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Barry Goldwater’s ‘Conscience of a Conservative’ Chapter 3. State’s Rights

by coldwarrior ( 80 Comments › )
Filed under Academia, Barry Goldwater, History, Libertarianism, Open thread, Politics, The Constitution at September 24th, 2013 - 12:00 pm

Barry Goldwater’s Conscience of A Conservative Chapter 2 is here.

Now on to Chapter 3, State’s Rights.  (The book was ghostwritten by L. Brent Bozell Jr., brother-in-law of William F. Buckley.[1] Bozell and Buckley had been members of Yale’s debate team.)

The good Senator comes right out of the gate and blasts both parties, the Democrats AND Republicans for failing miserably to control the size of Fedgov. Both were guilty then, both are guilty now. The Democrats are at least honest and don’t pay lip service to State’s Rights like the GOP does. Even when the GOP ran the show in the 2000’s Fedzilla still grew. They couldn’t even kill the Ethanol subsidy! We burn our own food in our gas tanks! And the federal deficit doubled, libetries were taken away for ‘security’, more shackles of slavery placed on every American. I expect this kind of behavior from the Democrats, and now I expect it from the Republicans as well.

Goldwater explains how we got in this mess (again he is prescient in this  1960 book). We know how its done too. Fedzilla takes money in taxes from citizens,  skims a good percentage of it in the Washington DC money laundering racket, and then sends it back to the states with strings attached.  The mob does this as well, its called loan sharking and usually gets a RICO arrest and plenty of jail time when the perp is found guilty. In this case the perp is both sides, the GOP quit playing cop against the organized criminal gang of the Democrat Party. I have ZERO confidence in the current leadership of the GOP and am disgusted by what they did last time they were in power. The deficit was doubled and our liberties taken away by the Patriot Act and the creation of these over reaching ‘security’ agencies.

The amazing thing is that most people simply don’t understand that they are being robbed at gunpoint in this scheme. Fedzilla with the coercive force of the state demands money from you so they can take a percentage of it for themselves and then send the money back to the states with demands and strings attached. Every dollar they take from a state’s citizen goes to empower DC not the local capital. This has got to stop or we will lose our liberties at an ever faster pace. This message is being taken to the public now though with some of the rising stars of the GOP; much to the chagrin of the old guard at GOP HQ who are not amused! We have to educate people on this shell game. It is one way to preserve what few liberties we have left.

Goldwater argues that most people see through the DC money laundering and know that Fedzilla money does not come for free. I am not so sure that this is the case in 2013. Do a majority of voters understand the Racket? Do they care? I believe that this is one thing that must be explained by the libertarians and Fiscons ad nauseaum. Make it hit home, explain it and explain it again. Explain that the alternative is that the local State should be returned to its set of rights and responsibilities AT THE COST OF power concentrated in DC.  States Rights is one place where there is a Zero Sum Game. the money has to stay in the State because the State will know better how to spend the money because it will be locally driven. 50 Laboratories working on individual solutions right for their situation is far better than 1 Lab creating Fedzilla! What works in one State might not work in another. Or, a State may come up with something that the others can use.  The solutions worked at the local State level don’t take rights and liberties away from the other 49. Fedzilla solutions do.

The local state politicians refuse to vote ‘no’ on this type of shell game. They think that they are doing their constituents a favor by getting money from DC! They actually doom these citizens to more links in the shackles. This is indirect coercion but coercion none the less. It is in fact blackmail. Accept the funds and the demands and the ever expanding fedgov or lose power. If the states would get together and stand firm, they could easily break the DC money laundering racket.

Fedzilla also coerces the State by threatening to step in if DC thinks that the State should act on something. This is where the 10th Amendment comes in. The 10th recognizes the State’s jurisdiction in given areas. The State can either act or not as it sees fit. With these rights come responsibilities. The State politician is directly beholden to the citizenry in a very real sense.  Usually, everyone knows how to get a hold of their State representative pronto. He usually lives right down the street and has an office near the voter. In my case, he is a driver and 4 wood away and gets an earful from us quite often. The bureaucrat in DC doing the bidding of busybody politicians is unreachable. He is a faceless cog insulated from the wrath of the voters, he doesn’t care what you think. Your opinion and vote does not impact him in almost all cases.

