Thursday, June 6, 2013

Republicans Have Selective Memory When It comes to The Reagan Presidency

It’s time Republicans laid former President Reagan to rest and stop invoking his name as the hero and shining light of being a Republican. 

What worked in Reagan's time wouldn't work today.
Former President Ronald Reagan died June 5, 2004 leaving behind a legacy that many Republicans use as the guiding principles for their party. It also led to Republicans having selective memory when it comes to the Reagan legacy. Republicans use Reagan’s name as the be all and end all when it comes to what the GOP should be. However it has led some Republicans to concede that Reagan couldn’t make it as GOP’er in today's party.
When Republicans look back at the Reagan presidency selective memory is front and center, here are seven legacies they don’t want to talk about or remember.
1. Reagan was a big fan of FDR.
Though Reagan famously quipped, "The nine most terrifying words in the English language are 'I'm from the government and I'm here to help,'" he admired Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who arguably did more to expand the role of government than any other American leader. Reagan voted for FDR all four times and called him "one of history's truly monumental figures." It would be hard to find a GOP candidate today willing to admit a similar admiration for Roosevelt.
2. Reagan increased tax 11 times during his presidency.
Reagan was not afraid to raise taxes. As governor of California, he signed the largest tax increase in the history of any state at that time. Though it's true that under President Reagan, the top income tax rate decreased from roughly 70 percent to 28 percent, taxes increased 11 times during his tenure. As Professor Douglas Brinkley, author of The Reagan Diaries, said in a 2011 NPR interview, "There's a false mythology out there about Reagan as this conservative president who came in and just cut taxes and trimmed federal spending in a dramatic way. It didn't happen that way."
3. Reagan increased spending and expanded the federal government.
Reagan did not reduce the size of the government during his tenure. Annual federal spending during his terms averaged 22.4 percent of the gross domestic product, which is greater than the 20.8 percent average under President Jimmy Carter. As then-Slate editor Michael Kinsley once noted, the federal government's spending increased by 25 percent in real terms from the time Reagan entered office to the time he left. During the same time, the federal civilian workforce grew from 2.8 million to 3 million.
4. Reagan gave amnesty to three million illegal aliens.
Reagan signed a 1986 law granting amnesty to three million undocumented immigrants. Anyone who came to the U.S. prior to 1982 was eligible for the amnesty. The comprehensive legislation also mandated tighter security along the Mexican border and provided for penalties on employers who hired immigrants without papers. This still isn’t to this date being enforced.
5. Reagan tripled the national debt.
Reducing the National Debt  is now a goal of Republicans , but during the Reagan presidency, the national debt tripled -- from $995 billion to $2.9 trillion. In a 1998 book, Richard Darman, the former president's adviser, declared, "In the Reagan years, more federal debt was added than in the entire prior history of the United States."
6. Reagan's Supreme Court appointee Sandra Day O'Connor saved abortion rights.
When Reagan nominated Sandra Day O'Connor to the Supreme Court in 1981, she came with a record of pro-choice votes as an Arizona state legislator. The first woman justice, O'Connor would become a critical swing vote on abortion and reaffirm the core of Roe v. Wade in 1992. In other words, Reagan's decision to name O'Connor to the Supreme Court ensured that women had the right to choose for another generation.
7. Reagan negotiated with terrorists.

In the Iran-Contra scandal, Reagan went where Republicans would scream to the high heavens today: He negotiated with terrorists. Trying to free American hostages held by Iranian terrorists in Lebanon, Reagan violated the U.S. embargo and secretly sold weapons to Iran. The funds from selling those weapons were then used to support the Contra rebels in Nicaragua. Tom Brokaw argues that Iran-Contra was a far greater scandal than those now facing President Barack Obama. 
Is negotiating with a terrorist group to free Americans a greater scandal than spying on Americans or the murder of an American Ambassador?