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New Frontier
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All Flashcards in Topic 11.12
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11.12.112 cards
New Frontier
Kennedy's 1961–63 program of ambitious domestic goals (poverty, space, civil rights) — largely blocked in Congress by a conservative coalition.
Great Society
Johnson's 1964–68 expansion of government, including the Civil Rights Act (1964), Voting Rights Act (1965), Medicare/Medicaid, and War on Poverty programs.
Why did LBJ succeed where JFK struggled in Congress?
Johnson was a former Senate majority leader who knew how to pass bills, and he used the emotional aftermath of Kennedy's assassination to push civil rights legislation through quickly.
What was the 1968 Democratic Convention crisis?
Chicago police violently clashed with anti-war protesters on live television, making the party look divided and out of control right before the election.
Nixon's 'Southern Strategy'
Nixon's approach of winning over white southern Democrats angry about civil rights, using coded appeals on crime and states' rights rather than explicit racism.
Watergate scandal — what happened?
In June 1972, burglars linked to Nixon's re-election campaign broke into Democratic Party offices; Nixon then covered it up, which was exposed by journalists and secret Oval Office tapes.
Why did Nixon resign in August 1974?
The Supreme Court forced release of his tapes proving he knew of the cover-up, making impeachment by Congress certain; he resigned rather than face it.
Ford's pardon of Nixon (1974)
Gerald Ford, Nixon's unelected successor, granted him a full pardon so the country could 'heal' — but it was hugely unpopular and likely cost Ford the 1976 election.
Reaganomics
Reagan's (1981–89) economic program of large tax cuts, deregulation, and higher defence spending, based on the idea that growth would 'trickle down' to everyone.
War on Drugs (Reagan era)
Expanded mandatory minimum prison sentences, hitting crack cocaine hardest, dramatically raising incarceration — debated for its impact on poor and Black communities.
Compare Kennedy/Johnson liberalism with Reagan conservatism
Kennedy and Johnson expanded federal government to fight poverty and inequality (1961–69); Reagan reversed course, cutting taxes and government size while expanding policing (1981–89).
Bill Clinton's 1990s presidency
A centrist 'New Democrat' who cut the deficit, reformed welfare (1996), and presided over a tech-driven economic boom, despite being impeached in 1998 (and acquitted).
11.12.212 cards
What were the 9/11 attacks?
On 11 September 2001, al-Qaeda hijackers flew planes into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon; a fourth crashed in Pennsylvania. Nearly 3,000 died — the deadliest attack on US soil.
What was the War on Terror?
Bush's response to 9/11: invading Afghanistan (2001) to remove the Taliban, then Iraq (2003) to topple Saddam Hussein over false WMD claims.
What caused the 2008 financial crisis?
Risky mortgage lending and a housing bubble burst, causing bank collapses like Lehman Brothers — the worst US downturn since the Great Depression.
What was TARP?
The Troubled Asset Relief Program: a $700 billion bank bailout under Bush in 2008, deeply unpopular with ordinary Americans who lost jobs and homes.
What was the Affordable Care Act (2010)?
Obama's healthcare law expanding insurance coverage to millions; passed with zero Republican votes, becoming a lasting symbol of partisan division.
How did Trump's 2020 election loss affect US politics?
Trump refused to concede and falsely claimed fraud; on 6 January 2021 his supporters stormed the Capitol trying to block certification of Biden's win.
What did Lester Pearson achieve for Canadian social policy?
As PM (1963-68) he introduced universal Medicare (from 1966) and the Canada Pension Plan, building the modern Canadian welfare state.
What was the Official Languages Act (1969)?
Pearson's law making English and French equal official languages across the Canadian federal government, aimed at addressing Quebec nationalism.
What was the October Crisis (1970)?
The FLQ kidnapped a diplomat and murdered a Quebec minister; Trudeau invoked the War Measures Act, sending troops into Quebec and suspending civil liberties.
What did patriation of the Constitution (1982) achieve?
Trudeau brought Canada's constitution home from Britain and added the Charter of Rights and Freedoms — but Quebec's government never signed it.
Compare Meech Lake (1987-90) and Charlottetown (1992).
Both were Mulroney's attempts to bring Quebec into the constitution. Meech Lake failed when two provinces missed the ratification deadline; Charlottetown was rejected by voters in a national referendum.
Why did the Progressive Conservative Party collapse in 1993?
Anger over free trade, the new GST, and failed constitutional accords under Mulroney; the party fell from 156 to just 2 seats as Reform and the Bloc Quebecois split its vote.
11.12.312 cards
What was the Quiet Revolution?
Quebec's rapid transformation (starting 1960) from a conservative, Church-run society into a secular, modern welfare state, led by Premier Jean Lesage's Liberal government.
What triggered the shift to Quebec nationalism after the Quiet Revolution?
Once the Church's grip weakened, many Québécois asked why the province, not just its churches, could not run its own affairs — nationalism grew from cultural pride into a political demand for autonomy or independence.
What was the FLQ?
The Front de libération du Québec, a small radical group formed in 1963 that used bombings and kidnappings to try to force Quebec's independence from Canada.
What happened in the October Crisis of 1970?
FLQ cells kidnapped British diplomat James Cross and Quebec minister Pierre Laporte; Laporte was murdered. PM Trudeau invoked the War Measures Act, suspending civil liberties and sending troops into Quebec.
What was the political effect of the October Crisis?
It discredited violent separatism. Quebec nationalists shifted almost entirely toward the ballot box, boosting the newly formed Parti Québécois, which won power in 1976.
What happened in Quebec's 1980 and 1995 referendums?
Both asked Quebecers to approve negotiating sovereignty. 1980 lost decisively (about 60% No); 1995 came within about 1 percentage point (50.6% No to 49.4% Yes) — separatism's closest brush with success.
How did the Conservative Party of Canada emerge?
In 2003 the right-of-centre Progressive Conservatives merged with the western-based Canadian Alliance to form one united Conservative Party, ending decades of vote-splitting on the right.
What was the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC)?
A body launched in 2008 to document the harm done by Canada's residential school system, which forcibly removed Indigenous children from their families for over a century; it delivered 94 Calls to Action in 2015.
How did the 2008 financial crisis affect Canada compared to the USA?
Canada's banks, more tightly regulated, avoided major collapses; under PM Stephen Harper, Canada ran deficit-spending stimulus but recovered faster and with less damage than the US.
Compare Jean Chrétien and Stephen Harper's approaches to government.
Chrétien (Liberal, 1993–2003) cut deficits sharply and kept Canada out of the Iraq War; Harper (Conservative, 2006–15) cut taxes, took a harder foreign-policy line, and centralized power in the PM's office.
What is Justin Trudeau best known for domestically (2015–2020 period)?
A gender-balanced cabinet, legalizing cannabis (2018), continuing reconciliation efforts with Indigenous peoples, and a more socially liberal, internationalist tone than Harper's government.
Why is the Quiet Revolution significant for Canadian federalism?
It turned Quebec from Canada's most traditional province into a modern, assertive one demanding special status or independence — a challenge to Canadian unity that persists into the 21st century.
Topic 11.12 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Political developments in the USA and Canada (1960–2020)
History (2028+) exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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