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- <text id=93HT1146>
- <title>
- 80 Election: Meet the Real Ronald Reagan
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1980 Election
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- October 20, 1980
- NATION
- Meet the Real Ronald Reagan
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Shaped by his roots, he views the world with his own special
- optimism
- </p>
- <p> TIME Senior Correspondent Laurence I. Barrett, who began
- reporting on national politics during the 1964 Barry Goldwater
- campaign, started covering Ronald Reagan in January, and has been
- able to study him at close hand as he wages his fight for the
- White House. Here, as the campaign begins its final phase, is
- Barrett's assessment of the Republican candidate for President:
- </p>
- <p> The Boeing 727 jet called Leadership 80 is rattling through
- a cobblestoned stretch of sky, descending toward its third
- landing of the day. In the first cabin a stewardess is picking up
- crockery and leftovers; a reporter steals some conversation with
- a campaign official; Aides Mike Deaver and Stu Spencer gab about
- the next stop.
- </p>
- <p> In the midst of this confusion, Ronald Reagan seems to be
- sealed in a private bubble. The man who once disliked flight so
- much that advisers had to badger him into the air prior to the
- 1966 California gubernatorial campaign is now totally at home in
- a plane and absorbed in preparing his message. He has forgotten
- to remove the linen napkin tucked between the buttons of his
- white shirt (he always wears white shirts, usually adorned with a
- wide, solid-color tie; the color of the little RR monogram
- stitched under the left breast varies). His glasses--rarely seen
- in public, where he tends to use contact lenses--are partway
- down his nose, and his lips are pursed as he silently sounds out
- phrases from the speech before him. Something does not ring right
- to his acute ear. He pauses, changes a few words with a fine-
- tipped felt pen, mouths the passage again, goes on to the next
- half-sheet of paper.
- </p>
- <p> Finally he is done. Concentration had congealed his face
- into a map of worry lines and wrinkles proclaiming his 69 years,
- but now as he looks up and displays that broad, lopsided, life-
- is-wonderful smile, ten years disappear as if by magic. Soon he
- will be on the ground disseminating the message, and he knows he
- does it well. For more than half a century, since his first try
- at high school theater, he has been delivering lines onstage,
- over radio, in movies, on television, through newspaper columns,
- in speeches at formal banquets and chats in factory lunchrooms--in
- fact, by just about every medium available except skywriting
- and smoke signals. "Nature was trying to tell me something," he
- wrote in his autobiography, Where's the Rest of Me? "Namely, my
- heart is a hamloaf."
- </p>
- <p> But despite all this, the talks and the speeches and the
- barnstorming across the nation, the real Ronald Reagan remains
- elusive. The question is not just where does the actor leave off
- and the man begin, but how could a figure who started politics so
- late come so far so fast that he now must be favored to win the
- race for the White House.
- </p>
- <p> Reagan's associates never tire of telling reporters that his
- opponents make the same mistake over and over again: they
- underestimate him. When they do, it is not surprising, because he
- comes from outside their experience. Presidential candidates
- normally spend decades n politics, or at least in some form of
- public service, before winning the nomination. Reagan is
- different: from modest beginnings, mostly by the force of his
- personality, he rose rapidly in two highly competitive fields,
- radio and movies, and turned to politics only after his show
- business career ebbed. More than that of any other major
- politician on the national scene, Reagan's present has been
- shaped by his private past: he bases his attitudes toward public
- policy on successes and disappointments experienced long before
- he began campaigning for public office, which he did not do until
- he was 55, a year younger than Jimmy Carter is now.
- </p>
- <p> One thing that must always be remembered about Ronald Reagan
- is his reverence for his roots, his childhood in Dixon, Ill. For
- all the family's financial problems, his older brother Neil, now
- 71 and returned after a long career as a Hollywood advertising
- executive, says of their boyhoods: "You could draw a pretty close
- parallel with Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer. We never had a worry in
- the world that I can remember." True, the family moved five times
- in 14 years by Neil's reckoning. Before Ronald left for college,
- the Reagans never lived in house they owned. And yes, the father,
- Jack, drank a lot and gambled as well, switched jobs often (he
- was a shoe salesman, mostly) and was sometimes short when the
- rent was due. But the mother, Nelle, a strong woman of enduring
- good cheer, managed to keep it all together, teaching her sons
- that "God will provide."
