I.        Rise  of the New Right – built on the ashes of the Goldwater fiasco in 1964,  the Republican Party targeted white suburbanites, and particularly those  suburbanites living in the South and West
A)    Watergate  and Its Aftermath—Although apologists for Nixon point out  that—rightly—that Nixon was not the first president to abuse the power  of his office to strike back at his enemies. But Nixon was the first to  do this in a systematic fashion, and to use the powers of his office to  attempt to subvert a criminal investigation into the attempt on the part  of his campaign to fix a national election.
1)      The  Watergate break-in—the so-called “third-rate burglary” was an attempt  to plant illegal listening devices at the headquarters of the Democratic  National Committee.
B)     Tax  revolts – conservatives were able to use the growing distrust against  government to feed a movement to choke off funds for the government,  namely taxes.
1)      California  Proposition 13 – sold the idea that taxes merely funded wasteful  government spending, particularly for things like education, welfare,  and other social programs
2)      Rise  of “code” language – while it became unacceptable to use racial slurs  in the 1970s and 1980s, this did not mean that race disappeared as an  issue in American politics—only that these references to race were now  used in a “code” language, like “welfare queens” and “drug lords.”
C)    Christian coalitions
1)      Southern Christian academies – with the implementation of Brown v. Board of Education, white Christian academies opened as a way for parents to avoid sending their children to integrated schools.  The Carter administration tried to end the tax breaks these led to these various groups organizing to resist this
2)      Southern  televangelists – preachers like Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson used  the technology of television to expand the scope (and number of  contributors to) their “mission.”
3)      Reactions to gender politics
(a)    Abortion – Roe v. Wade linked control of reproductive rights to a woman’s constitutionally guaranteed rights to privacy.  To  social conservatives, this upset gender roles and traditional  patriarchy, and was considered an attack on “the right of a husband to  protect the life of the child he fathered in his wife’s womb.”
(i)                  Opposition  of Catholic Church – while the Church may not speak for all of its  female members on this issue, it was able to mobilize a great deal of  opposition to the decision.
(b)   Opposition  to the Equal Rights Ammendent – as the long sought-after ERA got closer  to passage by the states, political opposition to the Amendment got  more heated; this amendment would have simply recognized legally the  changes that had largely already taken place in the United States.  Right-wing  politicians like Phyllis Schafly, Jerry Falwell were able to distort  its effects and change (by comparing it to the perceived slights whites  received under Affirmative Action programs) and sway public opinion  about ERA enough to prevent its passage.
(c)    Gay  Pride movement – the Stonewall Riot in Greenwhich Village New York  signaled that gays would no longer accept the harassment and  stigmatization that they had received previously.  As gays “came out of the closet,” however, they met increasing opposition from politicians on the Right.
D)    Right  turn of the Democratic Party – after the McGovern disaster of 1972 (who  many party members felt was too liberal), and Carter’s victory in 1976  (who was certainly more conservative than many of the voters who voted  for him), the Democratic Party became increasingly more conservative in  its movement toward “the center.”
1)      Disenchantment  of the poor – rather than mobilize voters who had historically made up  their voter base (minorities, blue collar workers, and the poor),  Democrats began to compete for the same suburban voters that Republican  candidates were pursuing—white suburbanites
(a)    Decline  of trade unions and urban machines – unions and machine politics had  traditionally mobilized Democratic voters, and as these institutions  declined, so did their effectiveness
E)     Election  of Ronald Reagan – two bit actor, former president of the Screen Actors  Guild, became spokesman for the vehemently anti-union General Electric  Company in the 1950s, and began a rapid rightward descent.
1)      Presidential policies
(a)    Cut taxes – for the rich, anyway; Reagan got Congress to cut taxes for the rich from 73% to 28%,  but  taxes for the poor actually went up, because they were hit with an  increase in state and local taxes to make up for the shortfall as a  result from the decline in federal tax revenue
(b)   Cut social programs – Reagan cut much spending on social programs, like welfare
(c)    Increase defense spending – corporate welfare for selected industries, fed boom on the West and East coasts (see below)
(d)   Results  – federal tax revenues plummeted by $750 billion, and generated  staggering federal deficits of $150 billion and $200 billion, which kept  the prime interest rate in double digits.
F)     Reagan  boom – the Reagan years were beneficial for a small, select group of  people, but the era was one of increasing disparity between the few  rich, and the increasing number of poor
1)      Growing  disparity – between 1977 and 1990, the income of the richest fifth of  the population grew by one-third, and that of the top one percent almost  doubled; but the total income of the bottom 60 percent of Americans  actually fell, and the incomes of the poorest Americans fell most  sharply.
II)                 Reaganomics and its Effects on Working People
A)    Undermining  of Unions – perhaps the greatest effect of Reaganomics was that it  undermined the financial security of working-class people, by  undermining the unions that represented their unions.
1)      The  Reagan Recession (1981-1983) – one of the first effects of supply-side  economics, or “Reaganonimics,” as it came to be called, was one of the  worst recessions of the post-war era.
(a)    Demand  from corporations for give-backs – corporations in financial trouble  went to unions and its workers, and demanded concessions to remain in  business.  Competitors then went to their unions and workers, to demand concessions to remain competitive.  The cumulative effect of this was at best to freeze the wages of working-class, and at worst to undermine the wage structure.
B)     Toledo  AP Parts Strike--fifty years after the Auto-Lite strike, a Toledo firm  provoked a strike by its unionized workforce. Despite the support of a  mobilized community, the union and its workers largely returned to work  months later largely on the company's terms. The company, however,  quickly discovered that despite this "victory," however, the company  quickly discovered that they were still unable to compete in the  marketplace, and with a decade were out of business.
C)   Workers in Decatur, Illinois – Decatur is a small town in central  Illinois, rising out of the prairie, which had a diversified (for the  Midwest) manufacturing base, but which witnessed the full aftereffects  (or aftershock, to use a nuclear analogy) of Reaganomics.
1)      A.E. Staley – locally-owned agricultural goods manufacturer, manufactured corn starch, corn syrup, soy products.  This  company resisted buyouts through the early 1980s, but by the end of the  decade was bought out by a London-based food processor.
(a)    Demand  for 12 hour, rotating shifts – in order to more “efficiently” use its  workers, management wants its workers to work twelve hour shifts, and do  away with shift pay differentials; it also wants workers to move from  one shift to another every other month (describe havoc this plays with  lives of workers with families)
2)      Firestone  – the tire industry was one of the largest casualties of the  merger-mania of the 1980s, and Firestone was bought by Japanese  manufacturer Bridgestone.
(a)    Demand  for twelve-hour, rotating shifts; do away with annual pay  increases—instead, have cost of living increases and productivity  incentives.
(b)   Provoked  strike – this strike proved costly not only to many workers (who lost  their jobs, some temporarily, to strikebreakers), but ultimately to the  company, as well—the replacement workers manufactured the AT Wilderness  tires that went on Ford Explorers--and proved to be inferior tires,  subject to blowouts that caused numerous rollover accidents, and led to  Fords abandonment of Firestone tire (after an 80-year business  association, and at least one marriage between family members).
3)      Caterpillar  – the industry leader in the production of heavy equipment at the time  it provoked a strike by UAW members over concessions that it wanted in  its contract—namely, a six-year contract, complete control over  production decisions.  In the end, this company handed the UAW the worst defeat in its history.
III)            The Reagan Hangover – is suffered by working people in this country, of course.

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