While you wait. The Impeachment Process

Similar documents
Modern Presidents: President Nixon

CHAPTER 26 THE UNITED STATES IN TODAY S WORLD

Guided Reading Activity 32-1

CHAPTER 29 & 30. Mr. Muller - APUSH

Unit 7 Station 2: Conflict, Human Rights Issues, and Peace Efforts. Name: Per:

The 80 s The 90 s.. And beyond..

Bush, Clinton, Bush, & Obama Administrations

This is the End? Last Two Weeks

10 Defining Moments of

SSUSH25 The student will describe changes in national politics since 1968.

Section 1: The Conservative Movement Grows

The Clinton Presidency

Was Ronald Reagan s Vice-President for eight years Pledged to continue much of Reagan s economic, domestic, and foreign policy commitments Famous

The Conservative Tide

Modern World History

The 1990s and the New Millennium

Before National Politics Reagan the Actor. He was a Hollywood film star and he knew how to use television as no president before him.

Bush (41):

104 Reagan to the Present Presentation.notebook May 17, 2016

The Clinton Years. Clinton s Agenda

THE UNITED STATES IN THE MODERN WORLD

Period 9 Notes. Coach Hoshour

After the Cold War. Europe and North America Section 4. Main Idea

President Reagan ran as a conservative alternative to President Carter. Reagan, a former actor, had previously served as the governor of California.

President William Jefferson Clinton

CLINTON FOREIGN POLICY

Citizenship Just the Facts.Civics Learning Goals for the 4th Nine Weeks.

Georgia Studies. Unit 7: Modern Georgia and Civil Rights. Lesson 3: Georgia in Recent History. Study Presentation

Section 3. The Collapse of the Soviet Union

Clinton Administration. Election of Election 1992 Con t 4/30/13

The End of Communism: China, Soviet Union & Socialist Bloc A P W O R L D H I S T O R Y C H A P T E R 3 1 B

Name Class Date. A Conservative Era Section 1

THE UNITED STATES IN THE MILLENNIAL GENERATION

CHAPTER 41 Resurgence of Conservatism,

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons

Undergraduate Student 5/16/2004 COMM/POSC Assignment #4 Presidential Radio Speech: U.S.-Russian Peacekeeping Cooperation in Bosnia

netw rks Reading Essentials and Study Guide Politics and Economics, Lesson 3 Ford and Carter

The Rise of the New Right

WATERGATE. In 1972, Nixon ran for reelection.

Post-Cold War USAF Operations

Clinton & The New Democrats

U.S. NATIONAL SECURITY POLICY AND STRATEGY,

Democratic majority in Congress. No political mandate (43% of popular vote)

Richard Millhouse Nixon Years 37th President of the United States from 1969 to 1974

Objectives: Before the Presidency 1980 Election

Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation & Institute National Defense Survey


The Presidents Presidential Powers

PEW RESEARCH CENTER FOR THE PEOPLE & THE PRESS MARCH 1999 NEWS INTEREST INDEX FINAL TOPLINE March 24-30, 1999 N=1,786

World History Chapter 23 Page Reading Outline

Review for U.S. History test tomorrow

Reading Essentials and Study Guide A New Era Begins. Lesson 2 Western Europe and North America


4/14/16. Essen%al Ques%on: How did the events of the Clinton years ( ) shape American history?

Unit 8. 5th Grade Social Studies Cold War Study Guide. Additional study material and review games are available at at

Name Date History 12 Bush & Clinton s Domestic & Foreign Policies

President Jimmy Carter

SSUSH22 Analyze U.S. international and domestic policies including their influences on technological advancements and social changes during the

AP Civics Chapter 17 Notes Foreign and Defense Policy: Protecting the American Way

Chapter 34 Crisis, Realignment, and the Dawn of the Post Cold War World

Post-Cold War Era- Today. 1990s-2000s

Domestic Crises

Before National Politics Reagan the Actor. He was a Hollywood film star and he knew how to use television as no president before him.

World History (Survey) Restructuring the Postwar World, 1945 Present

SSUSH22 Analyze U.S. international and domestic policies including their influences on technological advancements and social changes during the

AMERICAN PAGEANT CHAPTER 41. America Confronts the Post-Cold War Era

Period 9 Essential TEKS Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills Correlation to APUSH Unit 9 (Period 9 of College Board Framework)

American History: The Election of 1988

Samples from Exploring History Through Primary Sources: American Presidents

5.1d- Presidential Roles

Chapter 31: The End of the Cold War and the Challenge of Economic Development and Immigration,

The Triumph of Conservatism, Nixon s Domestic Policy

Con!:,rressional Research Service The Library of Congress

SSUSH25. Key Supreme Court Cases and the US Presidents from Nixon-Bush. The Last PowerPoint presentation of the semester

