopped open-ended benefits, instead favoring a limited work-based concept, and shifted control to the states.