“Nothing could so far advance the cause of freedom as for State officials throughout the land to assert their rightful claims to lost State power, and for the Federal Government to withdraw promptly and totally from every jurisdiction which the Constitution reserved to the States.” -Barry Goldwater

Barry Goldwater’s ‘Conscience of a Conservative’ Chapter 2

by coldwarrior ( 107 Comments › )
Filed under Barry Goldwater, Democratic Party, Open thread, Politics, Republican Party at August 26th, 2013 - 3:00 pm

Barry Goldwater’s ‘Conscience of a Conservative’ Chapter 1

So…onto chapter 2. ‘The Perils of Power’

Goldwater’s opening paragraph hits with both fists.

The New Deal, Dean Acheson wrote approvingly in a book called “A Democrat Looks at His Party’ , “conceived of the federal government as the whole people organized to do what had to be done .” A year later Mr Larson wrot A Republican Looks At His Party , and made much the same claim as in his book for Modern Republicans. The ‘underlying philosophy’ of the New Republicanism, said Mr Larson, is “that is a job has to be done to meet the needs of the people, and no one else can do it, then it is the proper function of the federal government.’

Let that sink in.

Both parties utterly and completely repudiate the founding principle of limited government. Things have not changed either. Many in the GOP and the Dems both are for larger and larger government. One is just for slower growth of government. The end result is the same, Leviathan without a defined limit, an endlessly expanding monster fed by both sides of the aisle! What of the founding principles?

He continues: ‘…and they propound the first principle of totalitarianism: that the State is competent to do all things and is limited in what it actually does only by the will of those who control the state.’  .
This view, both from the democrats and republicans is in direct conflict with and total disrespect for the Constitution that is intended to limit the functions and scope and size of government!
This same expanding government, be it run by democrats or many of the GOP, cannot outrun the historical legacy that government is the single most powerful and ‘chief instrument for thwarting man’s liberty’.

So, we are back to the Hobbes v Locke arguments again. Goldwater says that State power preforming the legitimate functions of government should not restrict freedom, but absolute power always does, this creates a sliding scale from true anarchy to police state.  A government that ‘can’ restrict freedoms ultimately will. Lets place Obamacare and the recent NSA spying in this box. Power is the drug, the sex, in DC.

The founders lived through the single authority, state as master, absolute political system. They understood that the natural tendency of government is to move toward absolutism. The founders created a system where power is separated and spread on several layers of government that should always be protective of its own power and by being that, check the other branches of government. Sadly. This has failed, especially in the relationship between the States and Fedgov.

So, how to measure Fedgov? First, size of financial operations as a percent of GDP over time. We don’t have to get into this here as it is known by all. Second, scope of activities in things like land ownership, medicine, insurer, mortgage broker, employer, debtor, taxer and spender, ponzi scheme manager in Social Security. Third, how much of the people’s earning, their blood and sweat, does Fedgov take in the form of taxes? Fourth, what is the extent of government interference in the day to day lives of the citizens? We are no longer a country of law, we are a country of regulation where each individual has to operate every day in a smaller and smaller box of compliance. Everyone on this blog has heard me rail about this.

SO how did we get here? Easy, both sides lied to us. the Dems lied to us on how far and how big government would be expanded and the GOP lied that it would cut the size of government down in real terms. We are suckers of the first order. Lets just spend a little on this, hey, you like this program…well, everyone likes their own pets. We have traded liberty for security since 9/11. We have failed Franklin’s tests. First: “A Republic, if you can keep it”, and second, ‘They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.’

How do we step back and reverse the ever larger and ever intrusive government that will in the end become the Leviathan? Goldwater offers this, “The turn will come when we entrust the conduct of or affairs to men who understand that their first duty as public officials is to divest themselves of the power that they have been given.”