MODERN AMERICA now

Recognizing the problem/agenda setting: ormulating the policy: Adopting the policy: Implementing the policy: Evaluating the policy: ECONOMIC POLICY

The World Since 1945 (1945 Present) Part I: Multiple-Choice Questions

Remarks of Andrew Kohut to The Senate Foreign Relations Committee Hearing: AMERICAN PUBLIC DIPLOMACY IN THE ISLAMIC WORLD FEBRUARY 27, 2003

Chapter Summary. Section 1: The Computer and Technology Revolutions. Section 2: The Clinton Presidency

Introduction to the Cold War

The Nixon Presidency

B. Reagan s anti-government message regarding: size of government, budget, taxes

Gerald R. Ford ( )

American History 2 - Unit 7 Test

Conflict in the 21 st Century

netw rks Reading Essentials and Study Guide The Resurgence of Conservatism, Lesson 2 The Reagan Years

PEW RESEARCH CENTER FOR THE PEOPLE & THE PRESS AUGUST 1998 NEWS INTEREST INDEX FINAL TOPLINE July 29 - August 2, 1998 N = 1,189

Alan Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY 13/e. Chapter Thirty-one: From The Age of Limits to the Age of Reagan

UNIT 9 NOTES PRESENT

Conservative Revolution

Standard: SS6H3 Explain conflict and change in Europe.

SETTING THE STAGE. News in Review December 2012 Teacher Resource Guide U.S. ELECTION: OBAMA RE ELECTED. Check It Out

Democracy. How does democracy work? What challenges has Brazil faced? Case Study: Latin American Democracies BEFORE YOU READ AS YOU READ

Lessons of Vietnam/Recent International Relations Pacing Guide

Section 1: Nixon and the Watergate Scandal

Geog 123: Introduction to Globalization: Fall Exam 1: answer all of the following questions.

The Nixon Presidency

CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT: RIGHTING A NATION ADRIFT: AMERICA IN THE 1970s AND 1980s READING AND STUDY GUIDE

World War I. The Great War, The War to End All Wars

Transcription:

While you wait The Impeachment Process After watching the video clip, send me a K-mail answering the following question. You will hear back from me regarding your answers a little later. http://viewpure.com/o_mi4uqjjvc 1. Define impeachment and briefly explain the process.

President Bush greeting Gulf War soldiers. President Clinton and King Hussein of Jordan look on as Yasser Arafat, left, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu shake hands. Unit 12, Lesson 7 Two More Presidents

Which U.S. President was a World War II Navy pilot and a genuine war hero? Which President of the United States played the saxophone and at one time had considered a career as a musician? This same president was a Rhodes Scholar, a Yale graduate, and a former governor. Today you ll learn more about our 41st and 42nd U.S. Presidents. Where we re headed

Identify U.S. Presidents who served between the years 1974 and 2012 (Lessons 4-7). Identify major events that occurred during President Bush s administration. Recognize what is meant by the end of the Cold War. Identify the causes and results of the Gulf War. Describe with examples Bill Clinton s achievements and failures. Explain the purpose and process of impeachment. Objectives for this lesson:

George H.W. Bush Mini Biography http://www.biography.com/people/georgehw-bush-38066#awesm=~ochsgnjdopjhrh

The title of Chapter 60 is The End of the Cold War. What do you think is the meaning of this phrase?

In, the Soviet Union broke into pieces. Yes, the Soviet Union, the the land we called Russia a nation composed of many states fell apart. The Soviet Union s power didn t collapse. Communism did. As a system, communism had failed. It had begun with high hopes as a visionary experiment. The experiment hadn t worked. It had turned Russia into an unfree,, clumsy nation. Karl economic ideas hadn t worked, either. Government ownership of land and products didn t bring efficiency and productivity. Finally, the burden of ever-growing needs helped wreck Russia s economy. (Trying to keep up with the Reagan-era military might have helped do it.) Page 270

When the Russian people had had enough, they just threw communism out. It was stunning; it was peaceful; it meant that everything had changed in the world s politics. The War was over. It was hard to believe. Now that Russia was a nation, there was no giant to battle. At first we didn t seem to know what to do. Page 270 In 1989, the Soviet Union fell apart a momentous event symbolized by the removal of this statue of Vladimir Lenin, the founder of Russian communism.

