Mixed economy in the United States

In the United States, mixed economy, Competition Law, and protection of Common Property were all substantially increased in the Progressive Era. These programs fell out of favor in the Post-WWI Republican Party of the 20's but were readopted and extended in response to the Great Depression during the New Deal Era. Beginning in the 1970's, rising inflation and unemployment created an opportunity for attack of the Liberal order of mixed economy, and the Old Business Wing of the Republican Party began a coordinated strategy of attack on Progressive economic policy and New Deal Liberal economic policy. This led to yet another Partisan reallignment, the Defeat of the Democratic Party as champion of Progressive and Liberal economics, the rise of Neoconservatism, neoliberal economics, Corporate Political Rights, and the Republican Party as the Party of the Rich and their Corporations. In the 1990's the Democratic Party adopted a strategy of compromise, and shifted it's economic policy to more closely allign to neoliberal economics while maintaining social liberalism, this new position was a third-way strategy advocated by Bill Clinton. Clinton Democrats typically distanced themselves from New Deal Liberal economic policy and began to refer to themselves as Progressives.