1980 Reagan VS. Carter VS. Anderson

"Podium"

Transcript

Museum of the Moving Image
The Living Room Candidate
"Podium," Reagan, 1980

FEMALE NARRATOR: Women voters invited President Carter to join the 1980 debates. He refused the invitation. Maybe it's because during his Administration inflation has gone as high as 18 percent.

[TEXT: Inflation Up 18%]

[TEXT: 8 1/2 million out of work]

The number of Americans out of work has reached eight and a half million.

[TEXT: Housing starts hit new low.]

Housing starts have hit a new low, while interest rates have hit a new high.

[Interest rates hit new high.]

Maybe he won't debate because he knows the real question is, "Can we afford four more years of this?"

[TEXT: Can you afford 4 more years?]

MALE NARRATOR: The time is now for Reagan. [with TEXT] Reagan for president.

Credits

"Podium," Reagan Bush Committee, 1980

Maker: Campaign '80

Original air date: 09/18/80

Video courtesy of Ronald and Nancy Reagan/Ronald Reagan Presidential Library.

From Museum of the Moving Image, The Living Room Candidate: Presidential Campaign Commercials 1952-2012.
www.livingroomcandidate.org/commercials/1980/podium (accessed June 5, 2025).

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1980 Reagan Carter Anderson Results

On November 4, 1979, a group of Iranian students stormed the American embassy in Tehran. Protesting the entry of the deposed Shah into the United States, they held 53 Americans hostage. For the next twelve months, the hostage situation was an ongoing American nightmare magnified by constant media attention. Confidence in President Carter eroded as a result of the Iran crisis, an oil shortage and resultant increase in gas prices, and 18 percent inflation. Carter’s chances were further damaged by a tough primary battle against Massachusetts Senator Edward Kennedy.

While Carter had been the fresh face of 1976, this year the role of Washington outsider was played by the Republican nominee, Ronald Reagan. A former Hollywood actor who became governor of California in 1966, Reagan made a brief run for the presidency in 1968, and nearly beat Gerald Ford for the Republican nomination in 1976. Reagan’s landslide victory was due not only to Carter’s problems, but also to a demographic shift toward an aging population that was growing more conservative. Carter became the first Democratic incumbent to lose the presidency since Grover Cleveland in 1888. In a further indignity, the Iranians waited until the moment of Reagan’s inauguration to release the hostages.

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