But it was becoming clear to most people that we are all passengers on the same global spaceship. The European nations had joined together to form a Common Market called the Union. They began acting economically as if they were one giant nation. Japan was a major economic power. like South Korea, China, India, and Indonesia were making big moves in business. The world s economies were all becoming linked, as nations that had once been communist began to change to market economies economies with little government control. Page 271

When thousands of Chinese students demonstrated and raised a statue of the Goddess of Democracy in Tiananmen Square in the capital of China, the government broke up the demonstrations and killed many of the rebels. Tank Man, or the Unknown Rebel, is the nickname of an anonymous man who stood in front of a column of Chinese tanks the morning after the Chinese military forcibly removed protesters from in and around Beijing's Tiananmen Square on June 5, 1989. The man achieved widespread international recognition due to the videotape and photographs taken of the incident. Page 271 People all over the world wanted. When students in China rebelled against their corrupt government, they paraded around with a statue of the Goddess of Democracy modeled after our Statue of. The Chinese government sent troops, who opened fire on civilians in Beijing s Square. Many students were killed.

What was happening? Page 271 The fall of communism was giving oppressed peoples everywhere an of possibilities. It gave us a new of our freedoms. Ronald Reagan championed those freedoms worldwide, but it was the president, Republican George Bush, who was able to take us in a direction.

Bush was a practical fellow with a low-key manner and an ability to tackle details. The son of a Connecticut senator, Bush was the youngest pilot in the navy during World War and a genuine war hero. After the war, he moved west to Texas and became an oilman. But it was government that fascinated him, and he served in a series of important jobs right up to the vice presidency under Ronald Reagan. In, he became president himself. Page 271

He promised. But all those years of war preparation had been hard on us as well as on Russia. Bush became president at a time when were in decay, were behind those of many other nations, was epidemic, and the huge national was making many Americans fearful of the future. So President Bush worked out an agreement with which was controlled by a Democratic Party majority to raise. It may have helped restrain the debt and thus take a step toward that was coming; it didn t help George Bush with the American people. But his foreign policy did win approval. Page 271-272

As president, George Bush promised not to raise taxes. Then why did he make an agreement with Congress to raise taxes? Page 271

Saddam Hussain A U.S. F-117A, known as the stealth fighter. When Saddam, dictator of Iraq, sent troops into neighboring and took over that nation, Bush led a forceful response. The United States, with the United Nations, stopped Hussein s aggression in the powerful, short Gulf War. U.S. Marines advance during the ground war in Operation Desert Storm. Page 272

Page 272 President Bush led a response (from August 1990 to February 1991) that would be known as the First Gulf War, or Operation Storm. Working with the United Nations, the president put together a coalition of nations that quickly drove out of Kuwait. Air strikes on well-defined targets were coordinated with an effective ground force that raced through Kuwait and into southern Iraq.

Page 272-273 President Bush and his military advisers achieved their goal: an Kuwait. But they resisted pressure to capture and remove Saddam Hussein for two reasons., they thought, was an even more dangerous threat than Iraq and a strong Iraq was necessary to contain Iran. And the second reason for holding back? They understood that occupation of a defeated would be costly and dangerous. Some criticized President Bush for that decision, because it left Saddam Hussein in power in Iraq.

What were the causes and results of the Gulf War? (Pages 272-273)

The next time President Bush called out American forces, it was to help starving people in. That nation, which elbows out into the Indian Ocean from the east coast of Africa, was in a state of crisis. Crops failed. Armed thugs were terrorizing and killing. There was no effective. Our marines brought food and some help. We worked with the. Our aim was to make a whole-world venture. Page 273

Why did Bush send American forces into Somalia? (Page 273)

But good intentions don t always matter. In the former Eastern European nation of Yugoslavia which had been split into several different nations, some of them claiming the same land Serbs and Croats and Muslims began killing each other, partly because their were different. That horrendous war, with ethnic cleansing or mass killings, finally ended with an agreement negotiated in Dayton, Ohio, in 1995. A Serbian woman grieves in a makeshift cemetery during the ethnic and religious civil war in the former Yugoslavia. In the face of such calamities, we started asking ourselves some hard questions: does the United States have a to try to solve the problems of other nations? Is it done best with armies or with negotiators? Or should we concentrate on creating a just society at home and hope that the rest of the world will take notice? Page 273

William Jefferson Clinton Mini Biography Page 274 http://www.biography.com/people/billclinton-9251236#awesm=~oci08gk1z1uqjl

That a small-town boy from one of the poorest of states could make it to the nation s top job is what America is all about. William Jefferson Clinton, from Hope, Arkansas, became our president and, at the age of 46, the third-youngest in American history. He was the first president in 12 years. Few men have arrived at the presidency with a background to match Clinton s. A graduate of Georgetown University s School of Foreign Service, he had been a Rhodes scholar at Oxford University in England, received a law degree from Yale University, and for 12 years served as of Arkansas. Everywhere he left an impression of vigor, compassion, and astonishing ability along with troublesome stories of about-faces under pressure from wealthy interests and other less-thanprincipled actions. Page 274

