Reagan's Influence on the 1980s Explored
Morning in America' Takes Year-by-Year Look At Reagan in the '80s
By Megan King, Roll Call, April 12, 2005
Historian and author Gil Troy calls the late President Ronald Reagan
"the greatest president since Franklin Delano Roosevelt."
Yet, he quickly qualifies the statement as nonpartisan and purely
historical, saying he is the greatest president in the "Time magazine
sense."
"He's the president who's had the most effect on our lives," Troy said,
referring to the standard that Time magazine uses to choose its "Person
of the Year."
Troy's new book, "Morning in America: How Ronald Reagan Invented the
1980s," aims to take a nonpartisan look at the polarizing president.
The
book blends both pop culture and politics to look at the entire decade
from a "Reagan's America" perspective.
Troy was dismayed that many works examining Reagan were "partisan and
polemical," and his goal was to create a more balanced account.
"We can have a conversation that asks what are his strengths, his
weaknesses, and what did he accomplish," Troy said.
Rather than simply rehash the historical and political significance of
the Reagan years, Troy said he aimed to encapsulate the entire decade
of
the 1980s which featured "the ultimate celebrity president."
"I always loved decade books," he said, citing many of his favorites,
including "Only Yesterday" by Frederick Allen, which chronicled the
1920s. "I was fascinated by 'How do you tell the story of a decade?'"
The book covers the decade year by year in 10 chapters containing
historical, political and cultural happenings, from Iran Contra to
Cabbage Patch dolls and Tip O'Neill to "The Big Chill."
Yet the historical work also offers political lessons that still apply
more than 20 years after Reagan took office.
"Reagan was able to push his agenda early on, especially with the
legislative strategy group. The president was engaged and really
willing
to put the personal touch" in dealing with Congress, he said.
He also cites Reagan's legacy of revitalizing the Republican Party.
"He took this cranky, elitist movement and turned it into 'Goldwater
with a smile,'" Troy said.
"Morning in America" also discusses the Democrats' struggles as the
opposition to Reagan early in his first term.
"How does the opposition find traction, find its voice?" Troy asked,
citing the Democrats' use of the "Reagan recession" and issues of
fairness to slow down the Reagan revolution.
"Reagan pushed the ball downfield and just got to the line of scrimmage
before Democrats stopped it," Troy said of moving Reagan's legislative
agenda early in his first term. "His people spent the rest of his term
scrambling around that line."
Troy also saw how the "Reaganized" America played into the 2004
election.
"Although I'm a historian and don't like to admit that I find anything
surprising, but I was surprised to wake up the morning after Bush won
re-election and have people be surprised that cultural issues matter,"
Troy said. "We live in a Reaganized America. The red vs. blue state
stories go back. We must go back to the Reagan era to see how it
developed."
Reagan's trademark populism was also a factor in the 2004 race, Troy
argued."The 2004 election was the fight of the gazillionaires, and the only
onewho seemed to be an aristocrat was John Kerry," Troy said. "Both George
W. Bush and John Edwards seemed like real people who just happened to
have big bank accounts."
Troy also points out that Reagan was frequently criticized for being
too moderate, but President Bush has embraced the values issues that Reagan
usually avoided. "It will be interesting to see if it is his great success or his great
undoing," Troy said.
The New York native, who spent the 1980s earning his bachelor's,
master's and doctoral degrees at Harvard University, is a history
professor at McGill University in Montreal. He has written three
previous books about the nature of the U.S. presidency, and he decided
to focus on one president for his latest project.
At McGill, he tries to keep his classroom nonpartisan, saying the best
compliment he receives from students is that they cannot figure out his
political persuasion.
"During the [2004 presidential] campaign there were so many delicious
things that could be used in class. I had to be almost mathematical
about it. If I made fun of Bush one day, I made fun of Kerry the next
day," he said.
Although he studies Reagan, Troy is mum about his own political
affiliation, declaring on his Web site that he "is not now nor has he
ever been a member of the Republican Party."
"I have two brothers who, if the vast right-wing conspiracy had a
secret
decoder ring, they would have the code," Troy said with a smile.
Troy chose the "Morning in America" campaign theme for the title
because
he sees it as one of the defining moments of Reagan's presidency, and
it
also defined the decade for the nation.
"Reagan gave the Republicans the ability to create a narrative, a big
picture story, and George W. Bush really learned that with the war on
terror which parallels the 'Morning in America' campaign - feeling good
about America. It's not the kind of stuff you would've seen during the
1970s."
Copyright 2005 (c) Roll Call Inc. All rights reserved.
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