Ronald Reagan
White House Correspondents' Dinner: A Look Back in Laughter (hic!) [sic.]
Tomorrow night marks the annual White House Correspondents' Dinner in Washington, D.C. Members of the press corps (including some Media Mob contributors who are already on their way—note low posting rate today!) will have a chance to clink glasses with the president and his cabinet and remind themselves that despite five years of war, an economy some are already calling a Depression, and a painful slog of an election season, it's all in good fun. L'chaim! To us!
This year's event will be emceed by CBS Late Late Show host Craig Ferguson, whom the W.H.C.A.'s president (and ABC News correspondent), Ann Compton, is really excited about: "Craig Ferguson is a fresh take on late night TV. As a new citizen, a first-time uncommitted voter and someone who has looked at American politics from the outside, I am looking forward to his unique take on our system."
Kennedy, Bush, and the Pennsylvania 'Lifeline'
The April 22 Pennsylvania primary breathed new life into an underdog presidential campaign that had been on the ropes, ensuring that the race would continue at least through the Indiana primary in two weeks and raising new concerns within the party about the front-runner’s ability to close the deal.
Yes, this is old news—28 years old, to be exact. read more »
McCain Is Old Like Reagan, Not Like Dole
This year, Republicans have chosen to nominate for president a war hero and longtime senator with one losing White House bid under his belt. In 1996, the party put up a 73-year-old war hero and longtime senator who already had two failed White House campaigns to this name.
On this basis, it has become fashionable to compare John McCain to Bob Dole, the septuagenarian whose listless ’96 effort established the low-water mark for Republicans in the post-Goldwater era—159 electoral votes and 41 percent of the national popular vote.
Reflecting on Mr. McCain’s recent biography-themed campaign swing and a new ad, The Atlantic’s Ross Douthat wrote that the G.O.P. standard-bearer “pushes all my Dole-redux buttons.” read more »
Why Does Ralphie Run?

As Ralph Nader becomes the Harold Stassen of the 21st century and a running joke to everyone except Al Gore, we sometimes forget that a generation ago (When Stassen was our perennial candidate for President), Nader was a founder of the consumer and environmental movement. How does someone evolve from one of the most credible policy advocates in the country, to a punch line on late night television?
When you buckle your seatbelts and when your air bag deploys—saving your life—you should thank Ralph Nader. The Clean Air Act, the Federal Environmental Protection Agency and the Federal Water Pollution Control Act are at least partially due to Nader’s skill as an advocate in the late 1960’s and early 1970’s.
I mention the history because Nader did not build his reputation as a consumer and environmental advocate by pushing symbolism at the expense of results. He must know that his popularity is trending down. read more »
If McCain's an Apostate, So Was Reagan
It’s funny what conservatives will forgive.
Late last week, they treated John McCain to a chorus of jeers when he appeared before the Conservative Political Action Conference and dared to bring up illegal immigration—a very sore spot with an audience that believes McCain’s efforts on the subject have amounted to a bid to provide “amnesty” to 12 million or so undocumented workers.
But the next morning, the very same activists in the very same room serenaded George W. Bush with chants of “Four more years!”—even though it was Bush who made enacting McCain’s despised “amnesty” legislation one of his second term priorities.
Over and over this campaign season, we have heard about the right’s distrust of McCain, talk that reached fever pitch when he emerged as the likely Republican nominee and was promptly greeted by a band of talk show bloviators who suggested they’d sooner vote for Hillary Clinton than for him. How could they be so offended by McCain, but not Bush? read more »
Hillary, and Lewis, and Penn, Attack
The bloodletting between the Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton was not stanched by the end of last night’s debate in Myrtle Beach. It continued in the spin room.
Ann Lewis continued to talk about Obama’s comments about the trajectory changing force of Republican ideas to a Las Vegas editorial board.
“He said that they were the party of ideas,” she said. “Clearly in contradiction to the Democratic Party.” read more »
Hillary Supporters 'Stupefied' by Obama's Reagan Comments
Supporters of Hillary Clinton reaffirmed in a conference call just now that they are outraged by Barack Obama's positive remarks about Ronald Reagan as a trajectory-changer in American politics.
"I was stupefied by the comments," said Representative Barney Frank of Massachusetts. He added, "It's baffling to me that Senator Obama would speak so favorably of him."
The best line of the call though came from an angry Representative Corrine Brown of Florida.
"Every time I see a homeless person I think about Ronald Reagan," she said, before adding, "It is very important that young people know about the history."
UPDATE: The Clinton campaign e-mails to say that their supporters on the call were also taking exception to Obama's remarks to the Reno Gazette-Journal's editorial board, in which he said "I think it's fair to say that the Republicans were the party of ideas for a pretty long chunk of time there over the last 10-15 years in the sense that they were challenging conventional wisdom."
