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Ronald Reagan’s Triple Legacy

On Sunday, Americans will mark the 100th birthday of Ronald Reagan. But for the conservative movement, the now-decades long hagiography project is reaching a crescendo. While the Gipper’s former speechwriter Peggy Noonan lauded his goodness in the Wall Street Journal Friday morning, Sarah Palin kicked-off the Young Americans for Freedom three day extravaganza at the Reagan Library in California. But while this weekend’s anniversary will rightly celebrate Ronald Reagan’s Cold War resolve, boundless optimism, and deep, abiding faith in the American people, the real lasting legacy of President Reagan will nowhere be on display. The father of the Republican Party’s fiscal irresponsibility , Ronald Reagan made skyrocketing national debt, a dangerously reflexive aversion to taxes and a corrosive distrust of the people’s government permanent fixtures of American politics. Ronald Reagan: The King of Debt Ronald Reagan: The Tax Cut Mythmaker Ronald Reagan: Undermining Trust in Government The King of Debt A born-again convert to supply side economics, Ronald Reagan came to office in 1981 promising to simultaneously slash taxes, massively increase defense spending and balance the budget. Instead, as his budget director David Stockman acknowledged last year, Reagan produced red ink as far as the eye could see: “[The] debt explosion has resulted not from big spending by the Democrats, but instead the Republican Party’s embrace, about three decades ago, of the insidious doctrine that deficits don’t matter if they result from tax cuts.” Which is exactly right. While the Republicans’ fiscal rot deepened under George W. Bush, it began with Ronald Reagan. It was the legendary Gipper whose financial recklessness and tax-cutting fetish came to define the modern GOP. The numbers tell the story. As predicted, Reagan’s massive $749 billion supply-side tax cuts in 1981 quickly produced even more massive annual budget deficits. Combined with his rapid increase in defense spending, Reagan delivered not the balanced budgets he promised, but record-settings deficits. Even his OMB alchemist David Stockman could not obscure the disaster with his famous “rosy scenarios.” Forced to raise taxes twice to avert financial catastrophe (a fact conveniently forgotten in the conservative hagiography of Reagan manufactured by the GOP’s 2008 ticket of John McCain and Sarah Palin ), the Gipper nonetheless presided over a tripling of the American national debt . By the time he left office in 1989, Ronald Reagan more than equaled the entire debt burden produced by the previous 200 years of American history. For his part, George H.W. Bush hardly stemmed the flow of red ink. And when Bush the Elder broke his “read my lips, no new taxes” pledge to address the cascading budget shortfalls, his own Republican Party turned on him. While Bush’s apostasy helped ensure his defeat by Bill Clinton, it was Clinton’s 1993 deficit-cutting package (passed without a single GOP vote in either house of Congress) which helped usher in the surpluses and economic expansion of the late 1990′s. Alas, they were to be short-lived. Inheriting a federal budget in the black and CBO forecast for a $5.6 trillion surplus over 10 years, President George W. Bush quickly set about dismantling the progress made under Clinton. Bush’s $1.4 trillion tax cut in 2001, followed by a second round in 2003, accounted for half of the yawning budget deficits he produced. Bush’s presidency nearly doubled the national debt And as the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities concluded last year, the Bush tax cuts if made permanent would contribute more to the U.S. budget deficit over the next decade than the Obama stimulus, the TARP program, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and revenue lost to the recession – combined . In 2001, Michael Kinsley marked Reagan’s 90th birthday by noting, among other things, that when it came to small government, “this legendary Reagan revolution barely happened.” Federal government spending was a quarter higher in real terms when Reagan left office than when he entered. As a share of GDP, the federal government shrank from 22.2 percent to 21.2 percent–a whopping one percentage point. The federal civilian work force increased from 2.8 million to 3 million. (Yes, it increased even if you exclude Defense Department civilians. And, no, assuming a year or two of lag time for a president’s policies to take effect doesn’t materially change any of these results.) As USA Today explained five years ago, measured as a percentage of gross domestic product, average annual federal spending dropped far more under Bill Clinton (-1.8%) than Ronald Reagan (-0.3%). As Kinsley put it: Under eight years of Big Government Bill Clinton, to choose another president at random, the federal civilian work force went down from 2.9 million to 2.68 million. Federal spending grew by 11 percent in real terms–less than half as much as under Reagan. As a share of GDP, federal spending shrank from 21.5 percent to 18.3 percent–more than double Reagan’s reduction, ending up with a federal government