Event Event 1980–1982

Reagan Election (1980)

Ronald Reagan's 1980 presidential victory. The first electoral proof that the Christian right's voter mobilization strategy worked.

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Ronald Reagan's 1980 victory over Jimmy Carter — himself a born-again Southern Baptist — was the Christian right's debut as a decisive political force. Reagan had little personal religious conviction and had signed liberal abortion legislation as California governor. But he spoke the language. At the National Affairs Briefing in Dallas (1980), Reagan told a crowd of 15,000 evangelical leaders: 'I know you can't endorse me, but I want you to know that I endorse you.' The Moral Majority registered millions of voters and ran get-out-the-vote operations that delivered white evangelical turnout crucial to Reagan's margin. The alliance was transactional from both sides: Reagan got votes; evangelical leaders got access, appointments, and the language of Christian America as official policy.

Documented themes

  • Christian Nationalism
  • Political Strategy
  • Anti-Democratic

Connections from Reagan Election (1980)

  • influencedJames Dobson (1980) — Reagan's 1980 election transformed James Dobson's relationship to political power. Before 1980, Dobson had maintained some distance from direct partisan politics, framing Focus on the Family as a family-advice ministry rather than a political organization. Reagan's election — and the White House access it provided to Religious Right leaders — pulled Dobson into the political sphere. He served on a Reagan-era White House task force on the family. The election demonstrated that evangelical mobilization could win the presidency, which gave Dobson both the institutional confidence and the political incentive to make FOTF an increasingly explicit political actor through the 1980s and 1990s. By the time Dobson founded the Family Research Council as FOTF's Washington policy arm, the political transformation Reagan's election had enabled was complete.
  • triggeredReagan Restores Bob Jones Tax Exemption (1982) — Reagan's 1980 election — delivered in significant part by evangelical voters mobilized around the IRS enforcement against Christian schools — created the political obligation to reverse the Bob Jones University tax exemption revocation. In January 1982, the Reagan administration announced it would restore the tax exemption of Bob Jones University and Goldsboro Christian Schools, overriding the IRS policy. The move was a direct repayment of the political debt Reagan owed to the Religious Right constituencies who had organized around this issue. It was also the most explicit demonstration of what the evangelical-Republican alliance meant in practice: electoral support would be rewarded with policy reversals that benefited Religious Right institutions.

Connections to Reagan Election (1980)

  • Heritage Foundation influenced (1980) — Heritage's 1980 Mandate for Leadership provided the policy framework for the Reagan campaign and incoming administration.
  • Moral Majority influenced (1980) — The Moral Majority registered millions of evangelical voters and ran get-out-the-vote operations critical to Reagan's 1980 margin.
  • The Southern Strategy influenced (1980) — Ronald Reagan launched his 1980 general election campaign not in a major city but in Philadelphia, Mississippi — the site where civil rights workers James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner were murdered by Klan members with local law enforcement complicity in 1964. His opening speech endorsed 'states' rights.' This was not a geographic coincidence or an innocuous policy phrase. Philadelphia, Mississippi had no strategic electoral significance. 'States' rights' was the language of segregationist resistance to federal civil rights enforcement. The choice of location and language was a deliberate signal to the white Southern constituency the Southern Strategy had been cultivating since 1968: the Republican Party understood their grievances and would not actively oppose them. The Moral Majority, built from the same white Southern evangelical constituency, had already registered millions of those voters. Reagan's campaign fused the Southern Strategy's racial appeal with the Religious Right's moral-cultural framing — the two streams of white Southern backlash politics completing their merger in a single candidacy. He carried every former Confederate state.

Sources

  • Jesus and John Wayne — Kristin Kobes Du Mez (2020), pp. 105-115
  • Thy Kingdom Come — Randall Balmer (2006), pp. 30-42