American Decades
National Politics: Republican Nomination Race 1980
Reagan Emerges Early.
Former California governor Ronald Reagan quickly became the front-runner in a crowded pack of Republican presidential hopefuls that also included Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr. of Tennessee, former UN ambassador and CIA head George Bush of Texas, Congressman John B. Anderson of Illinois, former Texas governor John B. Connally, and Sen. Robert J. Dole of Kansas. After beating Reagan by 33,530 to 31,348 votes in the Iowa precinct caucuses on 21 January 1980, Bush claimed to have the "Big Mo" (momentum) in his favor, but his campaign stalled in New Hampshire. He hurt his image when he supported the Nashua Telegraph plan to limit the debate it sponsored to the two front-runners, believing quite rightly that it was not to his advantage to split his targets and appear to be at odds with other moderates. Also realizing the problems such a debate would cause Bush, Reagan invited the others to join in the debate,...
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1980's Government and Politics
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Topics in the News
- The Cold War
- The Cold War: Thaw
- The Cold War: Third World Woes
- The Middle East
- The Middle East, Central America, and the Iran-Contra Scandal
- National Politics: Republican Nomination Race 1980
- National Politics: Democratic Nomination Race 1980
- National Politics: 1980 Elections
- National Politics: 1982 Elections
- National Politics: Republican Nomination Race 1984
- National Politics: Democratic Nomination Race 1984
- National Politics: 1984 Elections
- National Politics: 1986 Elections
- National Politics: Democratic Nomination Race 1988
- National Politics: Republican Nomination Race 1988
- The New Right
- Reaganomics
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Government and Politics, 1980–1989
