De-Reaganization

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De-Reaganization refers to a period of time following the Presidency of Ronald Reagan when insiders and big wigs of the Republican Party disavowed conservatism and returned to an era of big government.

Some blame de-Reaganization, led by President George H.W. Bush,[1] as responsible for the defeat of the Republican Party in 1992 and the rise of the modern extreme left Democrat Party.[2]

The term De-Reaganization has at time been misused by media cohorts eager to promote the Republican Establishment's cause.[3]

See also

References

  1. https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/how-george-h-w-bushs-broken-no-new-taxes-pledge-changed-american-politics-and-policy-forever
  2. "This is apparent in both the rhetoric and content of the Democratic platform of 1992, with New Democrat Bill Clinton as the presidential candidate. The platform fully indulged in the rhetoric of revolution, much like Reagan. Denouncing a 12-year "nightmare of Republican irresponsibility and neglect" that had led, among other things, to an explosion of poverty and a "mountain of public debt," the platform called for nothing less than "a revolution in government" (Democratic Party 1). "The Revolution of 1992 is about a radical change in the way government operates"
    The Imaginary Reagan Revolution: On the Conservative Undermining of Radical Left-Wing Discourse, Bradley Smith, Transatlantica, January 2017.
  3. The de-Reaganization of the Republican Party