Are there any out there?  Who will take this to the stump:

“I have little interest in streamlining government or in making it more efficient, for I mean to reduce its size. I do not undertake to promote welfare, for I propose to extend freedom. My aim is to not pass laws, but to repeal them. It is not to inaugurate new programs, but to cancel old ones that do violence to the constitution, or that have failed in their purpose, or that impose on the people unwarranted financial burden. I will not attempt to discover whether legislation is ‘needed’ before I first determine if it is Constitutionally permissible. And if I should ever be attacked for neglecting my constituents’ ‘interests’ I shall reply that I was informed their main interest is liberty and that in that cause I am doing the very best I can.”

Personal liberty, State’s right’s, and smaller government. Is that so much to ask?

Barry Goldwater’s fight against segregation; and Southern whites shift to the GOP started before the 1960’s

by Phantom Ace ( 51 Comments › )
Filed under Bigotry, Conservatism, Libertarianism, Republican Party, The Political Right at April 30th, 2013 - 3:00 pm

ReaganGoldwater

Barry Goldwater was once an icon for the Conservative movement. But as the movement changed in the last two decades he has become almost persona non-grata. Progressives have smeared him has a racist and today’s Conservatives collaborate through their silence. Libertarian-Conservatives still admire Goldwater and through the personage of Rand Paul there is a growing Neo-Goldwater wing on the right. It may not be force in 2014 or 2016 but after this version of the Republican Party has run its course this wing will be ascendant and most likely will lead a new version of the GOP to victory in 2020.

One of the hidden historical facts about Barry Goldwater was that he was against Segregation. As a Department store owner he desegregated his business. Another hidden gem was that Goldwater was a member of the NAACP. Back then, before the organization went Afro-Marxist, the NAACP welcomed Republicans. Goldwater put his money where his mouth was and helped fund anti-segregation legal challenges.

Here, Barry Goldwater enters the story. Goldwater was a department-store proprietor and a member of the Phoenix city council. He was a very conservative Republican, something that was not at all at odds with his membership in the NAACP, which was, in the 1950s, an organization in which Republicans and conservatives still were very much welcome. The civil-rights community in Phoenix, such as it was, did not quite know what to make of Goldwater. It was already clear by then that he was to be a conservative’s conservative and a man skeptical of federal overreach; while he described himself as being unprejudiced on what was at the time referred to as “the race question,” the fact was that he did not talk much about it, at least in public. His family department stores were desegregated under his watch, though he was not known to hire blacks to work there. But when the Arizona legislature was considering making segregation voluntary in the public schools, Goldwater was lobbying for it behind the scenes. And, perhaps more important, he organized a group of well-known white conservative leaders to do so as well. He did so on the advice of his friend Lincoln Ragsdale.

[….]

When Lincoln was working to raise money for the NAACP for a lawsuit to integrate the schools, he turned to every possible source he could think of, including the conservative city councilman Barry Goldwater. To his surprise, Goldwater responded with a large check. What surprised him further was that Goldwater became a personal friend and political colleague of the couple, a “great inspiration,” in Lincoln’s words.

[….]

But funding the lawsuit may have been the most important thing Goldwater did in his civil-rights career. As the historian Quintard Taylor of the University of Washington puts it: “Most historians characterize the 1954 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Topeka Board of Education as the death knell for de jure public school segregation. Yet a little-known legal victory by . . . the Arizona NAACP before the Arizona State Supreme Court in 1953 provided an important precedent for the ruling by the highest court in the land.” The NAACP had not been getting very far suing on behalf of black students, but it had made some progress with suits on behalf of Mexican-American students: A 1951 decision had outlawed segregating Hispanic students in the Tolleson School District, and Phoenix refused to comply with the new legal standard, so it was targeted for a lawsuit, too: one that would have ended racial discrimination against any student.

[….]

