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Reagan’s real legacy is the man himself

By: Byron York
Chief Political Correspondent
May 5, 2009

President Reagan at Rancho Del Cielo

Santa Barbara, California -- You drive up a steep, rough and winding road to reach Ronald Reagan's ranch in the Santa Ynez mountains. For eight years, from 1981 to 1989, this place north of Santa Barbara was the Western White House; Reagan spent nearly a year of his time in office here. Now, what he called Rancho del Cielo is pretty much deserted.

But the ranch, tended by a lone caretaker, is still much like it was when Reagan was alive. It's not open to the public; these days, the old adobe house and 688 surrounding acres are owned and carefully maintained by the conservative Young America's Foundation. The group doesn't have the staff or resources to conduct public tours, but they were kind enough to take me on a visit one afternoon last week.

The first thing that strikes you as you approach the house is how modest it is. The main part of the building was constructed in 1871. Even after Reagan added a couple of rooms when he bought it in 1975, the whole house only measured about 1,500 square feet.

The floors are covered in a brick-pattern linoleum. ("He laid it himself," my guide tells me.) The furniture is plain and comfortable; there are a couple of chairs upholstered in an orange-and-brown patchwork pattern that could have come out of any middle-class American den of the 1970s. There is western art on the walls.

The bedroom is small and plain, with what looks like an old Ethan Allen chest and two bedside tables that had to be turned sideways because the room wasn't wide enough to fit them. Reagan's nearby bathroom has a modular shower and a toilet squeezed in a tiny nook.

Any budget hotel down the road has more comfortable accommodations. Reagan, who with his wife was pilloried for having a plutocrat's taste, in fact enjoyed a level of simplicity beyond what most vacationing Americans would accept.

The house is nestled on the edge of a mountainside meadow. It's idyllic, but if you drive about five minutes away, you'll find another spot on the property, at the top of a hill, where the president could have built a new home, perhaps an impressive monument to himself, with fabulous views of the Pacific to the west and the valley to the east. Instead, Reagan preferred the little house by the meadow.

Walking around the ranch, you can't help thinking about the current Republican party and its relationship to Reagan. One feeling the ranch produces -- nearly forces on you -- is the realization that the 1980s were a long time ago. When Reagan took office, the top income tax rate was 70 percent. The Cold War was in one of its most dangerous phases.

By the end of his administration, Reagan had reduced that confiscatory 70 percent tax rate to 28 percent. And he won the Cold War. Most presidents don't leave much for us to remember them by. Reagan has two great legacies.

But what does it mean for us today? Certainly low taxes and a strong national defense remain bedrock principles for conservative Republicans. And when Democrats argue, as Sen. Charles Schumer did recently, that the Reaganite "traditional values kind of arguments and strong foreign policy, all that is over" -- well, someday he might discover otherwise.

But what specific policy proposal would Reagan embrace today to deal with skyrocketing health-care costs? The credit crunch? Immigration? No one can really say.

Perhaps it would be more instructive to look at the man himself. Over a lifetime of thought and study -- he was 69 when he became president -- Reagan developed a set of core principles that guided whatever he did. To those core principles -- liberty, free enterprise, American exceptionalism -- he added his own personal qualities. He was a serious reader, a self-improver, decidedly non-cynical, temperamentally non-Washington, and deeply patriotic. A gift for communicating made those qualities instantly recognizable to the American public.

As you walk around the old ranch, and see the private spaces where he spent so much time, you realize perhaps more than ever before that it was Reagan's character that made his triumphs possible. For Republicans, coherent positions on today's policy debates will emerge in time. The tougher question is where they will find a man like Ronald Reagan again.


Byron York, The Examiner’s chief political correspondent, can be contacted at byork@dcexaminer.com. His column appears on Tuesday and Friday, and his stories and blog posts can be read daily at ExaminerPolitics.com.



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Mildred Miller

May 5, 2009

Reagan's true legacy is the Iran-Contra
scandal in which thousands were killed,
and his ridiculous trickle-down monetary policies which brought on the
present depression.

 

Doc

May 5, 2009

Perhaps we need to take another look at the lady from the northwest. The rock rejected by the builders became the cornerstone.

 

May 5, 2009

His hope in the future and his tremendous love for my country are what stand out in my memory and are a huge contrast to the very small person that now occupies the whitehouse.

 

John

May 5, 2009

No Mildred, President Reagan's true legacy can be found in Eastern Europe where his courage in the face of communism freed millions.

 

JamesJ

May 5, 2009

Silly liberals like Mildred are under the delusion that a Utopia on earth is possible and they've killed millions trying to prove it

 

JamesJ

May 5, 2009

Silly liberals like Mildred are under the delusion that a Utopia on Earth is possible and they've killed millions trying to prove it.

 

Bonny Sisson Stilwell

May 5, 2009

Ronald Reagan showed us his birth certificate and he was from Illinois. We have a usurper in the White House, and the media as well as you are allowing Obama to violate the trust that American's once had for their Constitution by not demanding full disclosure. Obama has violated the freedom of information for all citizens by not revealing his recorded documents. Obama has never proved his eligibility, so how can he appoint a Supreme Court Justice for life when we are not allowed to view Obama's Birth Certificate?

