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<text id=89TT0248>
<link 93TG0041>
<link 93TG0031>
<title>
Jan. 23, 1989: Going Home A Winner
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Jan. 23, 1989 Barbara Bush:The Silver Fox
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 14
Going Home a Winner
</hdr><body>
<p>But Reagan's bread-and-circuses strategy will mar his place in
history
</p>
<p>By Laurence I. Barrett
</p>
<p> When his presidency was just five hours old, on Inauguration
Day, 1981, Ronald Reagan took a respite from the celebration and
the constant bulletins about the hostages en route home from
Tehran by joking with reporters, "It's been a very wonderful
day. I guess now I can go back to California, can't I?"
</p>
<p> The quip was a typical Reagan play on his ostensible disdain
for Washington and for the traditional politician's obsession
with power. In a profoundly personal way, Friday's Inaugural
will be an even more wonderful day for the nation's oldest
President. Eight years ago, many skeptics predicted that he
would have to go West for good after one failed term. Instead,
he heads home on his own schedule, with a strong sense that he
has done what he came to do. Despite the minefield awaiting his
successor, Reagan believes, as he grandly put it the other day,
"A revolution of ideas became a revolution of governance on Jan.
20, 1981."
</p>
<p> That Reagan leaves Washington and the nation very different
places from those he found is beyond dispute. How much of his
personal triumph translates into durable accomplishment is far
more debatable. But those doubts will be invisible as Reagan
and George Bush ride to the Capitol together. For Reagan, the
Inaugural puts the final adornment on the sash proclaiming him
the era's most successful President, if only in political terms.
</p>
<p> Though historians will give him a rough time because of the
impact of some of his policies, even the toughest appraisals
will have to recognize successes that seemed impossible eight
years ago. Reagan's four immediate predecessors presided over a
frightening decline in presidential authority. Neither Lyndon
Johnson, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford nor Jimmy Carter could
manage two full terms. Their serial failures left the
presidency bordering on decrepitude. That an elderly celluloid
cowboy from California unencumbered by heavy intellect,
workaholism or Washington experience might halt that decline was
inconceivable to the Eastern smart set. Yet Reagan not only
arrested the presidency's slide, he reversed it. His high
approval rating -- 64% last week, 5 points above Dwight
Eisenhower's in December 1960 -- is only one crude measure of
that change. Most Americans are more sanguine about their lot
and their leaders than they were in 1980. Government paralysis
is no longer the norm.
</p>
<p> That feeling of serenity, though diluted by a variety of
concerns, is part of the foundation of Reagan's political
trifecta: his re-election in 1984, his personal recovery from
the trough of the Iran-contra scandal and his final vindication
at the polls last November. Not since the Roosevelt-Truman era
has either party won three consecutive presidential elections.
Not even the popular Eisenhower had the pleasure of escorting
his designated heir to the Capitol.
</p>
<p> Their advanced age, Republicanism and durability create some
parallels between Eisenhower and Reagan. But as a politician,
the general was not the actor's equal. Political scientist
Richard Neustadt points out that "Ike came into office with the
status of a genuine national hero and merely had to preserve
that aura. Reagan came in only with what he had on his back and
had to create his stature." One indispensable item Reagan
carried was a quiver of messages and images, simple but sharp,
honed over his many years as a conservative advocate. His great
skill was in making a few of those arrows stick in the
electorate's consciousness.
</p>
<p> Later there would be endless musing over "Reagan luck" and
"Reagan magic." He was in fact often fortunate. Not only did
John Hinckley's bullet stop an inch from Reagan's heart, for
instance, but the shooting occurred at a time when the public
was still forming its concept of the new President. Reagan's
image was enhanced when he responded with both wit and grit.
But the incantations about "magic" imply mystical powers beyond
the ken of other politicians. There is nothing mysterious about
a veteran public performer with a knack for timing, a keen
sense for what will please a mass audience, and a talent for
hiring adroit p.r. advisers.
