On July 15, 1979, amid inflation and long lines at the gas pump, Jimmy Carter made an economic plea to the American people.
President Joe Biden performed the eulogy of former President Jimmy Carter on Thursday at the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C. Just 11 days until the end of his presidency, Biden spoke of the ...
The vice president paid tribute to Carter during his lying in state ceremony at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, in a speech remembering the late leader’s sincerity and dedication to ...
America mourns and remembers former president Jimmy Carter today ... Finally, in the last section of the speech, Carter laid out what he said he wanted to do in response. He argued that of ...
In his announcement speech for his presidential run, in 1974, Georgia Governor Jimmy Carter said there were things he would not do to become President: "I would not tell a lie. I would not mislead ...
Jimmy Carter, who died on Sunday at 100 ... But his most memorable appearance is surely his Malaise speech (so-called, though he never used the word in his text), on July 15, 1979.
The crowd roared, stymieing the opening words of an awkward statesman from Georgia who stood before the Democratic National ...
A series of recent historical studies have sought to sanitize the many failures of Carter's presidential term by arguing that ...
The news of Carter’s death today at the age of 100 will no doubt resurrect the memory of this infamous address, the “malaise” ...
Jimmy Carter was the perfect candidate for 1976, columnist George Skelton writes, and he was an exceptional ex-president. In between? That's the problem.
The official state funeral in Washington, DC for former President Jimmy Carter will be held on January 9, the White House confirmed Monday.
As the only FFA member to become a president of the United States, Jimmy Carter’s legacy extends far into the world of agriculture education and leadership.