share of the economy about a tenth smaller than Reagan left behind. Nevertheless, as Paul Krugman explained last July, Republican orthodoxy has remained unchanged since the time of Reagan. The GOP remains committed to ” redo that voodoo “: It’s not true, of course. Ronald Reagan said that his tax cuts would reduce deficits, then presided over a near-tripling of federal debt. When Bill Clinton raised taxes on top incomes, conservatives predicted economic disaster; what actually followed was an economic boom and a remarkable swing from budget deficit to surplus. Then the Bush tax cuts came along, helping turn that surplus into a persistent deficit, even before the crash. But we’re talking about voodoo economics here, so perhaps it’s not surprising that belief in the magical powers of tax cuts is a zombie doctrine: no matter how many times you kill it with facts, it just keeps coming back. And despite repeated failure in practice, it is, more than ever, the official view of the G.O.P. In 2002, Vice President Dick Cheney famously remarked, “Reagan proved deficits don’t matter.” Reagan himself long ago concluded the same thing: “I am not worried about the deficit. It is big enough to take care of itself.” The Tax Cut Mythmaker Arthur Laffer’s supply-side snake oil has been Republican orthodoxy ever since Jude Wanniski first sketched Laffer’s curve on a cocktail napkin. But in the wake of Reagan’s disastrous supply side experiment, the GOP didn’t merely suggest that tax cuts were the cure for everything from surpluses and deficits to erectile dysfunction and male pattern baldness. Despite the inescapable conclusion of empirical data and history to the contrary, Republicans continue to wrongly insist that ” tax cuts pay for themselves .” Sadly, the success of that poisonous propaganda has made talk of needed tax increases a non-starter. To be sure, Reagan’s heirs continue to ignore his mangled mantra that ” facts are stubborn things .” Last year, future House Speaker John Boehner was adamant that the Bush tax cuts were “not what led to the budget deficit.” Jon Kyl (R-AZ) the second ranking Senate Republican made the same point another way, telling Chris Wallace of Fox News, “You should never have to offset cost of a deliberate decision to reduce tax rates on Americans.” Aborted Obama Commerce nominee Judd Gregg (R-NH) soon chimed in, declaring “I tend to think that tax cuts should not have to be offset.” For his part, Oklahoma’s Tom Coburn argued his math will work in the future if you ignore the past, “Continuing the [Bush] tax cuts isn’t a cost, if you added new taxes, new tax cuts, I would agree that’s a cost.” And on Wednesday, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell explained how tax cuts magically turn red ink black: “There’s no evidence whatsoever that the Bush tax cuts actually diminished revenue. They increased revenue because of the vibrancy of these tax cuts in the economy. So I think what Senator Kyl was expressing was the view of virtually every Republican on that subject.” (Reviewing the Congressional Budget Office assessment of the hemorrhage of red ink produced by the Bush tax cuts, Ezra Klein joked that if a Democrat had made an assessment like Kyl’s, “He’d be laughed out of the room.”) Unfortunately for America’s financial health, George W. Bush wasn’t laughed out of the room in when he declared, “You cut taxes and the tax revenues increase.” Neither was John McCain when he reversed himself on Bush’s tax cuts in 2006, wrongly announcing, “Tax cuts, starting with Kennedy, as we all know, increase revenues.” Nor did Texas Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison pay a price for her 2009 regurgitation of Reagan’s supply-side commandment: “I think we get revenue the way we’ve done it in the past that has been so successful in the past and that is tax cuts…Every major tax cut we’ve had in history has created more revenue.” Perhaps the most lasting – and pernicious – legacy of Reagan’s mythmaking on taxes is that raising them is now almost a political impossibility. Despite their calls for spending cuts to reduce the federal deficit, Senate Republicans blocked legislation to create the national debt commission later authorized by an executive order from President Obama. John McCain explained why : “I want a spending commission, and I worry that this commission could have gotten together and agreed to increase taxes. Spending cuts are what we need. We don’t need to raise taxes.” Meanwhile, the Congressional Budget Office has already weighed in on the price tag for President Obama’s tax cut compromise with Republicans in December. The deficit for this fiscal year is now estimated at $1.5 trillion. The increase is due to the $400 billion impact of the tax compromise, $70 billion of it to households earning over $250,000 a year. As for the overall tax burden, the CBO confirmed what the Bureau of Economic Analysis previously reported in May: “revenues would be just under 15 percent of GDP; levels that low have not been seen since 1950.” As USA Today summed it up: Federal, state and local taxes — including income, property, sales and other taxes — consumed 9.2% of all personal income