Bonny Sisson Stilwell

 

Darvin Dowdy

May 5, 2009

Ronald Reagan evolved out of the Middle Working Class of America and he understood them. And respected them. He sold them on the concept of Conservatism. But his brand of conservatism was inclusive of Middle America. Reagan placed a value on American jobs. The same can't be said of modern day Republicans who hold Middle America in contempt. Darvin Dowdy

 

Peter

May 5, 2009

God bless Ronald Reagan.

 

Rushbabe

May 5, 2009

I was fortunate to have just entered college the fall that Reagan was elected. I remember those years and the four after as the happiest of my life.

I only hope my children can have the peace of mind and pride in America that we had when the Gipper was in charge -- and hopefully we will with Sarah Palin in 2012.

 

Bob McCune

May 5, 2009

The "riciculous trickle-down monetary policies" are simply the way economics works.

 

Stan

May 5, 2009

Gee, it would appear that Mildred has conveniently forgotten about the policies under the Clinton administration that guaranteed the banks, Freddie, and Fannie, would face sure financial disaster. I guess it's easier to keep your head stuck in the sand about an honorable man like Reagan than to see that there's a serious problem with the policies of the current neo-Marxist administration that we have now.

 

Tonya

May 5, 2009

Here's a great quote from The Gipper himself that replies very well to Mildred's comment: "The trouble with our liberal friends is not that they're ignorant; it's just that they know so much that isn't so."

 

Hollis

May 5, 2009

He could cut taxes like he did in '82...but again he could raise taxes like he did in '83,'84', 85' & '86

 

psycher

May 5, 2009

I'm proud to say that my first eligible vote for President was for Ron Reagan. I've voted Republican every election since. If the Republican party would look to the humility, integrity, and basic goodness of Reagan, and attempt to embody these characteristics, we might have a chance for a Republican resurgence. As long as Republicans spend like drunken sailors and have the morals of Bill Clinton, such a resurgence is a pipe dream. Such lack of integrity helped lose the last election.

 

Lisa

May 5, 2009

Oh dear Mildred. How silly and ignorant you appear.

Reagan's "ridiculous trickle down monetary policies" doubled the federal coffers, reduced Carter's double digit interest rates and inflation to single digits, and brought 92 straight months of economic growth. I respectfully suggest you do some reading on history.

 

Sean

May 5, 2009

I couldn't agree more! Reports of the death of the Republican party are I'm sure pre-mature. I never voted for Reagan and as a college student in the 1980s he pushed me more to the left than I would have ever predicted coming from a small farming town in rural New Jersey. But if there is anything instructive about the 2008 election, it's that the right person at the right time can deliver with a bang if the political conditions are right. Another Republican leader with ideas that capture the time will emerge. It's happened over and over again. Democrats are complacent to the point of arrogance (as was Rove in declaring a permanent majority) if they see nothing ahead but 40 years of Democrat ascendancy based on success in two national elections. Please!

 

eddie

May 5, 2009

If you white folks knew of President Reagan you all would be up in arms for the rule of Law,and would of ran and never would of had,nore than just some airport where blues and coups run in and out of flus,what's going on just won't do,process gone a slew,and all of W,DCsmells like pew,and they're still here,like hatred is new,and they all stink like donkey mew,got no Hancock's got no Few,and no march on Washington,to stick like glue,no staying on the grounds and passing the stew,so 40yrs go by let's not wait for two.

 

Real Men

May 6, 2009

Please forget about Reagan.
He was way above your food chains

( The Bushes want you to to remember
their legacy of disaster) Con-artist
compassion

Read my lips Papa
Mission acccomplished Son
Jeb is running on empty # 2 son

Note to Jeb Bush and Eric "Cannnotsee"
Cantor:

You do not go to Arlington and order Pizza. The democrats own it

You do not go to Arlington for anything
There is Woodbridge in PW county
Your about to lose that too

Try your base, anywhere but Arlington

Tell, Bush he has no chance and he is
not change. We already had two that's enough for one country to bear, in any lifetime

Try dumping McLame from the scene
Next time order some Virginian cuisine

Or go for broke and try a JR steak
in Mc Lean, real real men eat, and talk
change



 

Joe Sixpack

May 6, 2009

Reagan? I remember seeing him in the movie "Bedtime for Bonzo" maybe in 1952 or 1953. Decades later, he had Ollie North and John Poindexter reprising those same roles, double-dealing their oaths to uphold and defend the Constitution of the United States. Reagan is a figment of a whole lotta hyperactive imaginations and Jebb Bush at least has the wisdom to try to move the GOP beyond a fantasy and back to some rather ghastly realities.

 

Kelly

May 7, 2009

Really enjoyed this article. Thanks to Ronald Reagan (with a Democratic congress) and Bill Clinton (with a Republican congress) and by partial default George W. Bush, we had 25 years (1982 to 2007) of prosperity never, ever seen before. Gridlock works!

 


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