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Reagan
Resoluteness, Too -- Not Simply
Reagan Recovery
By Jackie Gingrich Cushman
October 17, 2011
“It’s
the economy stupid” is the
infamous mantra conceived by political consultant James Carville that
underscored the main issue driving the 1992 presidential race. A few
months
later, Bill Clinton replaced George H.W. Bush (41) as president, and it
was the
focus on the economy that got him there.
Today,
with lingering high
unemployment (hovering at 9 percent with 25 million Americans either
unemployed
underemployed or discouraged), the presidential election is once again
focused
on the economy. So it seemed to make sense that the
Bloomberg/Washington Post
Republican presidential debate held Tuesday night at Dartmouth College
in Hanover,
N.H., focused only on the economy.
Included
in the debate were former
Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, former CEO of Godfather’s Pizza Herman
Cain,
Texas Gov. Rick Perry, former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich,
Minnesota
Rep. Michele Bachmann, Texas Rep. Ron Paul, former Sen. Rick Santorum
of
Pennsylvania and former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman.
Instead
of standing at podiums facing
the audience, the candidates were seated at an oval table with their
three
questioners, PBS Anchor Charlie Rose, Washington Post Political
Correspondent
Karen Tumulty and Bloomberg Television White House Correspondent
Juliana
Goldman.
Rose
laid out the theme: “This debate
is different and distinctive. It is only about the economy. So we
debate this
evening about spending and taxes, deficit and debt, about the present
and the
future, about rich and poor, and about the role of government.”
The
next almost two hours focused on
the economy and jobs. There were no great surprises. Romney was
relaxed,
polished and commanded the most time as the front-runner; Cain focused
on his
9-9-9 plan (which is not, as Huntsman suggested, the price of a pizza,
but
Cain’s tax plan); Perry showed up, but watchers could barely notice;
Gingrich
(my father), again showed a greater depth and breadth of knowledge than
the
rest; Paul focused on the Federal Reserve; Bachmann focused on
repealing
Obamacare; Santorum landed a few punches on Cain while focusing on the
family;
and Huntsman focused on delivering a few laugh lines.
The
juxtaposition between the debate
topics and the news that broke on networks Tuesday about the alleged
Iranian
plot to assassinate the Saudi Arabian ambassador to the United States,
Adel-Jubeir, was a reminder that, while it might be “the economy
stupid” so far
in the 2012 presidential race, national security Issues are also always
important.
The
alleged plot included Iranians
hiring supposed Mexican drug cartel associates (for $1.5 million) to
bomb
Al-Jubeir’s favorite restaurant. “U.S. government charged Mansoor
Arbabsiar, a
dual U.S.-Iranian citizen, and Gholam Shakuri, an alleged member of the
Iranian
Quds Force (a division of the Revolutionary Guards), with conspiracy to
assassinate the Saudi Arabian ambassador to the United States, Adel
Al-Jubeir,
and to attack both the Saudi and Israeli embassies in Washington,
D.C.,” wrote
Mohsen Malani for the Foreign Affairs website Tuesday.
This
latest development among the
complex entities and relationships of the Middle East highlights the
knowledge,
understanding and resoluteness required of the United States president,
who
also serves as commander in chief.
The
presidency is about more than
balancing the budget and sparking the entrepreneurs of America to
create
wealth. It’s about not just navigating international relations but
ensuring
that the flow of freedom is channeled in the right direction.
We’ll
need not only the Reagan
Recovery in the economy, but the Reagan Resoluteness in regards to
international relations.
President
Ronald Reagan traveled to
Berlin in 1987 to give a speech at the Brandenburg Gate. Tensions were
high
between the United States and the Soviet Union, but instead of
placating the
communists, Reagan upped the ante. Reagan provided clear language
regarding
whom he felt had “won the war” and what must come next. There is “one
great and
inescapable conclusion,” Reagan said. “Freedom leads to prosperity.
Freedom
replaces the ancient hatreds among the nations with comity and peace.
Freedom
is the victor.”
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