- </p>
- <p> His progress from those beginnings to success on the screen
- and in politics has made Reagan a sunny optimist. He has great
- confidence in the individual's ability to make his way in the
- world, if only the individual is worthy and will put forth an
- effort, because he did it. And he has a misty nostalgia for the
- way things were before the Government got big and intrusive, a
- generalized longing for a simpler world where there were no forms
- to be filled out in triplicate.
- </p>
- <p> A line he uses often pops out when a group of
- wholesome-looking youngsters is close at hand. He will pause
- during a speech, glance at the high school band and say, "They're
- what this election is all about. I'd like them to know the
- freedom we knew when we were their age."
- </p>
- <p> To a euphoric audience at Louisiana State University in
- mid-September, he recalled that in those days one did not need a
- driver's license: you drove when Dad thought you were up to it.
- In an interview two weeks ago, he reminisced about a summer job
- helping to remodel houses at age 14: "At the end of the week, all
- the contractor had to do was reach in his pocket and take out the
- cash to pay me. No auditors, no book-keeping, no withholding of
- funds."
- </p>
- <p> Reagan hastens to add that he is not proposing to do away
- with drivers' licenses, Social Security or withholding taxes. He
- acknowledges that his rosy evocations of the past are selective,
- that blacks, for instance, were not exactly free (in fact, the
- Klan was active in Dixon during his youth). He even maintains, "I
- don't want to go back to the so called simple life. It wasn't
- simple at all." But he says that only after he has been backed
- into the corner that is reality. On the stump, the message is
- unadorned. As he told a rally in Paterson, N.J., "My idea of the
- way to start (as President) is to take Government off the backs of
- the people and make you free again!"
- </p>
- <p> Reagan's whole general move to the right, like his evocation
- of good-old-days nostalgia, is closely bound to his personal
- experiences. He started out, in his own words, as "a bleeding-
- heart liberal." In fact his father was in the Democratic minority
- in the Republican small towns where the Reagans lived, and both
- the father and Neil held jobs administering federal welfare
- programs at the local level during the Depression. Reagan
- acknowledges that he was not very concerned about Communism until
- he returned from the Army after World war II to resume his movie
- career and became head of the Screen Actors Guild. It was a time
- of choosing up sides in Hollywood, of violent labor disputes and
- the bitter controversy about blacklisting. Reagan recalled it
- recently in one of those rambling monologues that sometimes seem
- to reveal more than he realizes. It produced a rarity in his
- usual discourse: a flash of real emotion in the form of raw
- anger.
- </p>
- <p> He had returned from the military, as he now tells the
- story, "unaware that certain labor unions had been infiltrated by
- the American Communist Party. I was unbelieving until they made
- their big effort in a jurisdictional strike to gain control of
- the picture business. Then I discovered at first hand the
- cynicism, the brutality, the complete lack of morality of their
- positions and the cold-bloodedness of their attempt, at any cost,
- to gain control of that industry."
- </p>
- <p> For seven months Reagan tried to serve as a mediator, but
- eventually he led actors across picket lines to help break the
- strike. Tension ran so high that for a while Reagan carried a
- revolver; he thought that Communists were out to wreck his
- career and might even threaten his life. He is incensed now that
- some writers are taking a revisionist view of the period. Says
- Reagan, his mouth a thin line and his face more grim than he ever
- lets it get in public: "The rewriting of history that is going on
- about that era is the biggest fairy tale since Snow White and the
- Seven Dwarfs. The idea that a little band of freethinkers was
- being persecuted by the motion picture industry! They had a
- pretty good control already. They could destroy careers, and
- did." Reagan firmly believes that the unrest in Hollywood was
- directed by Moscow, and acknowledges that his experience helped
- shape his views of Communism. "We have been unrealistic in our
- approach to the Soviets all these years," he often says on the
- campaign trail. "They have one course and one course only. They
- are dedicated to the belief that they are going to take over the
- world."
- </p>
- <p> The Hollywood and war years also seem to be the source of
- Reagan's deep belief that the Federal Government, with its
- complex tax structure, nitpicking regulation and highhanded
- bureaucracy, is the root of much of what is wrong in American
- life. Reagan explains this aspect of his ideological roots with a
- personal anecdote. While serving as an Army base adjutant in
- California, he noticed that the civilian employees sent in by
- Washington were far less efficient than the military personnel.
- They had a much higher ratio of administrators to workers.
- Trivial, perhaps, but Reagan has brought up that experience in
- two conversations, nine months apart, to explain the beginnings
- of his belief that the federal bureaucracy is overblown.
