1981 Economic Recovery Tax Act
Arguably the most important legislation of the Reagan years, this act cut income tax rates 25 percent over three years and introduced indexing of tax brackets to protect taxpayers from automatic rate increases when inflation caused wages and salaries to rise.
Sandra Day O'Connor nominated to Supreme Court
President Reagan nominated O'Connor associate justice of the Supreme Court, the first woman ever named to the high court.
Beginning of AIDS epidemic
The acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) was first identified and its cause was soon determined to be the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), which is transmitted through the exchange of infected bodily fluids such as semen or blood.
1981-1983 Recession
In its successful effort to control inflation, the Federal Reserve tightened the money supply. The move did control the rate of inflation, but it also drove the economy into a recession that raised unemployment to 10.7 percent, the highest level since the Great Depression.
1983 Star Wars proposed
Formally named the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), this program called for development of a system of land- and space-based lasers and other high-tech weapons to protect the United States from missile attacks. The derogatory nickname, from the popular science fiction movie of that title, was originally used by the program's critics.
1984 Geraldine Ferraro becomes first woman on major party ticket
Democratic nominee Walter Mondale chose Congresswoman Ferraro of New York as the vice-presidential candidate on the Democratic slate.
1985 Gramm-Rudman Balanced Budget Act
The full name of this legislation, the Gramm-Rudman Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Reduction Control Act, indicates its objectives. The bill called for specific funding cuts, to go into effect automatically, if a balanced budget were not achieved by 1991. The 1991 budget was not balanced, but the cuts did not go into effect.
United States becomes a debtor nation
As a consequence of buying more goods abroad and the federal budget deficit, the United States, for the first time since 1915, owed more to overseas creditors than it was owed. The United States would soon accumulate the world's largest foreign debt.
Mikhail Gorbachev takes power in USSR
Gorbachev initiated a relaxation of Soviet control over Eastern Europe, as well as substantial restructuring of the USSR's communist system. He and President Reagan collaborated to reduce tensions between the two superpowers, especially by agreements to destroy an existing category of nuclear weapons.
1986 Iran-Contra affair
U.S. government arms sales to Iran in exchange for the release of hostages, and diversion of some of the profits from those sales to support the Contras, fighting in Nicaragua, were made public. These actions, illegal and unconstitutional, were investigated by a special prosecutor and grand jury, as well as by congressional committees. Although Reagan's presidency was weakened, there were few calls for his impeachment.
Simpson-Mazzoli Immigration Act
This first major revision of immigration laws since 1965 attempted to establish a fair entry process. It was later amended to expand the number of immigrants admitted, give priority to skilled workers, and unify families.
1987 Montreal environmental protocol
Thirty-four nations agreed to phase out ozone-damaging chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) by 1999.
1988 George Bush elected president
Reagan's vice-president defeated Massachusetts' Democratic governor, Michael Dukakis, in a campaign notable for harsh, negative, sometimes deceptive campaign advertising.
1989 Savings and loan crisis
The collapse of commercial real-estate markets in the late 1980s led to the failure of many savings and loan banks. The government, which had insured S & L deposits, had to make good the losses, which eventually cost taxpayers $150 billion.
Political revolutions in Eastern Europe
Germans demolished the Berlin Wall, as other countries in Eastern Europe broke or substantially loosened their ties with the Soviet Union and sought to reconstruct their political and economic systems.
Although this Supreme Court decision did not overturn Roe v. Wade, it did permit states to restrict abortion and suggested to many the direction in which the increasingly conservative Court was moving on the abortion issue.
1990-1991 Persian Gulf crisis
In response to the invasion and occupation of Kuwait by Iraq in August 1990, President Bush organized a United Nations military mission and, after a spectacularly brief and successful forty-two-day war, forced Iraq to withdraw from Kuwait. The apparently easy victory led to a national euphoria that later faded, in part because economic difficulties persisted.
1990-1992 Recession
This recession was caused by the deficit, the national debt, the savings and loan crisis, and the resulting loss of consumer confidence. Unemployment increased, which caused more Americans to fall below the poverty line. State and local governments were unable to continue to support previous levels of social welfare services and found themselves in difficult economic straits.
1991 Dissolution of Soviet Union ends Cold War
A failed military coup against Mikhail Gorbachev in the USSR led to the collapse of the Soviet system and the breakup of the Soviet Union into several separate republics.
Clarence Thomas-Anita Hill hearings
In hearings to confirm Clarence Thomas as associate justice of the Supreme Court, law professor Anita Hill accused Thomas of having made improper sexual advances while he was her boss. The Senate confirmed Thomas by a narrow margin.
1992 Los Angeles riots
The acquittal of police officers videotaped beating a black motorist led to an outbreak of violence in Los Angeles that lasted for several days, causing many deaths and the destruction of millions of dollars' worth of property.
