America is back
"America is back" is a catchphrase and political slogan used by a variety of United States presidents and other political leaders to assert a return to American prosperity or engagement after their election.
- Reagan administration
- The "America is back" slogan was used during the presidency of Ronald Reagan to represent the theme of American economic recovery and Reagan invoked the phrase during his 1984 State of the Union Address.[1][2] It later became a Reagan-Bush campaign motto during the 1984 U.S. presidential election.[2]
- George W. Bush administration
- The phrase was used by Arnold Schwarzenegger during his speech to the 2004 Republican National Convention, who declared that "Ladies and gentlemen, America is back!",[3]
- Obama administration
- Susan Rice used it during a February 23, 2009 NPR interview about her recent appointment as Permanent Representative of the United States of America to the United Nations.[4] Hillary Clinton used it in speeches while serving as United States Secretary of State during the presidency of Barack Obama.[4] Obama himself invoked it during his 2012 State of the Union address.[5]
- First Trump administration
- Donald Trump declared "we are going to show the whole world that America is back" while speaking during a rally on September 28, 2016 in Council Bluffs, Iowa[6] and used the phrase intermittently on other occasions during his first presidency.[5]
- Biden administration
- The slogan was also used during the presidency of Joe Biden[8] and, according to Alessandro Colombo, was "repeated by Biden almost daily during the first 100 days of his presidency".[9] "America is back" was also digitally invoked in the first 100 tweets from Biden's Twitter account following his election.[7]

- Second Trump administration
- Trump repeatedly invoked the slogan at the start of his second presidential term, including in his first address to Congress in 2025.[10]
Quiddity
[edit]The slogan has been used to communicate different fundamental purposes depending on the intent of the speaker.
As used by Ronald Reagan, "the slogan 'America is back!' signaled the return of such 'traditional values' as enthusiasm for unregulated economic growth", according to T. J. Jackson Lears.[11]
In his analysis of the slogan as used during the during the presidency of Joe Biden, Dennis Mills explained that "Biden ... [was] attempting to return to the Obama-era focus on America's diplomacy. This is the meaning of Biden's slogan 'America is back'".[12] According to Daniel Rueda Garrido, Biden's usage of "America is back" to indicate a heightened foreign policy focus on Atlanticism[13] positioned him "as the incarnation of America, which is held as the centre of the form of life of liberal capitalism and democracy" and "which presupposes a moment of prior retreat hinted presumably at Trump", though Marc Chandler, writing in Barron's in 2021, noted that there was reason to be skeptical about the assertion "America is back" since the "U.S. may be one election from leaving NATO and pulling out of the Paris Accord".[14][15] A study published in the Australasian Journal of American Studies posited the use of "America is back" was as a renunciation of the first presidency of Donald Trump.[16]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Smith, Hedrick (January 30, 1984). "One Campaign Issue Dominates: The Leadership of Ronald Reagan". New York Times. Retrieved March 8, 2025.
- ^ a b Roberts, Robert North (2012). Presidential Campaigns, Slogans, Issues, and Platforms. Bloomsbury. p. 18-19. ISBN 978-0313380938.
- ^ "Text Of Schwarzenegger's Speech". CBS News.
- ^ a b Delaunay, Jean-Claude (Fall 2015). "Review: How to Preserve Capitalist System? Review of Capital in the Twenty-First Century, by Thomas Piketty". World Review of Political Economy. 6 (3): 440. doi:10.13169/worlrevipoliecon.6.3.0425. Retrieved March 8, 2025.
- ^ a b Kanat, Kılıç. "An American presidential tradition: 'America is back'". setav.org. Foundation for Political, Economic and Social Research. Retrieved March 8, 2025.
- ^ "Remarks at a Rally at the Mid-America Center in Council Bluffs, Iowa". The American Presidency Project. University of California Santa Barbara. Retrieved March 8, 2025.
- ^ a b Manor, Ilan. "Biden's 100 First Tweets in Office". digdipblog.com. Exploring Digital Diplomacy. Retrieved April 1, 2025.
- ^ Rosefielde, Steven (2022). America's Future: Biden And The Progressives. World Scientific. p. 108. ISBN 9789811252464.
- ^ Colombo, Alessandro (2022). The Great Transition. Ledizioni-Ledipublishing. p. 84. ISBN 978-8855266703.
- ^ Montanaro, Domenico (March 5, 2025). "6 takeaways from Trump's pointedly partisan address to Congress". NPR. Retrieved March 8, 2025.
- ^ Jackson Lears, T. J. (2024). Conjurers, Cranks, Provincials, and Antediluvians: The Off-Modern in American History. Yale University Press. p. 352. ISBN 0300267142.
- ^ Mills, Dennis (2022). America's Future: Biden And The Progressives. World Scientific. p. 108. ISBN 9811252467.
- ^ Akande, Adebowale (2023). The Perils of Populism: The End of the American Century?. Springer. p. 212. ISBN 978-3031363436.
- ^ Chandler, Marc (October 1, 2021). "America Has Transformed Itself Before. Can Biden Do It Again?". Barron's. Retrieved March 8, 2025.
- ^ Garrido, Daniel Rueda (2024). Being and Power. A Phenomenological Ontology of Forms of Life. Vernon Press. p. 21. ISBN 978-1648898556.
- ^ Thierbach-McLean, Olga (July 2024). ""Build, Therefore, Your Own World"". Australasian Journal of American Studies. 43 (1): 41–69. JSTOR 48787090. Retrieved March 8, 2025.
Further reading
[edit]- Johnson, Richard. "What does Biden mean by 'America is back'?". Transforming Society. Bristol University Press. Retrieved March 8, 2025.