in 2009, the lowest rate since 1950, the Bureau of Economic Analysis reports. That rate is far below the historic average of 12% for the last half-century. The overall tax burden hit bottom in December at 8.8% of income before rising slightly in the first three months of 2010 . “The idea that taxes are high right now is pretty much nuts,” says Michael Ettlinger, head of economic policy at the liberal Center for American Progress. Not to Ronald Reagan and his acolytes. As the Gipper often put it : “The problem is not that people are taxed too little, the problem is that government spends too much.” Undermining Trust in Government But that wasn’t Reagan’s only problem with government. “Government is not a solution to our problem,” Ronald Reagan memorably remarked, “Government is the problem.” Or he put it on another occasion: “‘The nine most terrifying words in the English language are: ‘I’m from the government and I’m here to help.’” During his response to President Obama’s State of the Union address two weeks ago, Rep. Paul Ryan echoed Reagan: “Limited government also means effective government. When government takes on too many tasks, it usually doesn’t do any of them very well. It’s no coincidence that trust in government is at an all-time low now that the size of government is at an all-time high.” Ryan is right that it’s no coincidence that trust in government is at an all-time low. But the problem began with his party. And killing Americans’ faith in government was a goal, not a side-effect, of Republican leadership. By 2007, Gallup surveys found that under President Bush, Americans’ trust in the federal government had returned to lows not seen since Watergate. An April 2010 study by the Pew Research Center revealed that the trust in government which peaked over 50% after the 9/11 attacks had dipped below 25% by the time George W. Bush left office. By last spring, Pew’s Andrew Kohut lamented, “Just 22% say they can trust the government in Washington almost always or most of the time, among the lowest measures in half a century.” As it turns out (and as the chart above shows), distrust of Washington is an American tradition which, as Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton learned, tends to rise and fall inversely with the economy . But for Republicans’ undermining Americans’ faith in government is no accident. Since the time of Reagan, it’s been an essential political strategy. By now, the Republican recipe should be all too familiar. First is to endlessly insist that, as Ronald Reagan famously said, “Government is the problem.” Second is the self-fulfilling prophecy of bad government under Republican leadership, as the Bush recessions of 1991 and 2007, the Hurricane Katrina response, the Iraq catastrophe and the transfer of federal oversight powers to the industries being regulated all showed. Third, when the backlash from the American people inevitably comes as it did in 1992 and 2008, attack the very legitimacy of the new Democratic president they elected. Fourth, turn to the filibuster and other obstructionist tactics to block the Democratic agenda, inaction for which the incumbent majority will be blamed. Last, target the institutions and programs (Social Security, Medicare, the IRS) which form the underpinnings of progressive government. Then lather, rinse and repeat. It’s no wonder Pew’s Kohut concluded, “Record discontent with Congress and dim views of elected officials generally have poisoned the well for trust in the federal government.” And, sadly, catapulted Republicans to record gains in the 2010 midterm elections. “Poisoning the well” is a fitting description for decades of Republican politics. Author and Wall Street Journal columnist Thomas Frank is probably best known for What’s the Matter with Kansas , which documents the Republicans’ proven success in using social wedge issues to lead working Americans to vote against their economic self-interest. But in was in his subsequent book, The Wrecking Crew , in which Frank laid out the tried and true Republican formula for breaking – then retaking – government beginning with the Reagan Revolution. As it turns out, the failure of conservatives to govern isn’t a bug, it’s a feature : “The chief consequence of the conservatives’ unrelenting faith in the badness of government is…bad government… …And remember. None of it is accidental. These are the fruits of the free market theory of government.” As 1930′s Labor Department lawyer Carl Auerbach once put it, “You cannot run on a platform that government is the problem and expect the best people in the country to want to be a part of the problem.” Once upon a time, Ronald Reagan probably believed that, too. After all, he was once a Democrat and a fervent supporter of the New Deal. But Americans won’t be hearing much about that part of the Reagan story this weekend. And as the Gipper turns 100, his triple legacy of debt, defunding and distrust will doubtless go unmentioned as well. (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .) NOTE: For more analysis of Ronald Reagan the man and the myth, see the columns from Tear Down This Myth author Will Bunch in the Washington Post and CNN .

