Kiss my ass, Reagan lovers!

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This is long, but it explains the frustration of those of us who actually lived through the time feel when we hear anything good said about that son of a bitch.

The Democrats-Praise-Reagan Game by Robert Parry

As a journalist who investigated Reagan-era scandals – from secret arms deals with Iran and Iraq to drug traffickers protected by the covert wars in Nicaragua and Afghanistan – I always recoiled when Democrats prostrated themselves in praise of Ronald Reagan.


Beyond the pandering component, there was the annoying assumption that the rest of us were too stupid to see what they were up to, as they tried to sound “bipartisan” or buy a measure of protection from Republican attacks.

Now, a recurrence of this “Democrats-praise-Rea gan" game has intruded on the 2008 presidential campaign as both Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton have had to explain seemingly favorable comments about President Reagan.

In an editorial board interview before the Nevada caucuses, Obama cited Reagan as a leader who spoke to public anger about the lack of accountability in the 1960s and 1970s and thus “changed the trajectory of America.” That prompted an accusation from Clinton at the Jan. 21 debate that Obama was “admiring Ronald Reagan.”

Obama denied Clinton’s characterization, claiming he was just acknowledging Reagan’s historical significance. He also noted that Clinton had “provided much more fulsome praise” of Reagan in Tom Brokaw’s new book, Boom!, which quotes Clinton as praising Reagan’s flexibility.

“He could call the Soviet Union the Evil Empire and then negotiate arms-control agreements,” she said. “He played the balance and the music beautifully.”

Clinton also found herself explaining remarks she made in gaining the endorsement of the Salmon Press weeklies in New Hampshire. The endorsement editorial said Clinton’s list of favorite presidents included “Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Lincoln, both Roosevelts, Truman, George H.W. Bush and Reagan” – plus her husband, Bill Clinton.

When journalists and the Obama campaign noted the inclusion of Reagan and the senior Bush on Clinton’s list, the Clinton campaign released a statement quoting the Salmon Press co-owner saying “the question posed was originally what portraits would you hang in the White House if you were President and as the dialogue progressed, who are the presidents you admire most? … She did not say Reagan was her favorite President.”

Whatever the nuances, this pattern of fawning over Reagan has long been common among national Democrats, a way of triangulating against the anti-Reagan Democratic “base” and getting in line with Washington’s insiders who treat Reagan’s greatness as a matter of conventional wisdom.

Why?

But why do national Democrats do this? In my view, this Reagan pandering can be traced to two basic factors:

First, since the late 1970s when the Right began its huge investment in media outlets, attack groups and other year-round infrastructure, the liberal/progressive side of American politics failed to make any serious effort at countering it. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “The Left’s Media Miscalculation.”]

The rightward tilt of the media/infrastructure asymmetry, especially in talk radio and on cable news, meant that over the past quarter century, large swaths of the U.S. countryside heard denunciations of “lib-ruls” as un-American and even treasonous, with little explanation or defense of liberal positions.

As a secondary result, Democratic politicians sought some protection from the Right’s fury by trimming their ideological sails. Similarly, many mainstream journalists avoided critical stories about Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush out of fear of the career damage that the Right could inflict.

In the late 1980s, when I was with the Associated Press and Newsweek, I worked on important scandals, such as the Iran-Contra Affair and contra-cocaine trafficking, that implicated the Reagan and Bush administrations in serious crimes. But many senior editors, including some of my superiors, shied from these stories.

The young neoconservatives, rising to power under Reagan and Bush, understood the importance of controlling the flow of information that reached the American people, what the neocons called “perception management.” If you refused to back off stories that caused them trouble, the neocons would threaten to “controversialize&rdq uo; you by having the powerful right-wing apparatus single you out and destroy your reputation.

This difficulty of investigating Reagan and Bush was compounded by Democrats in Congress who feared political payback from the Republicans. Politically, it was safer to accept implausible explanations and absurd alibis. [For details, see Robert Parry’s Lost History and Secrecy & Privilege.]

The final opportunity for the Democrats to turn this pattern around came in late 1992 and early 1993 after Bill Clinton defeated George H.W. Bush. The Democrats finally controlled the Executive Branch as well as the Congress – and all that was needed was some support of ongoing investigations into Reagan-Bush wrongdoing.

But instead of cleaning house, President Clinton took the advice of Washington insiders that it was best to sweep these unpleasant matters under the rug. That way, the thinking went, the new Clinton administration wouldn't be distracted from its domestic priorities, like health care and economic policy.

Bad Deal

The deal turned out badly for Clinton. The Republicans still torpedoed his domestic agenda and the Right’s infrastructure was freed up from having to defend Reagan and Bush, so it could go on the offensive against Clinton and his alleged scandals, from his womanizing to the Whitewater real estate deal.

As Clinton’s presidency was relentlessly torn down, Reagan’s legacy was systematically built up. After the Republicans won control of Congress in 1994, they pressed a campaign to name Washington National Airport after Reagan along with at least one government building in every state.

