Author Topic: Republicans are stuck in a Reagan time warp...By Michael Gerson  (Read 270 times)

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Republicans are stuck in a Reagan time warp...By Michael Gerson
« on: November 04, 2014, 06:05:31 pm »
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/michael-gerson-republicans-need-to-escape-a-reagan-time-warp/2014/11/03/06ebb574-638b-11e4-836c-83bc4f26eb67_story.html


By Michael Gerson Opinion writer November 3 at 7:24 PM

The Republican debate about the shape of the political future has begun, typically for conservatives, as a fight about the past. As President Obama has become a ­Jimmy Carter-like figure — hapless, luckless and increasingly friendless — most prospective GOP presidential candidates are positioning themselves as Ronald Reagan’s rightful heir. A thick fog of historical analogy has settled over the Republican field.

“It took Jimmy Carter to give us Ronald Reagan,” argues Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.), who clearly sees (and admires) a resemblance to the latter in the mirror each morning. “I’m a great believer in Ronald Reagan,” claims Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), even while proposing a Carthage-like destruction of Reagan’s foreign policy. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) has called Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) “the son of Ronald Reagan when it comes to national security” — though Rubio is actually young enough to be Reagan’s great-grandson.

The squabble over this inheritance is recounted in a recent essay by Henry Olsen and Peter Wehner, provocatively titled, “If Ronald Reagan Were Alive Today, He Would Be 103 Years Old.” (Credit the editors of Commentary for knowing how to push conservative buttons in the good cause of bringing more eyes to an important article.) Olsen and Wehner are, in fact, deeply respectful toward Reagan, whom they describe as the greatest Republican since Lincoln. They warn, however, that “the constant invocation of Reagan’s name to bolster arguments for present-day policies (and present-day politicians) actually hinders our understanding of the substance of Reagan’s legacy — and undermines the Republican Party’s ability to make a case for itself in the here-and-now.”

For decades, Democratic policies and politicians grew pale and scrawny in the shadow of Franklin Roosevelt. It took Bill Clinton to modernize the Democratic appeal — providing government, at least in theory, with a catalytic, rather than supervisory, role. It is Republicans who now struggle in the shade of presidential greatness, even when they win congressional elections.

Olsen and Wehner point to two serious risks in seeking “a posthumous seal of approval” from Reagan. First, there is the consistent temptation of all idolatry — to craft a figure in our own image. Those who claim Reagan as the first and purest tea party leader find support not in history but in mythology.

The authors make what seems, at first, a fine distinction but turns out to be a decisive one. Reagan’s guiding political principle was not human freedom — the belief of a doctrinaire libertarian — but human dignity. The cause of dignity is served by the ability of individuals to shape their own destiny, something denied in all forms of totalitarianism. But properly limited government can also serve the cause of human dignity. “We accept without reservation,” said Reagan, “our obligation to help the aged, disabled and those unfortunates who, through no fault of their own, must depend on their fellow man.”

At the time, libertarians found Reagan “too kind, gentle and sentimental” and lacking a “blueprint for radical governance” (David Stockman), and the true progenitors of the tea party found him a captive of the “establishment” (Richard Viguerie). In fact, Reagan’s presidency represented an accommodation of the theory of the New Deal and the Great Society (the existence and constitutionality of Social Security and Medicare), coupled with a strong objection to the coercive, uniform and bureaucratic methods of modern liberalism. On economic policy, Reagan was deeply committed to cutting marginal tax rates but willing to accept tax increases in other areas. He operated, according to Olsen and Wehner, “within the four corners of reality.” He was “more a Burkean conservative than a Jacobin.”

The authors diagnose a second risk of Republican claims to be the vicar of Reagan. This strategy is employed as a conversation-stopper: Reagan said it; I believe it; that settles it. But this produces a Republican policy debate encased in amber. “Some of his epigones,” argue Olsen and Wehner, “today appear caught in a time warp, acting as if every year is 1980. Reagan, while conservative to the bone, would never have allowed himself to become captive to the past.” Reagan inherited a nation with high inflation and a 70 percent top marginal tax rate. Our nation has wage stagnation and a gap in skills and human capital that is hardening into a rigid class system.

This is a lesson that is particularly urgent for newly elected Republicans and prospective presidential candidates. A party truly animated by the spirit of Reagan will address the problems of our time, not of his.
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Offline truth_seeker

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Re: Republicans are stuck in a Reagan time warp...By Michael Gerson
« Reply #1 on: November 04, 2014, 06:32:54 pm »
There is not a single candidate today who could qualify to shine Mr. Reagan's shoes, and that means first term Senators Cruz and Paul.

By the time he won the Presidency, Reagan had been Governor of the largest state for two terms, that is completed terms.

He had twice before campaigned for the nomination of the Republican Party. He had written extensively on political philosophy. He had headed a major union.

One reason conservatism is floundering, in spite of wins today, is the failure of its followers to sell it, as Reagan so skillfully did.

"God must love the common man, he made so many of them.�  Abe Lincoln

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Re: Republicans are stuck in a Reagan time warp...By Michael Gerson
« Reply #2 on: November 04, 2014, 06:43:07 pm »
I have never big a strong proponent of Reagan's policies.  It's a mixed bag when you look closely at things like government spending as a percent of GDP, deficits and taxation.  What made Reagan great was his ability to lead without being overly aggressive.  He could be forceful when he needed to be, but usually he was so amiable it was impossible to attack him without looking like an unreasonable bully.

Just understanding that this country runs on confidence, and having followed Jimmy Carter's incredible morale-destroying presidency, Reagan had an amazing ability to inspire hope and then get out of the way.  That doesn't sound like such a big thing, but for a politician it is.  They are by nature control freaks.

Offline Fishrrman

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Re: Republicans are stuck in a Reagan time warp...By Michael Gerson
« Reply #3 on: November 05, 2014, 02:25:25 am »
truth seeker wrote:
[[ There is not a single candidate today who could qualify to shine Mr. Reagan's shoes, and that means first term Senators Cruz and Paul. ]]

You’re absolutely wrong about that.

Scott Walker up in Wisconsin has “walked the Reagan walk”. That is to say, he’s governed successfully from a conservative position in a blue-purplish state, and made convincing progress, both on the economic level (going from a state deficit to a surplus) AND on a philosophical/political level (breaking the unions).

We need someone to do on a national scale, what Governor Walker has done up in Wisconsin.

I could settle for a candidate like that.