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The New Right refers to a distinctive Belhavian conservative political movement made up of various individuals, groups, institutions, and other actors in the 1970s and 1980s who created the contemporary right-wing political climate inside Belhavia.
The New Right is believed to have created a political platform that gave form to economic neoliberalism, which has transformed the worldwide political economy and has arguably led to the decline and collapse of the Communist World and end of the Cold War. The New Right activists also successfully worked to elect one of their own, Julian Settas, into the presidency in 1980, which altered the political landscape and ushered in over three decades of Conservative dominance of Belhavian politics.
Origins
Key actors
- Julian Settas, Imperial Senator (1973-1981); later President of Belhavia.
- Shimon Lappman, prominent conservative economist who published the Lappman curve and is the leading neoliberal activist.
- Benjamin Goldwater, Imperial Senator (1965-1997); Conservative Liberal Democrat and later Tory who was a chief Settas ally.
- Aaron Feldman, Orthodox rabbi, political activist, social conservative, and later founder of the Association of Music Quality and Values Control.
- Yehuda Mezvinsky, academic and professor of military science at the Freeport Military Academy; thinker whose 1971 naval reform paper inspired the creation of the Strategic Naval Initiative Act in 1981.