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Golf wrap

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Golf wrap

Joanna Gasiorowska gives us a wrap-up of day three of the Qatar Masters.

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Pakistan trio handed long bans

Suspended Pakistan Test captain Salman Butt and fast bowlers Mohammad Amir and Mohammad Asif were banned for at least five years after they were found guilty of corruption by an International Cricket Council (ICC) tribunal in Doha. Al Jazeera’s Rahul Path reports from the tribunal in the Qatari capital.

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Egypt pipeline blast affects Jordan

Al Jazeera’s Nisreen El-Shamayleh reports from Amman.

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Egyptian protesters hold Tahrir Square

Ahmed Shafiq, the Egyptian prime minister, has said that “stability” was returning to Egypt on Saturday, but tens of thousands of protesters in Cairo’s Tahrir Square continue to demand that President Hosni Mubarak step down. In the latest reaction to the protests from the ruling party, its top leadership resigned en masse, including Gamal Mubarak, the son of the president. Al Jazeera’s Alan Fisher has more.

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Camille Grammer touches on Fox’s toxic effects on our personal lives

Click here to view this media Normally I’m about as interested in Hollywood divorces as I am in grass-growing competitions and NASCAR, but I thought Camille Grammer’s dissing of her ex-husband, wingnut actor Kelsey Grammer, was interesting for what it said about the state of our national discourse and how that filters down into our private lives and personal relationships. Grammer, interviewed early this week on Joy Behar’s HNN show, indicated early on that the two of them no longer saw eye-to-eye politically. And that seemed to be part of a larger drifting apart in the relationship, because they no longer had sex, either: BEHAR: Was it his fault or your fault or both? GRAMMER: It could be both, but it was more on his end. BEHAR: More on his end? GRAMMER: Yes. BEHAR: OK, well then again, good to be rid of him. GRAMMER: [Laughs] You know. I miss intimacy. I think that’s a really important part of a marriage, is to be intimate with your partner. And we didn’t really have that. BEHAR: It really is nice. But cuddling is fun. GRAMMER: Oh, I love cuddling. BEHAR: You didn’t do that. GRAMMER: He was too busy watching Fox News. He didn’t want to cuddle. BEHAR: Well, there’s a real turn-on. Of course, when Fox’s Bret Baier ran an item on this yesterday — minus any video — he was properly appalled: “Fox News has been blamed for a lot of thing, but this probably takes the cake.” And on the superficial level of Hollywood divorces, it would be silly indeed to read too much into this. It is, after all, purely anecdotal evidence from a single relationship. Nevertheless, the general phenomenon she’s describing is a dynamic I believe has been repeated on a massive scale over the past decade and more: friendships, family relationships, marriages and other close personal relationships soured because one of the two people involved has become a fanatical devotee of movement conservatism, particularly through the cultlike auspices of talk radio and Fox News TV — and the other person in the relationship does