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Reagan vs. Kristol

I just now got around to reading the atrocious Bill Kristol column that Stacy linked to earlier. I'm tempted to refute it line by line, but I specifically wanted to take issue with this:

Five Republicans have won the presidency since 1932: Dwight Eisenhower, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan and the two George Bushes. Only Reagan was even close to being a small-government conservative. And he campaigned in 1980 more as a tax-cutter and national-defense-builder-upper, and less as a small-government enthusiast in the mold of the man he had supported — and who had lost — in 1964, Barry Goldwater. And Reagan’s record as governor and president wasn’t a particularly government-slashing one.

It's one thing to say that Reagan wasn't effective at reducing the size of government, but to say he didn't run on a small-government message is simply not backed up by the facts. Here are some excerpts from his acceptance speech at the 1980 Republican National Convention:

As your nominee, I pledge to restore to the federal government the capacity to do the people's work without dominating their lives. I pledge to you a government that will not only work well, but wisely; its ability to act tempered by prudence and its willingness to do good balanced by the knowledge that government is never more dangerous than when our desire to have it help us blinds us to its great power to harm us....

It is essential that we maintain both the forward momentum of economic growth and the strength of the safety net beneath those in society who need help. We also believe it is essential that the integrity of all aspects of Social Security are preserved.

Beyond these essentials, I believe it is clear our federal government is overgrown and overweight. Indeed, it is time for our government to go on a diet. Therefore, my first act as chief executive will be to impose an immediate and thorough freeze on federal hiring. Then, we are going to enlist the very best minds from business, labor and whatever quarter to conduct a detailed review of every department, bureau and agency that lives by federal appropriations. We are also going to enlist the help and ideas of many dedicated and hard working government employees at all levels who want a more efficient government as much as the rest of us do. I know that many are demoralized by the confusion and waste they confront in their work as a result of failed and failing policies.

Our instructions to the groups we enlist will be simple and direct. We will remind them that government programs exist at the sufferance of the American taxpayer and are paid for with money earned by working men and women. Any program that represents a waste of their money--a theft from their pocketbooks--must have that waste eliminated or the program must go--by executive order where possible; by congressional action where necessary. Everything that can be run more effectively by state and local government we shall turn over to state and local government, along with the funding sources to pay for it. We are going to put an end to the money merry-go-round where our money becomes Washington's money, to be spent by the states and cities exactly the way the federal bureaucrats tell them to.

I will not accept the excuse that the federal government has grown so big and powerful that it is beyond the control of any president, any administration or Congress. We are going to put an end to the notion that the American taxpayer exists to fund the federal government. The federal government exists to serve the American people. On January 20th, we are going to re-establish that truth.

Cato's Michael Tanner has more about Planet Kristol, where President Bush's big government policies were a smashing political success.

View all comments (6) | Leave a comment

The Kingfish| 12.8.08 @ 6:12PM

Just read his old interview in 94 issue of Policy Review.

He was singing a MUCH different tune then.

Jeremiah| 12.8.08 @ 7:42PM

When are you "conservatives" going to face it?

The choice is NOT between "small government" supporters and "big government" supporters.

The choice is between Democrats, who believe that government should work on behalf of the middle class, and Republicans, who believe that government should aid the wealthiest in their attempt to raid the public coffers.

Robert| 12.8.08 @ 11:12PM

I gave up on Kristol. Forget talk about big government vs small government. How bout the constitution? If you follow it government will be small.

Paul E. More| 12.9.08 @ 4:55AM

How many times do Neocons like Bill Kristol have to let the truth slip out before the rank and file, the grass roots, get it and demand that NR, Rush, Hannity and all the rest stop carrying water for the Neocons.

Prior to this, during the heat of one of the attempts to ram amnesty through Congress, Bill Kristol stated on Fox Sunday Morning that he was a “liberal on illegal immigration.” How about that, not just a terrible liberal on legal immigration (including H1-b visa workers brought to the USA to replace middle class workers, i.e., Republican voters) but a LIBERAL on ILLEAGL IMMIGRATION TOO!

When is enough of the Neocon double talk enough. And note that Fred Barnes, who works for Kristol at the Weekly Standard, generally follows the same line.

Note also that smaller government doesn’t mean no government. If we aim for smaller government maybe we can at least stop government from growing and growing and growing.

james23| 12.9.08 @ 8:54AM

The Big Government Republicans' gift to the people who elected them: Bailout Nation.

How does one shrink the federal government in the age of bailout mania? At this point, the federal government is so large that it may be best just to keep feeding the beast until it explodes. And we start over.

biniki| 8.28.09 @ 10:58PM

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More Blog Posts by Philip Klein

http://spectator.org/blog/2008/12/08/reagan-vs-kristol

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