To be fair, Obama did put this in the context of the Republican approach having "played itself out."
Giuliani: How to Deal With Tyrants and Terrorists
The day after Rudy Giuliani officially stepped down from the top position at Giuliani Partners because of ties to a nation accused of harboring Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, he takes his message to the airwaves with an ad that invokes Islamic terrorism and Ronald Reagan.
Reagan Changed, Rudy and Mitt Just Flipped
Neither Mr. Romney nor Mr. Giuliani can change the subject with a simple I-was-a-different-person-back-then dismissal, because neither of them can point to a conversion story like Reagan’s. read more »
Reagan's Victory, Romney's Record
Steve Kornacki thinks Democrats aren’t looking at the real reason Reagan won in 1980—and it wasn’t his much-discussed, race-baiting speech in Neshoba.
Also from the Observer, Jennifer Rubin suggests Mitt Romney is going to have problems now that he's being forced to go into the specifics of his record.
Reagan's Not-So-Coded Appeal
Two decades after he left office, too many Democrats still refuse to face up to the very simple—but powerful—reasons why their clocks were so thoroughly cleaned by Reagan. read more »
On Times Op-Ed Page, Debate on Reagan and Race Rages on
The battle over Reagan and race that had been playing out recently on the New York Times op-ed page appeared to have subsided by the end of last week. But it received new life over the weekend when Reagan biographer Lou Cannon contributed a guest op-ed asserting that "Ronald Reagan was not a racist."
Today, Paul Krugman responds, arguing, as he has before, that Reagan used racist appeals for political benefit. Referring to Mr. Cannon and Times columnist David Brooks, he notes: "Reagan's defenders protest furiously that he wasn't personally bigoted. So what? We're talking about his political strategy. His personal beliefs are irrelevant."
Like Reagan Without the New Ideas
Republican angst has created an opening for Fred Thompson. read more »
G.O.P. Tall Tales About Reagan
Sensing their own smallness, contemporary politicians often seek to puff themselves up by appealing to myth and legend. read more »
Here's Johnny
The fact that he's a Democrat, he stressed, shouldn't be a big deal.
-- Azi Paybarah"I was a Republican in the 1980's--a Ronald Reagan Republican," he said. "I donated to the Republican library. I supported George H.W. Bush. I helped build the chapel at Camp David under George H.W. Bush, and then I was chairman of the New York County dinner two years out of five under Roy Goodman. I've done a lot of Republican things. "And I'm baaaack."
Cuomo and Newt at Cooper Union: Gunfire and Orchestras
Note to Obama Skeptics: This Is Not a Fad
Mitt Romney, Liberal
It's an old video of recently conservative presidential candidate Mitt Romney at a debate against Ted Kennedy in 1994 in which he (passionately) defends abortion rights and affirmative action and distances himself from the policies of Ronald Reagan and George Bush.
I'm thinking the McCain people are going to have fun with this one.
-- Josh BensonEye of Mordor
"As the hobbits are going up Mount Doom, the Eye of Mordor is being drawn somewhere else," Santorum said. "It's being drawn to Iraq and it's not being drawn to the U.S. You know what? I want to keep it on Iraq. I don't want the Eye to come back here to the United States."
It's the next logical step after Ronald Reagan's Star Wars defense plan, right? Daily Gotham thinks it's just crazy. More Santorum-Mordor musings are here.
-- Azi PaybarahDisillusioned Bushies Waving the White Flag
Lieberman’s Precarious Fate Makes D.C. Democrats Sweat
Lieberman's Precarious Fate Makes D.C. Democrats Sweat
If It's Showtime!, Is It Giuliani Time?
If It’s Showtime!, Is It Giuliani Time?
Rudy 2006

In a new blast email soliciting donations of between $25 and $500 for candidates in federal races this year, Giuliani urges recipients to rally around the White House and the Republican Congressional majority:
"I learned the virtue of strong Republican leadership when I had the honor of serving President Ronald Reagan in his Justice Department. His optimism helped inspire our nation as he led us to victory over communism.Giuliani ends the note by asking readers to go to the Solutions America website -- "so that I can be on the forefront of helping our Republican candidates in these important 2006 elections." read more » -- Josh BensonToday, President Bush faces a similar challenge. In the middle of a war on terror, we need to remain focused on furthering Republican ideas more than ever before. We can't turn back now."
To the Limit
KT McFarland spends yesterday being trailed by reporters asking her to respond to her brother's assertion that she's "evil."
Then, at a fundraiser last night, KT supporter"Bud" McFarlane tells Ben that all the personal stuff coming out about his Reagan administration colleague is the Post's fault. Ed Rollins backs him up.
And today, well, there's more.
"Off-message" doesn't really do it justice.