Barry Goldwater was not the most important opponent of racial segregation in Arizona, nor was he the most important champion of desegregating the public schools. What he was was on the right side: He put his money, his political clout, his business connections, and his reputation at the service of a cause that was right and just.

[….]

The problem for Republicans is that reclaiming their reputation as the party of civil rights requires a party leadership that wants to do so, because it cherishes that tradition and the values that it represents. It is not obvious that the Republican party has such leaders at the moment. The Party of Lincoln seems perfectly happy to be little more than the Party of the Chamber of Commerce. We should not turn our noses up at commerce — though Napoleon meant it as an insult, it was Britain’s glory to be “a nation of shopkeepers” — but it was not commerce alone that freed the slaves or built the nation.

Barry Goldwater stood up to any tyranny. Whether it was Nazism, Communism or segregation, he stood for individual liberty. Just like Calvin Coolidge is being rediscovered by many Libertarian-Conservatives, hopefully Barry Goldwater continues to be rediscovered. His message of individual liberty is timeless and if the Republican Party ever wants to be competitive in a Presidential election they should embrace this philosophy.

Another article on the GOP and civil rights that you should find interesting. Teh author states that the South was starting to trend Republican before the 1960’s.

by Sean Trende

I by-and-large agree with the thrust of Jamelle Bouie’s recent American Prospect article, which argues that Republicans badly misapprehend the reason(s) African-Americans generally vote for Democratic candidates. Too many conservatives assert that African-Americans have developed a “false consciousness” and simply need to be shown the error of their ways before they’ll start supporting Republicans. Asking “What’s the matter with black people?” simply isn’t going to get the GOP very far in its minority outreach efforts.

But in the course of this argument, Bouie makes the following statement: “White Southerners jumped ship from Democratic presidential candidates in the 1960s, and this was followed by a similar shift on the congressional level, and eventually, the state legislative level. That the [last] two took time doesn’t discount the first.”

If you polled pundits, you’d probably get 90 percent agreement with this statement. And if you polled political scientists, you’d likely get a majority to sign off on it. That’s maddening, because it’s incorrect.

[……..]

In the 1930s and 1940s, FDR performed worse in the South in every election following his 1932 election. By the mid-1940s, the GOP was winning about a quarter of the Southern vote in presidential elections.

But the big breakthrough, to the extent that there was one, came in 1952. Dwight Eisenhower won 48 percent of the vote there, compared to Adlai Stevenson’s 52 percent. He carried most of the “peripheral South” — Virginia, Tennessee, Texas and Florida — and made inroads in the “Deep South,” almost carrying South Carolina and losing North Carolina and Louisiana by single digits.

Even in what we might call the “Deepest South” — Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi — Eisenhower kept Stevenson under 70 percent, which might not seem like much until you realize that Tom Dewey got 18 percent in Georgia against FDR in 1944, and that this had been an improvement over Herbert Hoover’s 8 percent in 1932.

In 1956, Eisenhower became the first Republican since Reconstruction to win a plurality of the vote in the South, 49.8 percent to 48.9 percent. He once again carried the peripheral South, but also took Louisiana with 53 percent of the vote. He won nearly 40 percent of the vote in Alabama. This is all the more jarring when you realize that the Brown v. Board decision was handed down in the interim, that the administration had appointed the chief justice who wrote the decision, and that the administration had opposed the school board.

[………]

Perhaps the biggest piece of evidence that something significant was afoot is Richard Nixon’s showing in 1960. He won 46.1 percent of the vote to John F. Kennedy’s 50.5 percent. One can write this off to JFK’s Catholicism, but writing off three elections in a row becomes problematic, especially given the other developments bubbling up at the local level. It’s even more problematic when you consider that JFK had the nation’s most prominent Southerner on the ticket with him.

But the biggest problem with the thesis comes when you consider what had been going on in the interim: Two civil rights bills pushed by the Eisenhower administration had cleared Congress, and the administration was pushing forward with the Brown decision, most famously by sending the 101st Airborne Division to Arkansas to assist with the integration of Little Rock Central High School.