not. We’ve all encountered it: former college pals, or hometown buds, or old flames, or coworkers, or brothers-in-law, or grandfathers — all convinced now that you’ve become a bad person because you’re aiding and abetting those evil liberals in their attempt to destroy America. And what happens on an interpersonal scale is often ugly. It happens at Thanksgiving tables, at weddings and family reunions, when you go home to visit and see your old friends, or at work with people you’ve been friends with for years. There are several reasons for it. The first is that the relentless message of the right-wing talkers, whether at Fox or on the radio, is simple and unmistakable: Liberals are bad people, sick in their souls, and they want to destroy America and your way of life. Day and day out, that’s the message the True Believers get. And boy, do they believe it. The second is that, as Nicole reported awhile back, it’s been definitively established that Fox News watchers are deliberately malinformed — that is, they believe a broad array of things that are factually untrue, but have been told by Fox News that they are true: Fox News is deliberately misinforming its viewers and it is doing so for a reason. Every issue above is one in which the Republican Party had a vested interest. The GOP benefited from the ignorance that Fox News helped to proliferate. As we’ve explained on many occasions , this kind of rhetoric alienates people from reality — including the people who choose to live in that reality. By functionally unhinging people — there is no other way to describe the effect of persuading people to believe, doggedly and unshakably, in things that are provably untrue, even in the fact of irrevocable factual evidence — it serves to drive a real wedge between them and everyone else, while conversely forging powerful bonds with the like-minded. Finally, it must be understood that the mission of both Fox News and talk radio is not merely to propagandize with disinformation, but also to inflame. This is why conspiracy theories — which, functionally speaking, are narratives intended to induce simultaneous feelings of powerlessness and paranoia — abound on Fox News. There’s no one quite as congenitally angry as a congenital Fox Watcher. No wonder Grammer didn’t want to snuggle. What Fox News does is make people want to go out and beat up liberals. As Joy Behar says: What a turn-on, eh? This isn’t a problem just affecting Hollywood marriages. It’s affecting millions of personal relationships, and in a decidedly poisonous way. Fox News, as Bill O’Reilly likes to say about the “far left,” really is bad for America — bad for our politics, bad for national discourse, and really, really bad for our friendships and family ties, the very real fabric of our society.

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The uprising in Egypt has claimed its first journalistic victim. Ahmad Mohamed Mahmoud , a photographer with the newspaper Al-Ta’awun , died last night in hospital from gunshot wounds sustained seven days before. Mahmoud is thought to have been shot by a sniper while filming confrontations between security forces and demonstrators from the balcony of his home in Cairo’s Qasr al-Aini district, which is adjacent to Tahrir Square. Sources: CPJ / Wall Street Journal Journalist safety Egypt Press freedom Middle East Roy Greenslade guardian.co.uk

