June 9, 2004
THE GRAY LADY, WHERE IMITATION ISN'T FLATTERY:
Epitaph and Epigone (Maureen Dowd, 06/10/04, The New York Times)
Showing they haven't lost their taste for hype, some Bushies revved up the theme that Son of Bush was really Son of Reagan.
Maybe there really is a Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy; after all her boss wrote this: Reagan's Son (Bill Keller, January 26, 2003, NY Times Magazine)
Like a lot of Republicans who have watched both Reagan and Bush at close hand, Deaver sees uncanny similarities between them. The presidents are alike in their outlooks and career paths, in their agendas of tax-cutting and confrontational deployment of American power, in the ideological mix of their advisers. (Whatever you read about the president's inheritance from his father and Gerald Ford, the Reagan DNA is dominant in the staffing, training and planning of the Bush administration.) More than that, there are important similarities of character and temperament. And both are simple men who have made a political virtue of being -- in Bush's word -- ''misunderestimated'' by the political elite.Posted by Orrin Judd at June 9, 2004 11:44 PMThat Bush is Reaganesque is a conceit that some conservatives have wishfully, tentatively embraced since he emerged as a candidate, and one that Bush himself has encouraged. The party faithful have been pining for a new Reagan since Reagan, and for Bush the analogy has the added virtue of providing an alternative political lineage; he's not Daddy's Boy, he's Reagan Jr. The comparison has only gained currency since Bush entered the White House. Some Republicans speak of the current era, with the culmination of Reagan's ballistic missile defense and the continuing assault on marginal tax rates and, especially, the standing tall against global evil as the recommencing of the Reagan ''revolution.''
''I think he's the most Reagan-like politician we have seen, certainly in the White House,'' Deaver said. ''I mean, his father was supposed to be the third term of the Reagan presidency -- but then he wasn't. This guy is.'' [...]
I began this exercise inclined to think of Bush as Reagan Lite -- that is, a president with shallower, unschooled instincts in place of the older man's studied, lifelong convictions, and without the mastery of language that served Reagan so well. Perhaps, I'd have said, he is a bit of a Reagan poseur -- the White House being such a studio of contrivance and calculation. I ended my research more inclined to think that Bush is in a sense the fruition of Reagan, and that -- far from being the lightweight opportunist of liberal caricature or the centrist he sometimes played during his own election campaign -- he stands a good chance of advancing a radical agenda that Reagan himself could only carry so far. Bush is not, as Reagan was, an original, but he has adapted Reagan's ideas to new times, and found some new language in which to market them. We seem not only to be witnessing the third term of the Reagan presidency; at this rate we may well see the fourth.
Maybe Reagan will someday be known as "the George Bush of the Cold War".
Posted by: Michael Herdegen at June 9, 2004 11:54 PMI like Dubya but watching old Reagan tapes made me wistful for a time when there was a Great Communicator in office.
And I miss how the guy was so self-confident in office compared to Bush who has seemed hesitant and careworn though God knows, he's had justification.
Like it was said at AICN, Reagan never got bored down by events and it was like he was starring in Presiden Kickass:The Movie.
Posted by: M Ali Choudhury at June 10, 2004 8:13 AMWhat's AICN?
Your acessment is accurate and only history will tell us the relative merits of Bush/Reagan. Bush it would seem to me is considerably more the gambler and he's being considerably more aggressive on all fronts domestic and foreign. He might end up having his head handed to him also.
Posted by: h-man at June 10, 2004 9:46 AMaintitcoolnews.com
They had a nice tribute to Reagan's acting career complete with lots of posters of his movies.
Posted by: M Ali Choudhury at June 10, 2004 10:19 AMThe remarkable thing would be if MoDo had actually read her own paper. Most of the time I am pretty sure she doesn't.
Posted by: Robert Schwartz at June 10, 2004 10:40 AM