It’s impossible to separate race and economics completely anywhere in the country, perhaps least of all in the South. But the inescapable truth is that the GOP was making its greatest gains in the South while it was also pushing a pro-civil rights agenda nationally. What was really driving the GOP at this time was economic development. As Southern cities continued to develop and sprout suburbs, Southern exceptionalism was eroded; Southern whites simply became wealthy enough to start voting Republican.

In 1964, Barry Goldwater won 49 percent of the vote in the South to Lyndon Johnson’s 52 percent. This doesn’t represent a massive breakthrough; in fact, Goldwater ran somewhat behind Eisenhower’s 1956 showing. He lost Texas, Virginia, Florida, and Tennessee, all four of which were won twice by Eisenhower and the last three of which were won by Nixon. He also lost North Carolina and Arkansas.

Goldwater did win Louisiana and South Carolina, although as we saw above, those states became “swing states” in the 1950s, not the 1960s. The only real breakthroughs for Republicans came in Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi (Goldwater won 87 percent of the vote in the latter). But the argument that white Southerners in those states began voting Republican in 1964 is quite a different animal than the much broader claim that white Southerners began voting Republican that year; even then, the groundwork in these largely rural states had been laid in the 1950s.

And of course, there were steps forward in addition to the steps back for Democrats afterward. Jimmy Carter won the South by 10 points in 1976; if you narrowed down to white Southerners, Gerald Ford’s showing probably looked a lot like the Eisenhower/Nixon showings in the South. Even as late as 1992, Bill Clinton ran only a point behind George H.W. Bush in the South, although his showing among white Southerners was clearly much weaker. (Every Southern state besides Arkansas was decided by single digits that year.)

Even at the congressional level, the 1964 elections don’t represent some sort of watershed. The GOP’s development in the South lags its development at the presidential level, as quality candidates continued to favor the Democratic Party well into the 1990s, and as the national Democrats continued to tolerate Southern Democrats operating as a de facto third party through the mid-1970s. [……]

But if you’re looking for an analogue to Ike’s 1952 showing in the South, but at the congressional level, it would probably be 1962, not 1964. The GOP went from winning 21 percent of the Southern vote for Congress in 1960 to winning 33 percent in 1962. It nearly unseated Alabama Sen. Lister Hill that year, leading political scientist Walter Dean Burnham to declare that two-party competition had finally arrived there. Of course, it also won LBJ’s Senate seat in a special election in 1961.

Republicans actually stepped backward in the House popular vote in 1964, to 32 percent, before winning 34 percent in 1966. Incidentally, all of these improved showings owe a lot to Eisenhower, who directed the NRCC to launch “Operation Dixie” in the late 1950s, developing local “farm teams” in states where no Republican organization existed and working to make sure more House races were contested.

Goldwater’s nomination may well have represented a watershed in the GOP’s ideological development (though I think there are some nuances there that are frequently missed as well), and there’s no doubt, at least in my mind, that GOP candidates used racialized appeals to try to win over Southern whites. None of those debates are impacted by the observations above.

But the assertion that white Southerners began voting Republican in 1964 is simply incorrect, whether for president, Congress, or statehouses. The development of the Southern GOP was a slow-moving, gradual process that lasted over a century, and is just being completed today.

Update by Speranza

Read the rest –  Southern  whites shift to the GOP predates the ’60’s.

The only good conservative is a dead conservative; and Reagan Reclaimed

by Mojambo ( 228 Comments › )
Filed under Democratic Party, Politics, Republican Party at February 4th, 2011 - 2:00 pm

Barry Goldwater, William F. Buckley, Ronald Reagan –  vilified  when they were alive, now shown respect once they are 6 feet under.  The funny thing is that Goldwater was always more socially libertarian then hard core social conservative, however he was a staunch anti communist and that is why they hated him. Buckley was always a gentleman and Reagan was far more pragmatic then they realized.  Reagan put a happy face on conservatism, sought to broaden the party (not narrow it), and reached out to disaffected Democrats and Independents.  He concentrated on winning the Cold War, halting America’s decline which had set in under LBJ, Nixon and Carter,  and strengthening America’s economic base. His left-wing son (Ron Reagan, Jr.) in an attempt to win approval from the Left,  is also trying to reinvent his father into making him something that he never was. As Jonah points out “As we saw in the wake of the Tucson shootings, so much of the effort to build up conservatives of the past is little more than a feint to tear down the conservatives of the present.”

by Jonah Goldberg

The only good conservative is a dead conservative.

