1988 Bush VS. Dukakis

"1982 Noriega"

Transcript

Museum of the Moving Image
The Living Room Candidate
"1982 Noriega," Dukakis, 1988

[TEXT: 1982]

MALE NARRATOR: 1982. George Bush was made responsible for stopping drug traffic from coming into this country.

[TEXT: 1988]

MALE NARRATOR: What happened? Cocaine traffic up three hundred percent. More drugs in our classrooms. And Panamanian drug-lord Noriega kept on the government payroll.

[TEXT: THE BUSH RECORD]

MALE NARRATOR: That's the bush record on fighting drugs. And now George Bush wants to put Dan Quayle in charge for the next four years.

[TEXT: VICE-PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE: OCTOBER 5, 1988]

QUAYLE: I'm going to be coordinating the drug effort.

MALE NARRATOR [and TEXT]: DAN QUAYLE IN CHARGE OF FIGHTING DRUGS IN AMERICA?

MALE NARRATOR: If George Bush couldn't handle the job, how do you think Dan Quayle's going to do?

Credits

"1982 Noriega," Dukakis, 1988

Video courtesy of Northeastern University Libraries, Michael Dukakis Presidential Campaign Records.

From Museum of the Moving Image, The Living Room Candidate: Presidential Campaign Commercials 1952-2012.
www.livingroomcandidate.org/commercials/1988/1982-noriega (accessed May 13, 2025).

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1988 Bush Dukakis Results

Ronald Reagan—the first president since Eisenhower to serve two full terms—had presided over a renewed national optimism, but there were dark clouds on the horizon as his presidency drew to a close. The federal deficit was soaring out of control. The revelation that profits from American sales of weapons to Iran were illegally routed to the Nicaraguan contras spawned a major scandal. Wall Street was in turmoil following several insider-trading scandals and the October 1987 stock market collapse. The stage was set for one of the most bitter presidential campaigns in recent history: Vice President George Bush, who portrayed himself as the rightful heir to the Reagan revolution, versus Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis, who offered a traditionally Democratic vision of increased government spending on health care, child care, education, and housing. The Bush campaign used brutal television advertising to portray Dukakis as an ineffective liberal who would gut the country’s defense system and let convicted murderers out of prison. Hoping voters would dismiss the attacks as unfair, Dukakis refused to counterattack until late in the campaign. By then it was too late.