access to history Politics, Presidency and Society in the USA 1968–2001 Vivienne Sanders PART OF HACHETTE LIVRE UK This high-quality material is endorsed by Edexcel and has been through a rigorous quality assurance programme to ensure that it is a suitable companion to the specification for both learners and teachers. This does not mean that its contents will be used verbatim when setting examinations nor is it to be read as being the official specification – a copy of which is available at www.edexcel.org.uk. Study guides revised and updated, 2008, by Angela Leonard (Edexcel). The Publishers would like to thank the following for permission to reproduce copyright illustrations:AP Photo/PA Photo, page 182; Associated Press, pages 165, 168, 169, 203, 216, 218, 220; © Bettman/CORBIS, pages 6, 16, 37, 51, 97, 98; © Corbis, pages 22, 44, 56; FilmMagic, page 219; George Bush Presidential Library and Museum, page 148 (bottom); Getty Images, pages 41, 121; © David Hume Kennerly/Gerald R. 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Contents Dedication v Chapter 1 The State of the Union in 1968 1 1 The Significance of 1968 1 2 The Tet Offensive and the Vietnam War (January–February 1968) 2 3 Martin Luther King and Black Americans, April 1968 3 4 Bobby Kennedy and America’s Poor, May–June 1968 5 5 The Democratic National Convention in Chicago and Students, August 1968 9 6 The Miss America Pageant and Women, September 1968 13 7 The November 1968 Presidential Election and Middle America 15 Chapter 2 President Nixon 1969–74 20 1 Richard Nixon’s Background 21 2 Nixon’s Election as President in 1968 25 3 Getting Re-elected in 1972 34 4 The Watergate Scandal 47 5 The Results and Significance of Watergate 57 Study Guide 65 Chapter 3 Presidents Ford (1974–7) and Carter (1977–81) 66 1 Gerald Ford – Background 66 2 Gerald Ford – The Half-a-Term President 69 3 Jimmy Carter – Background 77 4 Why did President Carter Fail to Get Re-elected? 80 5 The New Right 93 Study Guide 95 Chapter 4 President Reagan 1981–9 96 1 Preparation for the Presidency 96 2 The ‘Imperilled Presidency’? 104 3 Reagan’s First Term: Aims, Methods and Achievements 106 4 Reagan’s Re-election in 1984 113 5 Reagan’s Second Term 114 6 An ‘Amiable Dunce’? 123 7 The Reagan Legacy 126 Study Guide 137 iv | Contents Chapter 5 President George H.W. Bush 1989–93 138 1 Background 138 2 Comparing Bush with Reagan 141 3 ‘The Vision Thing’ – Education and the Environment 143 4 Bush vs Congress 145 5 Social Themes: The New Right, The Supreme Court, Sex, Drugs and Race 146 6 Foreign Policy 150 7 The 1992 Election 152 8 Bush – The Verdict 155 9 American Society in the 1980s 156 Study Guide 157 Chapter 6 President Clinton 1993–2001 158 1 Bill Clinton – Background 159 2 The 1992 Presidential Election 161 3 President Clinton’s First Term 163 4 Republican Opposition and Extremism 171 5 The 1996 Presidential Election 180 6 The Monica Lewinsky Affair 181 7 Foreign Policy 188 8 Clinton’s Presidency – Conclusions 189 Study Guide 195 Chapter 7 Sport and American Society 196 1 Sport Reflecting the ‘American Way’ 196 2 Sport and Race Relations 199 3 Women and Sport 202 4 What Affects Sport? The Olympics and the Cold War 205 5 AIDS and the Gay Community 206 Study Guide 207 Chapter 8 The State of the Union in 2000 208 1 Multicultural America in 2000 208 2 Women in 2000 214 3 ‘One Nation, Two Cultures’? 215 4 The US Economy in 2000 220 5 Politics in 2000 221 6 The Thematic Approach to 1968–2001 222 Study Guide 223 Glossary 224 Index 232 Dedication Keith Randell (1943–2002) The Access to History series was conceived and developed by Keith, who created a series to ‘cater for students as they are, not as we might wish them to be’. He leaves a living legacy of a series that for over 20 years has provided a trusted, stimulating and well- loved accompaniment to post-16 study. Our aim with these new editions is to continue to offer students the best possible support for their studies. This page intentionally left blank 1 The State of the Union in 1968 POINTS TO CONSIDER This introductory chapter aims to show the preoccupations and characteristics of the United States in 1968 through studying the significance of several events in that year: • The Tet Offensive demonstrates the impact of the Vietnam War on US politics • The presidential election campaign and the assassinations of Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy show concern about race, poverty and disorder • The Miss America Pageant illustrates feminism Key dates 1968 January– Communists’ Tet Offensive in Vietnam February March President Johnson said he would not stand for re-election April Martin Luther King assassinated June Bobby Kennedy assassinated August Democratic National Convention in Chicago September Miss America Pageant disrupted November Nixon beat Humphrey in the presidential election 1 | The Significance of 1968 Key question How and why was the Rarely in American history does a presidential election year [1968] year 1968 significant? coincide with the cresting of such powerful social forces. In a bewildering array of successive crises, each magnified by the overwhelming power of the mass media … all of the conflicts that had emerged out of the postwar years surfaced and came before the American people for a decision. The ultimate consequence was defeat for those who sought a new society based on peace, equality and social justice; victory for those who rallied in defence m Status quo of the