Townhall...
Reagan
versus Obama
by Bill
O’Reilly
Mar 03,
2012
Last
week,
I ambled on up to the late Ronald Reagan’s ranch high in the mountains
of Santa
Barbara County. Rancho del Cielo (Ranch in the Sky) comprises 688 acres
and one
very small home. In fact, I was surprised by how modest it is.
The
Reagans
purchased the property in 1974, shortly before the late president
completed his
second term as governor of California. The story goes that Nancy Reagan
was not
thrilled because the property is so isolated and the house is tiny: six
rooms,
including a small master bedroom and kitchen, and no air conditioning.
The
Young America’s Foundation has kept the house exactly as it was when
President
Reagan died in 2004.
It is
obvious that Reagan didn’t care about amenities. He wanted to ride his
horses,
chop his wood and get some alone time. My visit to the ranch confirmed
that
Reagan was a regular guy who valued basic things.
And
that’s
why he defeated Jimmy Carter in 1980.
It’s
eerie.
That presidential election 32 years ago is strikingly similar to the
one we
have today: a Democratic incumbent in big trouble with the economy and
Iran.
Sound familiar?
President
Carter had to deal with a bad economy, folks lined up to buy gasoline,
Iran taking
and holding 52 American hostages in Tehran, and the perception that he
was too
inexperienced for the job. But Carter thought he could beat the shallow
Hollywood guy, Reagan, whom Democrats labeled as out of touch with the
folks.
Reagan,
however, kept his message simple. He simply stared into the camera
during one
of the debates and asked Americans: “Are you better off than you were
four
years ago?”
The
answer
was a resounding no. Reagan won in a landslide, as Carter had no
effective
comeback.
President
Obama is a much stronger presence than Carter ever was, so his
challenger will
have to do more than sloganeer. But the Republican candidate will have
to keep
it simple. If he allows himself to get bogged down in social minutiae,
Obama
will win.
It
will not
be enough to do what Reagan did, to compare the present day to four
years ago.
No, the Republican challenger will have to convince independent voters
that he
can do something Obama cannot do. He will have to be very specific
about that.
Finally,
there is the authenticity factor. Walking around the Reagan property, I
saw
that the president lived the same way he talked: simply. There were no
Jacuzzis, no canopies over the bed, no designer furniture. The house
could have
been in Albuquerque. Reagan actually was the same guy on and off the
stage.
In
debating
Obama, the Republican candidate will have to channel Reagan’s demeanor:
cool,
calm and precise. The Gipper knew how to win. So does Obama. His
challenger had
better learn fast.
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