- </p>
- <p> Other factors are at work. When he got out of the Army,
- Reagan was dunned by the Internal Revenue service for back taxes
- on his prewar movie salary; and though he never became a top
- star, by the late 1940s he was making enough money to find
- himself in the 91% income tax bracket. He did not like it a bit.
- While he voted reluctantly for Harry Truman in 1948, he was
- incensed by the Truman Administration's policy toward the movie
- industry, in particular an antitrust suit that forced the major
- studios to give up their ownership of theater chains. Says Reagan
- now: "I saw the whole economic stability of the industry just
- simply eliminated, the end of the contract system whereby they
- had been able to take young people--directors, actors, whatever--and
- develop them." It was the contract system that had given
- Reagan his start.
- </p>
- <p> While the industry was under siege, Reagan's own acting
- career was faltering. In 1954 he landed a job as host of the
- General Electric Theater on TV and traveling lecturer at GE
- plants. Inveighing against Government interference in the movie
- industry, he began collecting evidence of federal intervention in
- other industries, reading conservative literature and finding
- examples of the damage done by Washington. His GE tours put him
- in touch with more traditional, more conservative businessmen
- outside the film industry, and he was impressed. The point of
- this personal history is that Reagan's political principles,
- while sincerely held, derive from his gut reactions to specific
- events rather than any intellectual process. By 1964, when Reagan
- burst on the political scene with an impassioned TV appeal for
- funds for the presidential campaign of Barry Goldwater, his
- rejection of all things liberal and Democratic had become so
- intense as to make even Goldwater edgy. The Arizona Senator was
- at first reluctant to let Reagan speak in his behalf. Only after
- Neil Reagan, whose ad agency had landed the Goldwater account,
- read Ronald's proposed text over the phone did Barry give Ronald
- the go-ahead.
- </p>
- <p> As his own campaign progresses, Reagan seems to be
- undergoing another conversion. His rhetoric has become more
- muted, his tone less bellicose. On domestic affairs he has
- changed his mind about the federal bailout of Chrysler and loan
- guarantees for New York City (he is now for both) and disavows
- any thought of asking for repeal of the federal Occupational
- Safety and Health Act. Such moderation of views, aides insist, is
- consistent with his record as Governor of California from 1967 to
- 1974. In Sacramento he once went along with a tax change after
- proclaiming himself embedded "in concrete" against it. He
- sometimes brings that up voluntarily these days, and says, "Well,
- my feet aren't in concrete" on this or that issue.
- </p>
- <p> The turnabouts do indicate that Reagan possesses some
- flexibility, but they have to be put in perspective. The switches
- in specific positions have been relatively few and have not
- involved any issues of national consequence, or any that
- really still open for discussion. Who, at this stage, would
- reverse the Chrysler bailout or the New York City loan program?
- Asked about his basic attitudes last week, Reagan said, "Well,
- I'm still where I was over the past 20 years."
- </p>
- <p> Industrialist Justin Dart, one of the most conservative
- members of Reagan's California coterie, seems dead right when he
- says, "No politician on the face of the earth can function
- without some compromises. But Ronald Reagan makes fewer than the
- others. The only compromises he will make as President are those
- that are forced on him." And Stuart Spencer, a top strategist on
- Reagan's staff, also seems correct when he says, "I see less
- change in him than in any political figure I have ever known. He
- has a set of values, and everything stems from those values."
- </p>
- <p> If one checked a list of the 13 or 15 most important and
- most emotional issues that are susceptible to left-right
- delineation, Reagan would not have changed on a single one since
- 1976. The list would include the Panama Canal, abortion, gun
- control, SALT II, prayer in public schools, dealing with southern
- Africa, gay rights.
- </p>
- <p> Reagan's world view is nothing if not clear cut. Because the
- Soviet tiger will not change its stripes, it must be caged, or at
- least tamed, by American might. He thinks that little has
- changed since the most frigid days of the cold war except that
- the U.S. has surrendered the strategic superiority and thereby
- tempted Moscow into adventurism.
- </p>
- <p> Harry Truman, he thinks, was wrong to stage the Berlin
- airlift. The U.S. should have sent its trucks overland and called
- the Soviets' bluff; Moscow would have backed down and might have
- been better behaved thereafter. Douglas MacArthur was correct
- about Korea. Had the general's view prevailed, Reagan speculates,
- "I don't think there would ever have been a Viet Nam." And
- Solzhenitsyn is correct today in his dark vision of what will
- happen tomorrow if the West fails to pull together.
