Coming to Grips with Reagan
Newswatch
The press has a long history of underestimating Ronald Reagan, which may be why it still has trouble laying a glove on him. Of course, columnists and commentators who are paid to have opinions are in there mixing all the time, but it is the reportorial press that has the problem. Reagan uses anecdotes to great political effect in his speeches, pat-a-caking them into neat, sugar-coated homilies, but his facts often turn out to be wrong. Lately, according to Lou Cannon of the Washington Post, two sets of Jewish leaders have described a story told them by the President: he had been a member of an Army unit that photographed Nazi camps and therefore would never forget the Holocaust. Cannon, who as a Reagan biographer knows him well, says the President "spent the war with the First Motion Picture Unit of the Army Air Corps, making training films in Hollywood and living at home." When asked, Reagan said he had never left the country and was talking about a Holocaust film he had seen at the time. Being caught in misstatements, which can be so devastating to other Presidents, seems not to hurt Reagan at all, as if the public had accepted his factual carelessness long ago.
In a perceptive article last fall in the New Republic, Sidney Blumenthal concluded that the press and Reagan see truth differently. To the press, "collections of facts add up to the truth, particularly if the facts are balanced." Reagan, Blumenthal believes, gets his truth from his ideology; to him facts are means, "parables tailored to have a moral."
Reagan commands television better than any anchorman, which enables him to go over the heads of Washington journalists. Print pundits seem to matter to the White House principally because they influence broadcasters. But Reagan dislikes press conferences and has held only one this year. He can be bothered in two ways. Unglamorous print journalists ask factual questions that can expose his ignorance. As for TV types, their questions aim for a flustered on-camera response from Reagan. Andrea Mitchell, NBC: "Can you say to those parents, now that you've withdrawn the Marines to the ships, why more than 260 young men died there?" Bill Plante, CBS, frequently cites an unnamed "those" as authority for his questions: "Well, sir, what's your response to those who suggest that you don't spend enough time at the job of being President?" On the nightly TV news, however, Reagan is able to score unopposed by reading out some simplified snippet, knowing this is as much as the networks want to hear from him.
The President can also disappear from TV screens when it suits him. No videotape exists of his ordering the Marines to retreat to the ships; this was one announcement he did not make on-camera. As his former political strategist John Sears says, "He walks away from more political car crashes than anyone."
Top Stories on Time.com
Most Popular »
-
Most Read
- Poll: Obama Gains in States That Went for Bush
- BlackBerry's Storm Aims to Blow the iPhone Away
- Electric Cars at the Paris Auto Show
- 24 Words the CED Wants to Exuviate (Shed)
- Can McCain Map Out a Comeback Strategy?
- Will Palin's Obama-Terrorist Speech Backfire?
- Why Some Women Hate Sarah Palin
- Can Obama's Grass-Roots Army Win Missouri?
- If Women Were More Like Men: Why Females Earn Less
- Maybe We Should Blame God for the Subprime Mess
-
Most Emailed
- BlackBerry's Storm Aims to Blow the iPhone Away
- Why Some Women Hate Sarah Palin
- Maybe We Should Blame God for the Subprime Mess
- Electric Cars at the Paris Auto Show
- If Women Were More Like Men: Why Females Earn Less
- South Koreans Are Shaken by a Celebrity Suicide
- Poll: Obama Gains in States That Went For Bush
- Can Obama's Grass-Roots Army Win Missouri?
- 24 Words the CED Wants to Exuviate (Shed)
- Amid Global Gloom, the Good News From Africa
Mixx





RSS