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(h/t PoliticsUSA ) Mike Stark somehow managed to get on Rush Limbaugh’s radio show yesterday . After confronting Limbaugh with Reagan’s actual “accomplishments”, Stark asked how on earth Limbaugh and conservatives could possibly support Reagan. The response (or lack thereof) was just classic radio, not to be missed. You just have to love this: “I want to know why an amnesty-giving, tax-raising, cut-and-running, negotiating-with-terrorists kind of guy is a hero to the conservative movement.” Rush has no answer other than to blame Media Matters and suggest that liberals “just wouldn’t understand.” Predictably, he turns it into proof that liberals just need to be destroyed: So you, sir, a nice individual, I’m sure you’re a fine guy (probably not too much fun at a ball game, unlike Bill Clinton), but still, you illustrate that people like you just have to be defeated, not met halfway and gotten along with. I mean politically. Stark’s question has been my question. I can point to a lot of Reagan damage, but by today’s conservative standards, Reagan would be considered too liberal for their movement. The Social Security payroll tax had to go up. Had it not been raised, Social Security would have been bankrupt within 10 months. There was no option. The trade-off for that was the increase in Social Security retirement age, which could have been averted had the wage base for Social Security been determined in a way that kept up with the rise in wages. This weekend, conservatives are descending on Santa Barbara, California, for the Grand Celebration of Reagan’s 100th birthday. That’s right up the road from me. Sarah Palin is the keynote speaker tonight. Cheney will be speaking tomorrow. It’s an extravaganza! I hope to survive the pollution that comes with all these prominent “conservatives” hanging out in my neighborhood, and wonder how it is that they can dance so delicately around the fact that Ronald Reagan was no conservative, at least not as they define it. The full transcript is at the end of Stark’s post here . It has some of the most amazing contradictions I’ve ever seen. I wonder how it must have pained Limbaugh to twist himself up like a pretzel in order to go where he went.

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Charles Krauthammer: ‘If Godzilla Appeared on National Mall Gore Would Say It’s Global Warming’

Charles Krauthmammer on Friday said if Godzilla appeared on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., Al Gore would blame it on global warming. Such marvelously happened when the discussion on PBS's “Inside Washington” turned to the nation's crazy weather (video follows with transcript and commentary): GORDON PETERSON, HOST: It’s been a terrible winter. If global warming is the problem, why are we having such a tough winter? Well Al Gore told Gail Collins of the New York Times there’s about a four percent more water vapor in the air now in the atmosphere than there was in the ’70s because of warmer oceans and warmer air, and it returns to earth as heavy rain and heavy snow. That’s what Al Gore says. CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER: Look, if Godzilla appeared on the Mall this afternoon, Al Gore would say it’s global warming… [Laughter] …because the spores in the South Atlantic Ocean, you know, were. Look, everything is, it’s a religion. In a religion, everything is explicable. In science, you can actually deny or falsify a proposition with evidence. You find me a single piece of evidence that Al Gore would ever admit would contradict global warming and I’ll be surprised. Krauthammer as usual was spot on. Consider that last Sunday, climate alarmist extraordinaire Joe Romm blamed the Egypt crisis on global warming. There's absolutely nothing these zealots won't blame on climate change, and there's nothing they will ever admit refutes it. Bravo, Charles. Bravo!

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Brent Bozell Excoriates Chris Matthews on ‘Fox & Friends’ for Comparing Muslim Brotherhood to Tea Party

“He's shameless, isn't he?” asked FNC's Steve Doocy, co-host of “Fox & Friends, about MSNBC anchor Chris Matthews, who recently compared the Muslim Brotherhood to the Tea Party. “Chris Matthews is not a journalist,” replied MRC President Brent Bozell. “He's a parody of himself.” On the February 4 “Fox & Friends,” the NewsBusters publisher acknowledged that while most of the coverage surrounding the crisis in Egypt has been relatively “fair and honest,” there have been a few notable “blips.” [Video embedded after the page break.] The most glaring exception was delivered by Matthews on Tuesday: “So the Muslim Brotherhood has a parallel role here with the Tea Party. They're the ones that keep you honest and decide whether you've stayed too long.” After playing the clip, Bozell retorted, “If a meteor came out of the heavens and hit New York City, [Matthews] would blame the Tea Party.” Bozell also criticized analysts at MSNBC and CNN for downplaying the fundamentalist views of the Muslim Brotherhood. “These are useful idiots,” he quipped. –Alex Fitzsimmons is a News Analysis intern at the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter.

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