- </p>
- <p> Occasionally Reagan's extemporaneous musings on the subject
- run to the absurd. While campaigning in New Hampshire last
- winter, he suggested that the expulsion of western journalists
- from Iran might be connected to the Soviet invasion of
- Afghanistan and might also have been a prelude to a Soviet army
- move into Iran. But his considered rhetoric tracks more
- logically. In a pair of long, painstakingly prepared speeches to
- veterans' organizations two months ago, he provided the essence
- of his policy: a large military buildup, which he defined as
- "whatever it takes to be strong enough that no other nation will
- dare violate the peace. That is what we mean by superiority--nothing
- more, nothing less."
- </p>
- <p> Reagan has not talked about other phases of foreign policy
- in great detail during the
- campaign, but his general ideas come through plainly enough. He
- thinks little of the way Jimmy Carter's human rights policy has
- been applied. He feels that approach has been feckless and
- hypocritical because it undermined loyal allies like the late
- Shah of Iran. Preventing "additional Cubas" in Central America
- must take priority over moral preachments.
- </p>
- <p> What Reagan calls "our alignment with Israel" must be
- continued. Concerning the Middle East, Reagan takes what might be
- termed the obligatory candidate's position: strong support for
- the Jewish state, sandwiched between generalities about enhancing
- peace in the region and improving relations with all parties. His
- stated ideas about NATO also run to unexceptionable generalities.
- </p>
- <p> One of the few fresh ideas he has offered is small bore:
- creation of a "North American accord" to enhance relations among
- Mexico, Canada and the U.S. The suggestion implies some kind of
- European Community approach, but Reagan has not developed it. In
- fact, Reagan's thinking and staff work have been much more
- concentrated on domestic economic affairs. That is where the
- votes are next month.
- </p>
- <p> As Reagan swept to the nomination, he welcomed the support
- of Republican moderates, but they came to him, not he to them. In
- one conversation, he discussed party unity this way: "I think the
- division of the Republican Party grew from pragmatism on the part
- of some, the Republicans who said, 'Look what the Democrats are
- doing and they're staying in power. The only way for us, if we
- want to have any impact at all, is somehow to copy them.' This
- was where the split began to grow, because there were other
- people saying, 'Wait a minute. There is a great danger in
- following this path toward Government intervention.'" He made
- very clear his conviction that unity has been restored because
- the "pragmatists" have now conceded to the conservatives, and
- equally clear that he was not using the word pragmatist as a
- compliment.
- </p>
- <p> On the other hand, he want to win, and ambition has
- sandpapered the edge of some of his most obvious political
- splinters. He is courting blue-collar votes, but he has not
- changed his mind on any of the important labor legislation
- pending before Congress. He is making a token attempt to win
- black support. In public, if someone raises the question, he will
- say that opposition to the landmark civil rights legislation of
- the mid-1960s has faded, and of course as President he will
- enforce those laws. But in private he will still say that the
- Voting Rights Act of 1965 was too selective and unfair to the
- Southern states. In short, Reagan is still a Reaganite, though a
- more mature and polished Reaganite than in the past.
- </p>
- <p> His new patina, however, has neither obscured nor answered
- the most troubling question about Reagan. Put starkly, that
- question is whether he is smart enough to be President. The U.S.
- has seldom demanded that its chief executive officers be
- intellectuals, of course. But clear-eyed realism, sensitive and
- discriminating judgment, a feel of power relationships, instinct
- born of at least a general knowledge of how the System works are
- all demanded in a President.
- </p>
- <p> Using these criteria, the evidence about Reagan is at best
- mixed. He has clearly shown a capacity to grow and meet new
- challenges. One expert adviser says that Reagan's instincts are
- sound and his mind open to argument, but adds candidly that
- Reagan has difficulty seeing the connections between related
- problems and goals. An aide who is much closer to Reagan
- personally says, "He isn't dumb, but sometimes he has a lazy
- brain. He reads something, and it goes into the reservoir he has
- up there without checking. It comes out when he turns the spigot
- on."
- </p>
- <p> After this tendency to spout believe-it-or-not "facts" had
- got him into repeated trouble, Reagan brought it mostly under
- control; he still tears many clippings out of newspapers, but
- nowadays he passes them on to his staff for checking before
- using the information in speeches. Last week's Mount St. Helens
- gaffe was an exception. But he still clings to favored notions,
- sometimes beyond the point of reason.
