Why do you think most Americans went along with Eisenhowers conservative approach to domestic policy?

journal article

A Perfect (Free-Market) World? Economics, the Eisenhower Administration, and the Soviet Economic Offensive in Latin America

Diplomatic History

Vol. 32, No. 5 (NOVEMBER 2008)

, pp. 841-868 (28 pages)

Published By: Oxford University Press

//www.jstor.org/stable/24915962

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Journal Information

Diplomatic History is the official journal of Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations (SHAFR). The journal appeals to readers from a wide variety of disciplines, including American studies, international economics, American history, national security studies, and Latin-American, Asian, African, European, and Middle Eastern studies.

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Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide. OUP is the world's largest university press with the widest global presence. It currently publishes more than 6,000 new publications a year, has offices in around fifty countries, and employs more than 5,500 people worldwide. It has become familiar to millions through a diverse publishing program that includes scholarly works in all academic disciplines, bibles, music, school and college textbooks, business books, dictionaries and reference books, and academic journals.

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Why do you think most Americans went along with Eisenhower conservative approach to domestic policy?

Why do you think most Americans went along with Eisenhower's conservative approach to domestic policy? Americans went along with Eisenhower's conservative approach because they wanted everything to return to normal. After WW2 they didn't want to worry about any possibility of war.

What was President Eisenhower's domestic policy?

In domestic affairs, Eisenhower supported a policy of "modern Republicanism" that occupied a middle ground between liberal Democrats and the conservative wing of the Republican Party. Eisenhower continued New Deal programs, expanded Social Security, and prioritized a balanced budget over tax cuts.

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