http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-new-party-of-reagan/2011/07/19/gIQAuckfOI_story.html
The new party of Reagan
After he switched to the Republican Party in 1962, Ronald Reagan famously quipped: âI didnât leave the Democratic Party. The party left me.â
Now, the Republican Party is doing the same thing to him â and Democrats are happy to take Reagan back.
At Tuesday morningâs meeting of the House Democrats, caucus chairman John Larson rallied his colleagues for the dayâs debt-limit debate by playing an audio recording of the 40th president.
âCongress consistently brings the government to the edge of default before facing its responsibility,â Reagan says in the clip. âThis brinkmanship threatens the holders of government bonds and those who rely on Social Security and veterans benefits. Interest rates would skyrocket, instability would occur in financial markets, and the federal deficit would soar. The United States has a special responsibility to itself and the world to meet its obligations.â
âKind of sums things up,â Larson said, playing the same clip again at a news conference.
Nobody knows what Reagan, who died in 2004, would make of the current fight over the debt limit. But 100 years after Reaganâs birth, itâs clear that the Tea Party Republicans have little regard for the policies of the president they claim to venerate.
Tea Party Republicans call a vote to raise the debt ceiling a threat to their very existence; Reagan presided over 18 increases in the debt ceiling during his presidency.
Tea Party Republicans say they would sooner default on the national debt than raise taxes; Reagan agreed to raise taxes 11 times.
Tea Party Republicans, in âcut, cap and balanceâ legislation on the House floor Tuesday, voted to cut government spending permanently to 18 percent of gross domestic product; under Reagan, spending was as high as 23.5 percent and never below 21.3 percent of GDP.
That same legislation would take federal spending down to a level last seen in 1966, before Medicare was fully up and running; Reagan in 1988 signed a major expansion of Medicare.
Under the Tea Party Republicansâ spending cap, Reaganâs military buildup, often credited with winning the Cold War, would have been impossible.
No wonder Democrats on Tuesday were claiming the Republican icon as one of their own. After the caucus meeting with the Reagan clip, Rep. Mike Quigley (D-Ill.) began the dayâs debate by reading from a 1983 Reagan letter to Congress warning that âthe full consequences of a default â or even the serious prospect of default â by the United States are impossible to predict and awesome to contemplate.â
âIn the year of his 100th birthday, the Great Communicator might be amazed at how far his own image has shifted from the original,â Quigley charged. âHeâd see his most dedicated followers using his name as justification for saying no to honoring our debts. Heâd see his legacy used to play chicken with the worldâs greatest economic engine.â
Republicans have continued their ritual praise of Reagan during the debt-limit fight. Rep. Trent Franks (Ariz.) claimed that the budget caps would allow America to be âthat great city on a hill that Ronald Reagan spoke of.â Marsha Blackburn (Tenn.) invoked Reaganâs belief that âthe closest thing to eternal life on Earth is a federal government program.âKevin Brady (Tex.) cited Reaganâs line that âthe nine most terrifying words in the English language are âIâm from the government and Iâm here to help.â â Both Steve King (Iowa) and Bobby Schilling (Ill.) informed the body that they had granddaughters named Reagan.
But while Reagan nostalgia endures, a number of Republicans have begun to admit the obvious: The Gipper would no longer be welcome on the GOP team. Most recently, Rep. Duncan Hunter Jr. (Calif.) called Reagan a âmoderate former liberal . . . who would never be elected today in my opinion.â This spring, Mike Huckabee judged that âRonald Reagan would have a very difficult, if not impossible time being nominated in this atmosphere,â pointing out that Reagan âraises taxes as governor, he made deals with Democrats, he compromised on things in order to move the ball down the field.â
During the debt-limit debate, a procession of Democrats â Vermontâs Peter Welch, Marylandâs Chris Van Hollen, New Yorkâs Paul Tonko, Texasâs Sheila Jackson Lee and Gene Green â claimed Reaganâs support for their position. Reagan is ârevered by many Democrats,â said Welch, who praised Reagan for fighting âthe absurd notion that America had an option when it came to paying our bills.â
Half a century after he left the party, the Gipper is winning one for the Democrats.
danamilbank@washpost.com
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