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  1. Ronald Reagan: Domestic Affairs. Reagan came to the presidency in 1981 with a straightforward and well-articulated domestic agenda. He promised to cut taxes, curb government spending, and balance the federal budget or at least reduce the deficit. His well-crafted Inaugural Address identified the major themes the new President hoped would define ...

  2. 5 de sept. de 2020 · Introduction: Revisiting the "Reagan revolution" / W. Elliot Brownlee -- Ronald Reagan and the American public philosophy / Hugh Heclo -- Reagan and the transformation of American conservatism / Ted V. McAllister -- Reagan: The soft-sell populist / Terri Bimes -- Sticking to his guns: Reagan and national security / Chester J. Pach, Jr ...

  3. 29 de may. de 2022 · Reagan's first budget was for the fiscal year 1982. As the chart below reveals, he incurred substantial deficits for each year of his presidency. As a result, debt also increased each year. Reagan's budgets tripled the national debt from $998 billion at the end of Carter's last budget to $2.9 trillion at the end of Reagan's final budget.

  4. On March 30, 1981, President Ronald Reagan was shot by John W. Hinkley, Jr., while leaving the Washington Hilton Hotel after giving a speech. The President was hit under his left arm by a bullet that ricocheted off his limousine. Once the sound of shots rang in the air, Secret Service agent Jerry Parr shoved Reagan into his limousine, and then ...

  5. Reagan’s proponents point to his accomplishments, including stimulating economic growth in the US, strengthening its national defense, revitalizing the Republican Party, and ending the global Cold War as evidence of his good presidency. His opponents contend that Reagan’s poor policies, such as bloating the national defense, drastically ...

  6. Since he left office in 1989, both scholars and the public have intensely debated what the Reagan years meant for the United States and the world. In this important new volume, editors Paul Kengor and Peter Schweizer bring together original essays from leading scholars who examine topics as varied as Iran Contra, abortion, the Cold War, governmental management, and economic policy.

  7. Strong support among white voters, those over forty-five years of age, and those with incomes over $50,000 proved crucial for Reagan’s victory. Figure 31.1.3 31.1. 3: Ronald Reagan campaigns for the presidency with his wife Nancy in South Carolina in 1980.