Amid this canonization of Ronald Reagan, no serious historical review was permitted into what actually happened during his eight-year presidency and the four years under George H.W. Bush.

After a while, few people were left in Washington who dared contest the greatness of Ronald Reagan. As that conventional wisdom solidified, national Democrats found it easier to identify some part of Reagan’s agenda that they could embrace than to take on the hopeless fight of challenging his record.

After the 9/11 attacks, a similar aura of invincibility surrounded George W. Bush. It was not until 2005 when Hurricane Katrina swamped Bush’s heroic image that some shine also washed off Reagan’s legacy, whose anti-government attitudes and tough-guy foreign policy had inspired Bush’s approach to governing.

But old habits die hard. To this day, many Democrats find it politically comforting to invoke Reagan’s name as they try to burnish their bipartisan credentials or ingratiate themselves with Republicans and conservative-minded independents.

However, at this critical juncture of Campaign 2008, Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton have discovered there is a risk in playing this game. An angry Democratic “base,” which has grown weary of Democratic leaders bowing to Republican power, is in no mood to hear sweet nothings whispered about Ronald Reagan.

Many rank-and-file Democrats are furious at how much harm the false Republican narrative of Ronald Reagan’s golden age has done to the nation.

Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s for the Associated Press and Newsweek. His latest book, Neck Deep: The Disastrous Presidency of George W. Bush, was written with two of his sons, Sam and Nat, and can be ordered at neckdeepbook.com. His two previous books, Secrecy & Privilege: The Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq and Lost History: Contras, Cocaine, the Press & 'Project Truth' are also available there. Or go to Amazon.com.

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This article raises a good point, but I was hoping it would talk more about the Reagan policies rather than just how his image was handled after he left office. In any case, be careful. There is a certain host of a certain talk program called The Young Turks who idolizes Reagan.

David

by yturks on 01/24/2008 12:39:48 PM EST


But we'll keep working on him until he see the light!

I think if you want more in depth on the policies, etc., the guy wants you to buy his books?

He might have focused on image because that is what the topic was surrounding Obama's (misbegotten) comments. The image of Reagan as opposed to the shattered and rotten soul beneath the image.

by MedfordTim on 01/24/2008 01:01:54 PM EST

[ Parent ]
http://www.nytimes.com/2008 /01/21/opinion/21krugman.ht ml?ex=1358571600&en=f86 4b796b7ad3d50&ei=5124&a mp;partner=permalink&ex prod=permalink As if anyone needed any refresher on why that guy was a disaster for this country and started us down the god-awful path we're on...

by keith on 01/24/2008 02:02:14 PM EST

[ Parent ]

http://www.nytimes.com/2008 /01/21/opinion/21krugman.ht ml

 

SAM: What's new, Normie?
NORM: Terrorists, Sam. They've taken over my stomach and they're demanding beer.

by Spinny on 01/24/2008 02:28:04 PM EST

[ Parent ]
As is pointed out here, he was the first president to express open contempt for the very office he served.

I truly believe that "you can't govern if you don't believe in government".

We wouldn't trust someone who despises capitalism and making money to run a successful corporation, would we?  No, obviously not, it's absolutely counter intuitive.

The Reagan era was incredibly destructive not just in its policies, but also amazingly damaging rhetoric that diminished (and continues to diminish) American confidence in our government.  Reagan (and others with this brand of conservative ideology) helped to prove their own beliefs by underfunding, defunding or outright mismanaging government programs .

Not to mention massive deregulation which led to the Savings & Loan chaos and today's sub-prime mess (among other things).

After all, if you hate government, what incentive do you have to to show fiscal discipline and run well funded, well managed government programs?  If you do that, why would anyone support the push to privatize everything (and thereby send millions or billions to the top campaign contributors and corporate friends and lobbyists?)

PS---Don't give me BS about how good the economy was under Reagan.  As I pointed out in a recent post, just looking at GDP and the stock market gives VERY little indication at how well the *average* American is doing.  Even the supposedly great 90's is a bit of a scam that *sounds* good on paper until you dig into the facts.

The bottom 90% of Americans have gained almost no economic benefit over the last 30 or so years!

by ihavenobias on 01/24/2008 04:01:53 PM EST

[ Parent ]
The Savings and Loan debacle
The AIDS epidemic perpetuated
He gutted America starting with rolling back the new deal
He cut and ran from Lebanon

by Grim Fandango on 01/24/2008 04:45:40 PM EST

[ Parent ]
"There is a certain host of a certain talk program called The Young Turks who idolizes Reagan."

He knows what a real conservative is supposed to act like.

You kids are too young to remember how bad things were back in the 1970s.

The 1980 election was a tidal wave that brought America back from the brink of destruction.
dump jimmy carter!

by KenTX on 01/25/2008 12:20:54 AM EST

[ Parent ]

And W is to the Democrats what Carter was to the Republicans.

What is that pipe dream about McCain and Lieberman again?