-- Josh BensonEvents for July 13, 2006
Norman Siegel will hold a news conference concerning filing of legal challenge to public school cell phone ban at 60 Centre Street.
Robert "Bud" McFarlane, national security adviser in the Reagan administration, will join K.T. McFarland at a kitchen talk in Brooklyn.
—Nicole BrydsonMcFarland's Army
On July 13, Henry Kissenger will be among the chairs at a swank event at Cipriani's with the hopes of raising about $200,000 for McFarland. Featured speakers will include General PX Kelley, former commandant of the Marine Corps, Robert Carl "Bud" McFarlane, National Security Advisor to President Ronald Reagan, and John F. Lehman, the former Secretary of the Navy and member of the 9/11 Commission.
- Jason HorowitzChuck on His Book, Reagan and the ACLU
Technology, Schumer told Horowitz, had "changed everything," and had "created the war on terror."
The trick for Democrats to appeal to contemporary voters, he suggested, would be to govern without being beholden to interest groups. As an example, Schumer singled out the ACLU as the architect of the Democrats' doom during the Ronald Reagan years:
"When I got to Washington, crime was ripping apart my district. And I wanted to do something about it. People's whole life-savings was being ruined by crime. And I get here, and the Democrats have been in power for 50 years, 1981, and who is writing crime policy? Not just at the table, but writing it? The ACLU. And the ACLU had a view, some people have it, that -- let 1,000 innocent people go free lest you convict one innocent person. And it was amazing to me, and I saw why people voted for Ronald Reagan."
Schumer, who is in the midst of an effort to make a dent in the GOP's Senate majority, concluded that Reagan "had a point" at the time, but said that that rationale for voters after years of Republican rule was now "gone."
In a bit a strategic restraint, Schumer left unspoken the formulation he'd used in an interview the Times last month, when he concluded, "What Bill Clinton did was modify Reagan Republicanism and put a Democratic face on it. That's not going to work."
-- Josh BensonExceptionalism Exposed: A Historical Tug of War
Jeanie's Got a Gun
So we'll have to make do with other people's reports:
Jeanine F. Pirro, who is running for attorney general, said she would not push for restrictions on legal guns and proudly declared that she had a .22, a .38 and a Mauser.
Also, Bill Weld will veto same-sex marriage legislation, and, Randy Daniels? He "pledged he would be just like Ronald Reagan, but 'in living color.'"
- Tom McGeveranThank You, Mr. Reitman! Gives Smoking Colbert-Style Wit
Thank You, Mr. Reitman! Gives Smoking Colbert-Style Wit
The Perils of Scaremongering: A Post-60's Epidemic of Panic
The Perils of Scaremongering: A Post-60’s Epidemic of Panic
Spitzer Unchills As Race Begins, Notices Suozzi

A Feel-Good Version of History Salutes the Deserving Winners
A Presidency Scrutinized, Lapses, Political Savvy and All

A Presidency Scrutinized, Lapses, Political Savvy and All
WOOD WAR IV
Paper A greets the 2,000th American military death in Iraq with a somber black memorial background and the word "tragic." Paper B presents a waving flag, the clear blue skies of freedom and an inspiring quote from Our President.
Quiz: Which one of these papers fumed yesterday, on its editorial page, that the troops "will have died for nothing--absolutely nothing at all--if the cut-and-run protesters prevail now" and that foes of the war "will also suggest to a still formidable Iraqi insurgency that perhaps, just perhaps, the United States has not the resolve to see this bitter thing through to a just conclusion"?
Answer: Paper A! Sorry, Rupert, but there's more to being American than mere red-white-and-blue bluster. Any fool can play a Sousa march. It takes a more subtle ear for the shadings of American patriotism to switch to a dirge without pausing or blushing. read more »
In other words, Ronald Reagan beats Sergeant Slaughter.
Winner: Daily News Overall standings: Daily News 3, New York Post 1Breaking: Ferrer Mourns Rosa Parks
Randy Daniels
But we wish he and his interpreters would get together a coherent narrative of how he came to be who he is, because we don't quite understand it.
Here's the Sun's version:
"He became a reporter for CBS News and worked for Democrats such as Atlanta's Andrew Young and New York's Mark Green before moving toward the conservative end of the political spectrum, inspired in part by a stint covering Ronald Reagan and by face-to-face experience, as a reporter, covering the horrors of communism." read more »
A correspondent is skeptical:
"He was so inspired by Reagan that he worked for Mark Green 6 years after Reagan came into office, then worked for Democrat Andrew Stein and then attempted to join the Dinkins administration 3 years after Reagan left office. He remained a Democrat until becoming a spokesman for well known conservative thinker Abe Hirschfeld."