status quo. r e t The current state of y affairs. Thus did historian William Chafe sum up the significance of the e K year 1968 in American history. Chafe depicted a society that 2 | Politics, Presidency and Society in the USA 1968–2001 contemporaries thought was coming apart. What were the K Feminists e ‘successive crises’ and what ‘tensions’ do they illuminate? Advocates of equal y t • The Tet Offensive (January–February 1968) illuminated the political, social, er m tensions relating to the Vietnam War. economic and legal s • The death of Martin Luther King (April 1968) reflected racial rights for women. tensions. Cold War • The triumph and tragedy of Robert Kennedy (May–June 1968) The struggle highlighted the tensions between rich and poor and the use of between the violence as a form of political discourse. capitalist USA and • The Democratic National Convention at Chicago (August 1968) the Communist demonstrated the tensions between students, politicians and Soviet Union, Middle America. c1947–89. • The disruption of the Miss America Pageant (September 1968) illustrated the tensions between feministsand traditionalists. • The presidential election triumph of Richard Nixon (November 1968) reflected the tensions between ‘those who rallied in defence of the status quo’ and those who protested against it and sought change. Summary diagram: The significance of 1968 Crises in 1968 Tensions illuminated • Tet Offensive • Vietnam War issues • Death of King • Racial tensions • Death of Bobby Kennedy • Class and political tensions • Democrats in Chicago • Young vs old • Miss America • Feminists vs traditionalists • Election of Nixon • Conservation vs change 2 | The Tet Offensive and the Vietnam War Key question (January–February 1968) What was the significance of the Tet (a) The main event – the Tet Offensive Offensive? The year began calmly enough, until on 30 January 1968 the K Vietnamese Communists launched a great offensive in South Communists’ Tet e Vietnam. Sixty million Americans watching TV in the evenings Offensive in Vietnam: y January–February d saw US troops and their South Vietnamese allies struggle to clear a 1968 t Communists out of the South Vietnamese capital, Saigon, and e even out of the US embassy itself. K Ho Chi Minh e (b) The background to the Tet Offensive (1890–1965) y fi The Cold War had led Presidents Truman (1945–53), Vietnamese g u Eisenhower (1953–61), Kennedy (1961–3) and Johnson (1963–9) Communist who led r e to try to prevent Ho Chi Minh’s Communists from taking over the successful the whole of Vietnam. Eisenhower had established an anti- struggle against Communist South Vietnamese state, to which Kennedy and France (1945–56) Johnson had given ever-increasing aid. In 1965 Johnson sent in and the USA American ground troops. By January 1968, half a million (1956–69). The State of the Union in 1968 | 3 e US soldiers in Vietnam were trying, but failing, to stop t President Johnson da said he would not Communist North Vietnam and its many supporters in y stand for re-election: South Vietnam from destroying that unpopular South Ke March 1968 Vietnamese state. s (c) The significance of the Tet Offensive m NLF er Vietnamese When the US media showed Communists in the grounds of the t Communist US embassy in South Vietnam’s capital, Saigon, many Americans y e National Liberation believed that it exposed the American failure in Vietnam, K Front. demonstrating the ‘credibility gap’ between the Johnson administration’s claim that the USA was winning the war in Primary Vietnam and what was actually happening there. Before a On 31 March, Johnson declared that he would not seek the presidential Democratic Party’s nomination for the presidential election in election, the November 1968, but would seek peace instead. Tet had made it Democrats and clear that the United States would have to de-escalate in Vietnam, Republicans hold a and had taken President Johnson out of the 1968 presidential kind of competition election race. or mini-election in Johnson’s exit from the race opened the way for a struggle every state. In this within the Democratic Party. Hundreds of college students competition, which stopped chanting ‘Ho, Ho, Ho Chi Minh, the NLF is gonna win’. is mostly called a Instead, they said ‘be clean for Gene’, shaved off their beards, primary, they swapped their jeans for suits and ties, and campaigned for decide which Minnesota Senator Eugene McCarthy’s anti-war bid for the candidate they Democratic nomination. McCarthy won a resounding victory in would like to the New Hampshire primary. represent their party in the election. Summary diagram: The Tet Offensive and the Vietnam War Significance Background Event Showed US could US opposed Communists Tet Offensive not win; Johnson in Vietnam from 1950 gave up 3 | Martin Luther King and Black Americans, Key question April 1968 What was the significance of the (a) The main event – the assassination of assassination of Martin Luther King Martin Luther King? In March 1968 black garbage workers who were on strike had m Civil rights r invited civil rights leader Martin Luther King to Memphis, e t movement Tennessee, to help them in their campaign for equal pay. In y The predominantly e Memphis for several days, King was disturbed by the black K black movement for violence there. In a speech on the evening of 3 April, he reviewed equal rights for the triumphs of the civil rights movement, then prophetically African Americans, said: c1956–c68.