</p>
<p> Reagan could never master the arcana of nuclear weaponry or
arms control. Even the finer points of economics, one of his
majors in college, eluded him. But he understood Middle
American folklore and myth very well. After growing up in
small-town simplicity and pursuing his first career in
Hollywood, Reagan needed no tutoring in symbolism. By 1980 a
frustrated, confused America had lost all patience with
stagflation at home, impudent adversaries abroad and ambiguity
from its leadership. The moment was perfect for a leader who
dealt in stark simplicities. When he declared that "government
is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem,"
he appealed to his countrymen's primordial suspicion of
authority. When he talked of God's plan for American freedom,
he revived the nation's self-image as uniquely blessed. When he
inveighed against tax rates, he played on Everyman's resentment
against the burdens of the commonweal. Last week Reagan followed
what he called the "great tradition of warnings in presidential
farewells" by protesting the way history is taught these days.
He urged renewed emphasis on American uniqueness to achieve an
"informed patriotism."
</p>
<p> That Reagan believed in his spiel, and in himself, more
fully than do most politicians enhanced his credibility. Though
he has been living like gentry for nearly 40 years, his
geniality kept him in touch with the folks. "Having been a
Roosevelt Democrat was an asset," Neustadt observes. "Though he
turned far to the right, he never became a three-piece-suit,
business Republican." Instead he became something new under the
Republican sun, a smile-button conservative who persuaded
voters that less taxation meant more prosperity, that less
government facilitated the pursuit of happiness. And he taught
the Washington establishment that compulsive attention to detail
in the Oval Office simply got in the way of big ideas.
</p>
<p> None of this could please the crowd for very long without
some hard decisions and tangible results. During Reagan's first
term, he delivered enough of these to prove that he could make
the White House work again. Was he serious about fighting those
nasty special interests? He broke the strike by the
Professional Air Traffic Controllers' Association and
obliterated the union. Would he tame the Kremlin? He put
Moscow's bargaining feelers on hold while pumping up the
Pentagon budget to gargantuan proportions. Though the process
often seemed serendipitous, depending heavily on events in
Moscow, Reagan eventually presided over a microwave warming of
relations with the Soviet Union. No one can be sure how genuine
or durable the thaw will be, but it has helped Reagan
enormously. With the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty
in force and Moscow in a conciliatory mood, he can ignore the
criticism that his conduct of national-security affairs has been
generally incoherent.
</p>
<p> Would he really attack inflation, high interest rates and
unemployment? Reagan rammed through Congress his radical
tax-reduction scheme and some curbs on domestic spending. Just
as important, he supported the harsh restraints already being
applied by the Federal Reserve Board under Paul Volcker.
Inflation succumbed, at last, to the thumbscrew treatment after
Reagan waited out the most severe recession since the 1930s.
This painful therapy, together with the borrowing binge
required to finance the budget and trade deficits, produced the
economic expansion now in its seventh year. Today, with
unemployment at a 14-year low of 5.3% and inflation at a
tolerable 4.4%, Reagan has a shield against charges that his
economic accomplishments rest on quicksand. When asked about the
intractable pathology of the underclass, he sometimes replies,
accurately but irrelevantly, that the newspapers are full of
help-wanted ads. That a booming economy cannot match the
chronically unemployed with available jobs is an irony Reagan
chooses to ignore.
</p>
<p> Liberals still fulminate about the so-called Teflon factor
that ostensibly insulated Reagan from the penalties for his
weaknesses and mistakes. This complaint ignores some large
facts. No Teflon protected Reagan's approval rating during the
1981-82 recession or the Iran-contra debacle. Moreover,
commentators have shouted themselves hoarse warning about the
dangers of the budget deficits.
</p>
<p> Yet a huge disconnect occurred. Reagan, understanding better
than Beltway insiders what really interests voters, usually
concentrated on a handful of fundamentals. Having established
his credibility early, he was able to get by on what amounted
to a TV-era version of bread and circuses. The bread was the
economic recovery, which created a sense of well-being among
most members of the middle and upper classes. The circuses were
mainly Reagan's performances as head of state, in which he could
be as inspiring, consoling, reassuring or entertaining as the
event demanded. After the Challenger disaster, for instance, his
moving speech was a televised condolence call on the nation that
helped distract attention from NASA's ongoing failures.