That, in a nutshell, describes the age-old tradition of liberals suddenly discovering that once-reviled conservatives were OK after all. It’s just we-the-living who are hateful ogres, troglodytes, and mopers.

Over the last decade or so, as the giants of the founding generation of modern American conservatism have died, each has been rehabilitated into a gentleman-statesman of a bygone era of conservative decency and open-mindedness.

Barry Goldwater was the first. A few years ago his liberal granddaughter produced a documentary in which nearly all of the testimonials were from prominent liberals like Hillary Clinton and James Carville. Almost overnight, the man whom LBJ cast as a hate-filled demagogue who would condemn the world to nuclear war became an avuncular and sage grandfather type. Down the memory hole went one of the most despicable campaigns of political demonization in American history. Even Sarah Palin hasn’t been subjected to an ad in the New York Times signed by more than 1,000 psychiatrists claiming she’s too crazy to be president (though I don’t want to give anybody any ideas).

Then there was William F. Buckley, the founder of National Review, the magazine I call home. For more than four decades, Buckley was subjected to condemnation for his alleged extremism. Jack Paar (the Johnny Carson/Jay Leno of his day for you youngsters) was among the first of many to try to paint Buckley as a Nazi. Now, Sam Tanenhaus, editor of the New York Times book review section, who is writing a biography of Buckley, insists that Bill’s life mission was to make liberalism better.

But it’s Ronald Reagan who really stands out. As we celebrate the 100th anniversary of his birth, the Gipper is enjoying yet another status upgrade among liberals. Barack Obama took a Reagan biography with him on his vacation. A slew of liberals and mainstream journalists (but I repeat myself) complimented Obama’s State of the Union address as “Reaganesque.” Time magazine recently featured the cover story “Why Obama (Hearts) Reagan.” Meanwhile, the usual suspects are rewriting the same columns about how Reagan was a pragmatist who couldn’t run for president today because he was too nice, too reasonable, too (shudder) liberal for today’s Republican party.

Now, on the one hand, there’s something wonderful about the overflowing of love for Reagan. When presidents leave office or die, their partisan affiliation fades and, for the great ones, eventually withers away. Reagan was a truly great president, one of the greatest according to even liberal historians like the late John Patrick Diggins. As you can tell from the gnashing of teeth and rending of cloth from the far Left, the lionization of Reagan is a great triumph for the Right, and conservatives should welcome more of it.

On the other hand, what is not welcome is an almost Soviet airbrushing of the past to serve liberalism’s current agenda. For starters, if liberals are going to celebrate Reagan, they might try to account for the fact that they fought his every move, alternating between derision and slander in the process. As Steven Hayward, author of the two-volume history The Age of Reagan, asks in the current National Review, “Who can forget the relentless scorn heaped on Reagan for the ‘evil empire’ speech and the Strategic Defense Initiative?” Hayward notes that historian Henry Steele Commager said the “evil empire” speech “was the worst presidential speech in American history, and I’ve read them all.”

The point isn’t that liberals were wrong to oppose every Reagan policy. But what they seem to ignore is that those policies were the products of a political philosophy. Sure, he made pragmatic compromises, but he started from a philosophical position that the self-anointed smart set considered not just wrong, but evil or stupid or both. The Media Research Center has issued a lengthy report chronicling countless journalistic examples, but my favorite comes from Madame Tussauds Wax Museum in London, which in 1982 held a vote for the most hated people of all time. The winners: Hitler, Margaret Thatcher, Ronald Reagan, and Dracula.

