By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 9.4.03 @ 12:03AM
Why can't the senator from Yorktown be as decent as, say, Ronald Reagan?
Washington -- America is at war. We have already lost more of
our countrymen at home than on the battlefield. I would imagine
that in the average American's mind Islamofascism and terrorism
loom more menacingly than memories of the Soviet Union once did.
Most Americans recognize that in this war we have no alternative
but to fight. Yet seven of the fabled nine dwarves now seeking the
Democratic presidential nomination are taking acerbic issue with
the President.
Said Senator John Pierre Kerry, the other day in his most
intemperate declamation: "Overseas, George Bush has led and misled
us on a course at odds with 200 years of our history," and he went
on to complain that "he has squandered the goodwill of the world
after September 11, and he has lost the respect and the influence
that we need to make our country safe." It is an unedifying
spectacle, this parade of presidential candidates exploiting the
normal anxieties that exist in time of war to discredit the
President. Has the Republic ever witnessed the like of it? As a
matter of fact we have.
Living as we do half a century from the anxious days of World
War II we forget that even in the height of battle President
Franklin Roosevelt suffered his fill of nags and faultfinders.
There is, however, a difference between today's nags and those
besetting FDR. His were mostly members of the America First
Committee and other conspiratorially-minded extremists. President
Bush's are members of a mainstream political party seeking that
party's nomination. In fact, of all the Democrats seeking the
nomination, only Senator Joe Lieberman and Richard Gephardt are in
the great tradition of Democratic internationalists defending
American security.
It is a fact. The carpers campaigning for the Democratic
nomination, by stridently disparaging the President's conduct of a
war made inescapable by the attacks of September 11, have their
historical antecedents only in the carpers who disparaged FDR.
There is, however, a difference between the two groups of carpers.
The America Firsters existed on the fringes of 1940s politics. They
were reactionaries. The Democratic candidates do not see themselves
as operating from the fringes. The question is, are they too
reactionaries. I think they are, and it will take Lieberman and
Democrats like him a long time to rebuild their party.
After hearing Senator John Pierre's offensive diatribe I took a
break from the bitterness of today's unbearably small politicians
and picked up Peter Robinson's How Ronald Reagan Changed My
Life, a vivid account of the speechwriter's years in the
Reagan White House. Robinson's recollections of the old cowboy
remind us of how a great leader led in grim times. When Reagan
became president the economy was in dreadful condition -- worse by
far than Senator John Pierre's hallucinations on today's reviving
economy. A military colossus faced us that could do more than hurt
us -- which is the Islamofascists' only hope. The USSR could
destroy us.
Reagan reversed the course of history in both departments,
economics and geopolitical. Robinson in sprightly anecdotes depicts
Reagan as "the chief executive so utterly relaxed and at peace that
far from conveying any sense of the burdens of his office, he
always made your own burdens feel lighter." Robinson frequently
reminds us of the old cowboy's great lines and of his personal
charm.
There are in Robinson's book, also, scenes of Reagan's
unscotchable resolve. A favorite of mine occurs during the height
of Reagan's struggle to cut taxes. He meets with his distinguished
Economic Policy Advisory Board. It includes economists of
international distinction such as Milton Friedman, Arthur Laffer,
and the venerable Arthur Burns. Burns, then Reagan's ambassador to
West Germany, is part of a cabal in and out of the government
prevailing on Reagan to reverse himself on tax cuts. During this
meeting he asks the President to cut a deal with the anti-tax-cut
pols. Robinson quotes Reagan as responding: "You know, Arthur, I
can't tell you how much I enjoy these Advisory Board meetings. But
you know I made a promise when I ran for office that I wouldn't
raise taxes, and I intend to do all I can do to keep it. So every
minute you spend in these meetings talking about a tax increase is
a minute I don't get the pleasure of discussing something I might
actually do."
Then the most genial American president since Ike leaned over
the table and said to his formidable confrere, "Never mention a tax
increase in my presence again. Is that clear?" Presidents are often
faced with carpers even inside the White House, but the great
presidents prevail. In time Senator John Pierre will find that
out.
topics:
Taxes, Economics, Islam, Military, NATO, Fascism