Bill Clinton, seen here with his wife, Hillary, proved to be a brilliant campaigner who could connect with people of all backgrounds. The woman who would become Clinton s wife, Hillary Rodham, also awed people with her intellect and ability. As a lawyer, she held a series of jobs where her intensity and intelligence made her stand out. She served on the legal staff that investigated. She devoted much of her career to issues of health and child care. With Bill Clinton, she became half of an incredible political partnership. Page 274

What kind of president was Bill Clinton? For a Democratic president, he pursued many goals most often associated with. He cut, put more on the streets, built, stepped up the war on, expanded the penalty, and, after passage of a deficit reduction bill (without any Republican votes), the budget. For the first time in years, instead of a budget deficit, the country had a! All that helped bring about a stock-market surge, low unemployment, minimal inflation, and general. But Clinton was unable to get insurance for all Americans, or change the way we paid for political campaigns, or do much for schools. The gap between the rich and the middle class grew. Page 274-275

In affairs, the Clinton administration brought warring parties from Serbia, Croatia, and Bosnia to Dayton, Ohio, where they sat down and agreed to stop killing each other. Former president Jimmy Carter was sent to Haiti and helped that impoverished island get its first fairly elected president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, into office. In the Middle East, Clinton helped negotiate agreements between Israel and its Arab neighbors. In Ireland, where Protestants and Catholics had been fighting for centuries, the administration again acted as a mediator in the effort to achieve a historic peace agreement. Trade treaties lowering tariffs and bolstering international free trade were negotiated by the administration and ratified by Congress. And Clinton made a historic trip to China, where he charmed the Chinese with his willingness to answer hard questions. President Clinton arrives in Bosnia to spend Christmas with American troops stationed there. President Clinton brought Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin (left) and PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat together for a historic handshake after the signing of the Israeli-PLO peace accord at the White House in 1993. Not since the Camp David accords of 1978 had people felt such hope for peace in the Middle East Page 275

Despite his gifts of unusual intelligence and charm, Bill Clinton threw away the chance to be a president. Clinton s presidency, begun with so much promise, turned into a personal and national disaster. Even before he took office, Bill Clinton was accused of all kinds of wrongdoing. A special prosecutor was appointed to investigate questions about a real-estate investment (called ) in Arkansas that Clinton had made while he was that state s governor. The special prosecutor who ignored long-cherished legal traditions (such as the privacy of lawyer-and-client confidences) found no evidence of connected with Whitewater, but he did find Clinton s flaw. Page 276

Bill Clinton was president when television and films were bombarding us with images that had once been seen only in private. In the past we hadn t known much about the lives of politicians, but by Clinton s time the media were spreading opinions and information (and misinformation) everywhere and quickly. In the case of President William Jefferson Clinton, we learned details of his private life that no one wanted to know. The special prosecutor and the press went far beyond the bounds of legal necessity in describing the president s relations with a woman who worked in the White House. When faced with disturbing accusations about his personal life, Clinton was not. He to the American public and he lied to members of his administration. He wounded himself, his family, and the nation. Page 276 A humbled President Clinton vows to complete his term after the House of Representatives voted to impeach him. He was later acquitted of the impeachment charges by the Senate.

In December 1998, Bill Clinton was in the House of Representatives. Why? He was charged with sexual misconduct. However, in the Senate trial that followed, the president was found not to have committed. His private behavior was not deemed a constitutional offense (no matter how inappropriate). It was an example of constitutional at work. Page 276 A humbled President Clinton vows to complete his term after the House of Representatives voted to impeach him. He was later acquitted of the impeachment charges by the Senate.

Give some examples of goals that President Bill Clinton achieved during his presidency, goals that he was unable to achieve, and failures of his presidency. (Page 274)

Article II, Section 4 Step 1 is Grounds for Impeachment Phase. Step 2 is Phase 1. Steps 3 & 4 are part of Phase 2. Step 5 is the Penalty Phase.

Explain the purpose and process of impeachment. Bill Clinton was impeached, but he was not removed from the office of president. Why? (Page 276)

The impeachment process:

Research online Presidents George H.W. Bush and William Clinton. Collect information from The New Book of Knowledge, Grolier s online encyclopedia, and from other websites (A good source would be the presidential libraries). Complete Time Line sheet for each president. Be sure to include the following information: Personal Characteristics/Background Major Contributions Major Failures Domestic Policies/Activities Foreign Policies/Activities When finished, compare your answers with the ones in the Lesson Answer Key. B. Research

Homework Review pages 270-276 and answer questions 1-6 in your Student Guide pages. B. Research Complete the Presidential Time Line sheets for Presidents Bush and Clinton by doing research online. C. Use What You Know Complete the Presidential Clues sheet to see how much you remember about the presidents who served between 1974 and 2000. Check your answers with those in the Lesson Answer Key. Complete Unit 12, Lesson 7 Assessment. Tomorrow you will use maps to locate areas of major U.S. military involvement, and that have experienced major political changes since 1975.