Read the rest: Liberal Bouquets for Dead Conservatives

Steven F. Hayward chimes in on the same topic

The news that President Obama decided to read a biography of Ronald Reagan during his Christmas holiday in Hawaii might be taken as a sign that Reagan’s triumph over liberals is complete. Can anyone imagine John F. Kennedy admitting he was reading a biography of Calvin Coolidge, or Jimmy Carter taking in lessons from Dwight Eisenhower? This represents the culmination of a remarkable turnabout in Reagan’s reputation, most notably among liberals, who might have been expected to do to Reagan what an earlier generation of partisan historians did to Coolidge. Instead, we have seen a raft of books from liberal grandees such as Richard Reeves and Sean Wilentz giving Reagan his due.

But while conservatives should pocket these unexpected concessions, they should also note that the admiration of Reagan in the media-academic complex is highly qualified and mostly limited to his role in the Cold War. (And even this story they get wrong.) About the domestic-policy Reagan, liberals are currently engaging in a clever two-step — either excoriating Reagan with recycled 1980s clichés (favors the rich, hates the poor and minorities, reckless deregulation, and so forth), or making him out to be a crypto-liberal who tacitly set out to shore up the welfare state while cloaking himself in anti-big-government rhetoric. Ever so slowly, liberals are attempting a subtle revisionism. This revisionism is alarming not simply as an offense against historical accuracy, but also because the Liberal Revised Standard Version of Reagan will be used against the Tea Party and congressional Republicans in the months and years to come. We can expect to hear (and have already heard once or twice) that even Reagan didn’t attack entitlements the way Paul Ryan and today’s radical House Republicans propose to do.

It wouldn’t be the first time the Left has pulled off a historical Brinks job on a Republican whose achievements and popularity could not be destroyed with a direct attack. A hundred years ago, the leading Progressives appropriated Abraham Lincoln for their cause, even as they explicitly attacked Lincoln’s (and the Founders’) central political philosophy of natural rights. It culminated in the chutzpah of Franklin Roosevelt’s declaration in 1929 that “it is time for us Democrats to claim Lincoln as one of our own,” and in the early 1990s with New York’s ultra-liberal governor, Mario Cuomo, ostentatiously embracing Lincoln because “he’s reassuring to politicians like me.”

The liberal revision of Reagan has been unfolding for a while now, and at the center of it is the effort to separate him from his conservative beliefs. Joshua Green wrote in The Washington Monthly in January 2003 that “many of [Reagan’s] actions as president wound up facilitating liberal objectives. What this clamor of adulation is seeking to deny is that beyond his conservative legacy, Ronald Reagan has bequeathed a liberal one.” He raised taxes! He talked to the Soviets and reached arms agreements! Green’s article was provocatively adorned with a cartoon rendering of Reagan as FDR, complete with upturned cigarette holder. The late John Patrick Diggins, an unorthodox liberal who was a close friend of Arthur Schlesinger Jr.’s, argued in his 2007 book Ronald Reagan: Fate, Freedom, and the Making of History that Reagan deserves to be considered one of the four greatest American presidents, alongside Washington, Lincoln, and Franklin Roosevelt. His Upper West Side neighbors are still picking up their jaws off the floor. However, Diggins makes Reagan into a crypto-liberal: “Far from being a conservative, Reagan was the great liberating spirit of modern American history, a political romantic impatient with the status quo. . . . Reagan’s relation to liberalism may illuminate modern America more than his relation to conservatism.”

[…..]

It should never be forgotten that the Left hated Reagan just as lustily as they hated George W. Bush, and with some of the same venomous affectations, such as the reductio ad Hitlerum. The key difference is that in Reagan’s years there was no Internet with which to magnify these derangements, and the 24-hour cable-news cycle was in its infancy. But the signs were certainly abundant.

[…….]

Read the rest Reagan Reclaimed