Reagan defeats Carter by a landslide
4th November, 1980
Rebublican Governor of California and former Hollywood actor Ronald Reagan won the United States presidential election. He defeated incumbent Democrat president Jimmy Carter by a massive margin (with the final eventual polls showing a 489 - 49 win in Reagan's favour) to become the 40th President of the United States. At the time, Ronald Reagan was America's oldest president at the age of 69. He named George Bush, a former CIA boss, as his Vice President. Reagan was officially inaugrated in January 1981. This was the full cabinet that Reagan named in his first administration:-
Vice President: George H.W. Bush
Secretary of State: Alexander Haig
Secretary of the Treasury: Donald Regan
Secretary of Defense: Caspar Weinberger
Attorney General: William F. Smith
Secretary of the Interior: James G. Watt
Secretary of Agriculture: John Rusling Block
Secretary of Commerce: Howard M. Baldridge, Jr
Secretary of Labor: Raymond J. Donovan
Secretary of Health & Human Services: Richard S. Schweiker
Secretary of Education: Terrel Bell
Secretary of Housing & Urban Development: Samuel R. Pierce, Jr
Secretary of Transport: Drew Lewis
Secretary of Energy: James B. Edwards
Chief of Staff: James Baker
Administrator of Environmental Protection Agency: Anne M. Burford
Director of Office of Management & Budget: David A. Stockman
U.S. Trade Representative: William E. Brock III
Voting
Republicans were already clear leaders at the half way stage, with key victories in the east, mid-west and south states. Their stronghold in the west states were still to come, with predictions of safe votes well on course. Before retiring to his home in the Pallasades for polling day, Reagan made his final speech of the election campaign alongside his wife Nancy from a shopping centre car park in San Diego, in front of 30,000 supporters:
"In eight years here as your governor," he said, "I learned to have faith in you, the people and I envision a leadership as President taking government off your backs and turning you loose to do what I know you can do best."
President Carter's defeat was largely blamed on the energy and petrol queues crisis, aswell as his failure to negotiate the release of hostages still held in the U.S. Embassy at Tehran (as Skully mentioned above). He became the first incumbent President to be defeated since Herbert Hoover lost to Franklin Roosevelt in 1932. An hour after phoning Reagan to congratulate him, President Carter drove from the White House to a Washington hotel to address his supporters:
He told them: "I can stand here and say it doesn't hurt." Putting on a brave smile he added: "The people of the United States have made their choice and I accept that decision."
Policies, later years and legacy in brief
President Reagan made strong changes, including heavy tax cuts and increased spending on defense. In his first year, he survived an assassination attempt. In 1983, he approved the U.S. invasion of Grenada and increased CIA operations in Nicaragua, despite strong opposition from Congress.
He was re-elected by a landslide in 1984 and began arms-control talks with the USSR that led to the Intermediate Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty in 1987. He remained extremely popular right till the end of his term in 1989 despite the scandal over US arms sales to Iran that provoked worldwide criticism.
In 1994 he announced he was suffering from Alzheimer's disease. He died ten years later aged 93.
Ronald Reagan made several famous quotes, some of which I've long listed among my favourites:-
"My fellow Americans. I'm pleased to announce that I've signed legislation outlawing the Soviet Union. We begin bombing in five minutes." - Reagan joking during a mike check before his Saturday radio broadcast...
"I hope you're all Republicans." - Reagan speaking to surgeons as he entered the operating room following a 1981 assassination attempt!
"The nine most terrifying words in the English language are: 'I'm from the government and I'm here to help."
"Think of it... war breaks out and nobody turns up.."
"It's enough to make you wonder sometimes if we're on the right planet..."
Links to further reading below.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates...192279.stm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ronald_Reagan