Earth Summit at Rio de Janeiro
This meeting produced an international agreement on global warming.
Calling for a revitalization of the economy and a new Democratic agenda, Arkansas governor Bill Clinton won the presidency in a three-way race against President George Bush and Texas software billionaire H. Ross Perot. Clinton, forty-six years old when he took office, was the first president of the baby-boom generation.
1993 Family and Medical Leave Act
Clinton signed this bill, after Bush had vetoed it twice, calling for unpaid leave for employees in case of births, adoptions, or medical emergencies in their families.
NAFTA ratified
This agreement (the North American Free Trade Agreement) called for the establishment of a free trade zone covering all of North America. Supported by business, the agreement drew opposition from labor groups fearing low-wage foreign competition for jobs, and from environmentalists concerned with weaker pollution controls in Mexico.
1994 Omnibus Violent Crime Control and Prevention Act
As the economy improved, crime became one of voters' principal concerns. This bill provided for stepped-up law-enforcement funding, crime prevention, and prison construction, for control over the sale and possession of some assault weapons, and for the expansion of the death penalty.
Health care reform fails
Responding to increasing anxiety about rising health care costs, the Clinton administration proposed a complex reform plan. Opposed by pharmaceutical and insurance interests, the plan, developed under the leadership of Hillary Rodham Clinton, failed to pass the Senate.
Republicans gain control of Congress
Continuing political developments begun with the election of Ronald Reagan, the Republicans took control of the House of Representatives for the first time in forty years, and retook control of the Senate they had lost in 1986. Led by Georgia Representative Newt Gingrich, many Republicans came to Washington as ideological revolutionaries but became more pragmatic as time went by. 1995 United States establishes diplomatic relations with Vietnam
In the process of healing the wounds caused by the Vietnam War, relations between these two nations were normalized.
Twenty-fifth anniversary of Earth Day
Environmental activists could celebrate considerable success in reducing pollution in the United States, but recognized that much more needed to be done and increasingly emphasized the global nature of much significant pollution.
U.S. troops enforce peace in Bosnia
Following an American-brokered agreement that was supposed to end three years of ethnic violence, American troops were sent (as part of a NATO force) to Bosnia, once part of Yugoslavia, to serve as peacekeepers.
1996 Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act
Signed by President Clinton after he had previously vetoed two Republican-sponsored welfare reform bills, this act ended federal guarantees of cash assistance to poor families and otherwise dramatically revised federal welfare programs.
Clinton reelected
Clinton won a second term (the first Democrat to do so since FDR) as the Democrats united in the face of Republican control of Congress. With the Republicans themselves divided, Clinton won by emphasizing prosperity on his watch, and by taking credit for welfare reform and reduced budget deficits.
1998-1999 Clinton impeached and acquitted
US intervention in Bosnia and Serbia
Rise of radical Muslim movements and Al Qaeda terrorists
Ch. 31: A Divided Economy, A Divided People, 1980-2000
1980s Rise of “Yuppies” (young urban professionals)
Japan emerges as major economic power
Women enter work force in increasing numbers
Lee Iacocca revives Chrysler Corp.
Bill Gates builds Microsoft, computer use spreads
Immigration of Latinos and Asians expands
Affirmative Action programs challenged
1981 Reagan crushes air controllers’ strike
AIDS epidemic identified
1985 US becomes debtor nation
1989 Savings and Loan scandals
1990s Stocks rebound after 1987 crash
Outsourcing of jobs reflects globalization of economy
Wal-Mart emerges as major economic force
Revolution in personal computer and small electronics
World Wide Web expands
Human Genome Project unravels DNA structure
Deregulation of TV industry
Oppositions grows to immigration and multiculturalism
1991 EU formed
1992 Race riots in Los Angeles
1993 NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement)
1995 WTO (World Trade Organization) created
1998 Battles over gay rights, abortion intensify
Defense of Marriage Act
1999 Protests against WTO begin
2001 Bush admin. Rejects Kyoto Treaty concerning the environment
Ch 32: Into the 21st Century
2000 George W. Bush wins contested presidential election
2001 September 11
Al Queda terrorists attack the World Trade Center, Pentagon,
Military operations against the Taliban in Afghanistan begin
Enron declares bankruptcy
Congress passes the USA Patriot Act
2002 No Child Left Behind becomes law
US defeats Taliban in Afghanistan
Bush declares Ira, North Korea, Iraq “axis of evil”
2003 March, US invades Iraq
Regime of Saddam Hussein collapses
2004 Torture at Abu Ghraib prison becomes public
Bush wins reelection
2005 Hurricane Katrina devastates the Gulf Coast
John Roberts becomes Chief Justice of the Supreme Court
2006 Patriot Act renewed
Bush vetoes stem cell research bill passed by congress
North Korea tests nuclear device
Democratic Party regains control of congress
Continued sectarian violence in Iraq
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