Another once upon a time Republican Congressman has decided to retire because Bush destroyed his career very recently. How do I know that?

by z1p101 on 01/25/2008 12:42:57 AM EST

[ Parent ]
Now there is a new tidal wave. Showing a map of a bunch of empty country being red is impressive to the flying monkey right. Unfortunately for the conservatives its not translating to reality.

by Grim Fandango on 01/25/2008 01:19:36 AM EST

[ Parent ]
This has been a sore spot with me for a loooong time.

by Andrew Koenig on 01/24/2008 02:10:10 PM EST


I just noticed a new sign (I think it's new) heading down to Colorado Springs from Denver.  It's now the "Ronald Reagan Highway."  I guess after all of the wonderful things he did for the state of Colorado, we had to name an Interstate after him.  Obviously it's all just part of this conservative propaganda campaign to "prove" that the Reagan agenda was perfect.

by qsoundrich on 01/24/2008 03:37:01 PM EST

[ Parent ]
National Airport in DC was renamed after RayGun, but locals still call it National Airport. They respect the air traffic controllers that RayGun hated to much.

by zenie on 01/24/2008 11:51:05 PM EST

[ Parent ]

I knew Ronnie RayGun was a jerk when he came out with the Star Wars, SDI, plan. I read that book too [The Spike, by Robert Moss], only I didn't fall asleep in the middle like RayGun.

Robert Parry has a lot of good reporting and comments. Thanks. 

by zenie on 01/25/2008 12:24:44 AM EST


The Spike was another bloody novel [must be early onset oldtimer's...].

Death Beam was the imaginary Russian Star Wars plan that never happened. Also by Robert Moss, exciting and chilling.

by zenie on 01/25/2008 12:35:18 AM EST

[ Parent ]
I AM old enough to remember how bad things were in the late 70s and I am also old enough to remember how Reagan was essentially a somewhat less crazy W.  All of his policies were like W.'s except that he didn't go to the radical extreme that W. does.


He lied to us with trickle down economics and ran up the biggest deficit our country had seen.  Ross Perot was a viable candidate because of the Reagan/Bush economic excesses.


He made it alright to denigrate minorities and every social safety net.


He was the one that convinced me that the American people would rather believe a sweet lie than a hard truth.


Reagan was simply awful.  He began the conservative revolution whose logical conclusion is George W. Bush.

When I hear him lionized in the press or by Cenk, it makes my stomach turn.

by elingfam on 01/25/2008 10:05:51 AM EST


The ONLY reason Reagan wasn't as extreme as W. was that people were more used to being liberal than they are today.  They fought harder and were easier to outrage.

Do you think that Iran/Contra would be a scandal today?  When W. has left the entire executive branch for sale and taken corruption to a new level?  And the dems are too wussy to do anything about it?

No.

by elingfam on 01/25/2008 10:10:38 AM EST

[ Parent ]
It would be a helluva scandal.

And now, as then, indeed as with all the current scandals, NOTHING would happen. Chests would be pounded, outrage expressed on every network Sunday show, fingers pointed, calls for reform...yet no one would be held accountable. A lying President and the criminals around him would get away with major crimes, and get one great retirement package to top it off.

The more things change, the more they stay the same.

by MedfordTim on 01/25/2008 10:50:08 AM EST

[ Parent ]
Imagine if *Dems* had been behind Iran/Contra.  You think that story wouldn't have flooded every form of media for an endless period of time and that there woudn't have been (serious) punishment?

And of course it would be revived over and over in the coming years, especially during talks of how tough the republicans are against terrorism.

by ihavenobias on 01/25/2008 10:55:30 AM EST

[ Parent ]
...that the end result would have been any different regarding 'crime & punishment.' When was the last time a high ranking official served time? The Nixon/Ford years? Makes someone like me wonder if the fix is in and some sort of gentleman's agreement has been struck.

It would help explain some of the Pelosi and Reid betrayals...

by MedfordTim on 01/25/2008 11:09:54 AM EST

[ Parent ]
From the Vast Right Wing Conspiricy - Republican Playbook:

"If someone mentions George W., immediately bring up Bill Clinton. If someone brings up Ronnie, immediately bring up Carter. It has been years since anyone has bothered to point out that inflation was so bad in 1971 that a Republican president instituted a wage and price freeze in order to rein in runaway inflation. With any luck we won't have to defend the state of the economy when Carter was elected or that it is doubtful a Ford second term would have done any better.

'But I'm not sure Ford would have been much of an improvement. He would have been dealt the same unlucky economic hand as Carter, primarily rising inflation caused by runaway spending in the 1960s and a feckless Federal Reserve response in the 1970s. Then there were a pair of OPEC oil shocks. Then add in a high-tax, high-regulation economy and you have a recipe for disaster.' - those Liberal bastards at U.S. News and World Report!

"Remember! Deflection is the best strategy. Never answer a charge, accusation, or question; instead, give a mind-numbingly stupid or boring non-response&nb sp;referencing at least ONE person on our 'hate' list (current list always available through FOX News)."


by MedfordTim on 01/25/2008 10:41:18 AM EST


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