</p>
<p> In the use of American military force abroad, Reagan drew
the U.S. back from its post-Viet Nam allergy to intervention. He
established his bona fides as tough guy so thoroughly that,
unlike Carter, he was largely immune to political damage when
terrorists demonstrated in bloody fashion just how vulnerable
the country still is. Two hundred forty-one servicemen died in
Beirut, and 259 people were killed when Pan Am Flight 103 went
down last month. In the Tehran crisis that destroyed Carter,
the hostages survived.
</p>
<p> After the dour, crabbed atmosphere of the Carter years, the
country needed a mood change. The great failure, and great
paradox, of the Reagan era is that its protagonist succeeded
too well on that score. His rhetoric on domestic matters
encouraged Americans to celebrate instant gratification at the
expense of the future, while his policies channeled national
energies away from enterprises of common purpose. Reaganomics
increased the national debt by 170% and converted the U.S. from
a major creditor to a vulnerable debtor in the global financial
market.
</p>
<p> An inch below the lush turf of the Reagan prosperity, fault
lines are already formed. While the elderly have grown more
affluent, one-fifth of America's children live in poverty. While
there was a legitimate need to increase defense resources, the
Administration tolerated such sloth that blatant waste and scams
eventually evoked an anti-Pentagon backlash. While Reagan
celebrated deregulation as the key to a more creative economy,
lax scrutiny of the savings and loan industry contributed to
widespread failures that will cost taxpayers tens of billions.
Wall Street's obsession with wasteful takeovers diverted
resources away from constructive investment, while stagnation in
basic research for civilian technology inhibited innovation.
Efforts to compete effectively with Japan and other striving
industrial rivals suffered accordingly. Looser ethical
standards and the adoration of capitalism led to a wave of
scandals in and out of government that rivaled the excesses of
the Gilded Age.
</p>
<p> Many of these problems did not start with the Reagan
Administration. And though the national conceit puts the
presidency at the center of our political solar system, no
President can shine so brightly that every shadow disappears.
Reagan's failure was to deny frequently that the shadows
existed. While incumbency rounded out some of his early
one-dimensional ideas, Reagan clung tenaciously to his phobias
concerning Government intervention and federal taxes. Even Bush
has had to acknowledge that Washington must act more vigorously
in some areas, but Reagan to the end fought that reality. In
one of his several farewell talks, he compared advocacy of
government activism to "a false determinism (that will) take us a
mile or two more down what Friedrich Hayek called `The Road to
Serfdom.'"
</p>
<p> Hayek, an economist Reagan admires, preached that the free
market conquers all. During the first term, such nostrums were
handy tools for trimming some obsolete domestic programs and
reducing marginal tax rates. But when Reagan reached those
goals, he lacked intellectual material for a second act worthy
of the first. Here another of his weaknesses came into play with
devastating effect. Throughout his career his detached
management style made him depend heavily on his senior
advisers. After his 1984 electoral triumph, his fatigued White
House staff needed relief. Instead of reorganizing it himself,
Reagan allowed his then chief of staff, James Baker, and
Treasury Secretary Donald Regan to work out a job exchange that
suited their desires much more than the President's needs.
</p>
<p> Reagan went into his second term with a lackluster cadre of
close advisers determined to "let Reagan be Reagan." The energy
level dropped, and so did the level of expertise. Only after the
traumas of the Republicans' 1986 loss of the Senate and the
Iran-contra scandal upset the chessboard did Reagan put
effective knights into play again. But he had lost two precious
years in the interim, and with them the initiative in dealing
with accumulating problems.
</p>
<p> This Friday at noon, Bush inherits the challenges Reagan
leaves behind. Eight years ago to the day, as the hostages were
leaving Iran, Reagan had the pleasure of lighting the White
House Christmas tree a month late; Carter had left the tree
dark as a symbolic acknowledgment of the crisis. In the years
that followed, Reagan sent a great deal of welcome electricity
into the nation's circuitry. Now Bush must figure out how to pay
the power bill.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>