Rebecca Klatch’s A Generation Divided, a book in which she asserts that the Right reasserted itself on American Campuses alongside the left. The “new left” of the 1960s continues to dominate American public memory. This liberal movement made up of students that lacked the intellectual underpinnings of previous liberal, leftist movements. Students for a Democratic Society, or SDS, formed in 1960, but released the Port Huron Statement in 1962. Simultaneously, the right was also repositioning itself. In 1960, William F. Buckley hosted a group of young conservatives at his home in Connecticut. They proposed the “Sharon” statement, which pushed for free markets as a cornerstone of democracy. Thus the Young Americans for Freedom was born. Former YAF members reached power with the presidency of Richard M. Nixon and later within Reagan’s administration. So the question remains: If these groups grew up in the same decade of conformity, why did they choose such divergent political paths?
Klatch revisited former SDSers during the 1990s and discovers that many maintain the ideals of their youth.
SDSers focused on – Vietnam, Civil Rights,
YAFers focused on – Barry Goldwater, the Rise of Reagan
The “new right” was not formed from a reaction to SDSers or the New Left; their most important political documents, the Port Huron Statement and the Sharron Statement, were both drafted in 1960.The extremes of Vietnam and Government responses to protests—which often turned violent—moved some member of both the YAF and the SDS further to the extreme polls of their political spectrum (libertarians).