Rhetorical Analysis Of Jimmy Carter Speech At The National Convention

650 Words3 Pages

President Carter gave this acceptance speech at the Democratic National Convention on July 15, 1976. He was accepting the party’s nomination for president. The tone of his speech was optimistic and encouraging. President Carter said that “this will be the year we give the government… back to the people. ” This had to be inspiring to his Democratic audience because of the recent illegal actions of President Richard Nixon. Jimmy Carter was optimistic when he told his audience “our nation’s best [years] are still ahead.” He also made many promises of what he would accomplish while president. Carter promised to evolve the government into an “efficient, economical, purposeful, and manageable government.” He planned to do this by stripping away the …show more content…

This had to be an optimistic outlook for Americans because they had experienced the secrecy of the Nixon administration and high spending on the Vietnam War. Carter assured the people at the convention that he would invest “in people and not in buildings and weapons,” which also had to be inspiring to a country who kept spending money on the nuclear weapons arms race with the USSR. Finally, he was optimistic about what America could become during his presidency. Carter said that “we can have an America that provides excellence in education…, encourages ethnic diversity…, and an American government that does not spy on its own people.” To the Democrats at the National Convention, Carter’s speech was optimistic, a total turnaround from the days of Presidents Nixon and Ford.
When he spoke