- </p>
- <p> An example of how Reagan's mind works is his view on
- welfare. As he says, the system is a mess--costly, self-
- perpetuating and so far immune to reform. Reagan blames the
- bureaucrats. Welfare recipients, he says, have become prisoners
- of their caseworkers' need for a clientele. His solution is to
- get Washington out of the system by turning over all
- responsibility for administration to states and localities, along
- with sufficient taxing power to finance the case load. But
- welfare already is administered by states and communities; that
- nasty caseworker is typically a county or municipal employee. How
- would giving the locals total power over money and regulations
- change anything?
- </p>
- <p> When that question was put to him in June, Reagan replied,
- "I still think the greatest fault lies in Washington, because
- they're the ones who make the regulations and the regulations
- make it impossible to check up on people." The truth is the other
- way around: Washington for years has been pressing the states and
- localities to eliminate ineligibles. Reagan just cannot see that,
- because one of his abiding convictions is that Washington is the
- fount of most of what is wrong with the country. Remove the
- federal involvement, he thinks, and matters are bound to get
- better. In this area his conviction seems to have reached the
- point of compulsion.
- </p>
- <p> A couple of Reagan's more candid assistants acknowledge that
- some of the candidate' miscues are caused by an almost naive
- desire to prove that some conviction he holds dear is correct.
- The other day he visited the Santa Marta Hospital in a chicano
- area of East Los Angeles and told the institution staff that he
- had asked a nun there whether the hospital gets "compensation
- from Medicaid or anything like that." She had answered no, he
- reported, and then told the group, "I appreciate your pride in
- that." But a puzzled senior administrator later informed
- reporters that, in fact, 95% of the patients were subsidized by
- Medicaid or Medicare.
- </p>
- <p> Whether Reagan misinterpreted what the nun said or she
- answered his question incorrectly does not really matter. The
- point is that a man running for the White House should have known
- that no hospital providing what amounts to charity service for
- most its patients can exist today without Government help. Reagan
- was misled by his eagerness to discover a little island of
- independence from the feds.
- </p>
- <p> Reagan is well aware of the doubts about his brainpower, and
- occasionally jokes about the subject. He told one audience, "I'm
- not smart enough to lie," and quipped to construction workers in
- New York City the other day that a proffered hard hat would not
- fit because "I have a pinhead." But the humor is forced; cracks
- about his intelligence obviously hurt.
- </p>
- <p> "You can't help be a little irritated by that," he admits.
- "You say to yourself: 'How intelligent are the people who are
- writing this? Do they lack the intelligence to take a look at a
- state that is the size of California that was run successfully
- for eight years--a multibillion-dollar business?' I was
- intelligent enough to surround myself as Governor with the kind
- of expertise and the kind of people who could make these things
- happen." He has a point. His administration of California was
- competent, and he did not let ideological principles prevent him
- from doing what had to be done.
- </p>
- <p> As Governor, Reagan also developed an unusual management
- style that he is likely to revive if he reaches the White House. He relied very heavily on a small group composed of his
- immediate staff and the heads of major state agencies for
- information and advice; they in turn recruited large task forces
- of experts to study specific problems. Reagan set general
- direction and made the major decision, but left policy
- coordination and execution to the aides. He usually left his
- office about 5:30 p.m., often poking his head into a conference
- room on the way out to call to his staff, "Hey, you guys, get
- out! Go home to your wives!"
- </p>
- <p> Reagan's chairman-of-the board style has some advantages:
- for example, it leaves him free to concentrate on major policy
- issues, while avoiding the details that can suffocate an
- executive who fails to delegate. It also has a huge disadvantage:
- it leaves him dangerously vulnerable to poor work by aides, whom
- he rarely criticizes. Says a former California assistant: "Ronald
- Reagan has never even disciplined a maid."
- </p>
- <p> Two incidents from the campaign illustrate how the staff
- system works, and sometimes fails to work, in practice. The first
- is the zigzag evolution of his economic program. During the
- primaries, Reagan vigorously advocated cutting personal income
- tax rates 30% over three years, on the appealing argument that
- the reductions would, rather quickly, generate so much extra
- revenue through stimulating the economy that the risk of
- inflation-building deficits would be minimal. In retrospect, it
- now seems clear that Reagan did not really understand the
- implications of this position, and he came under heavy attack
- from opponents because he could not supply figures to justify his
- stand.
- </p>
- <p> During the spring, however, Martin Anderson, a shrewd
- economist in Reagan's inner circle, began putting together an
- impressive array of experts to draft a more credible program.
- They could not talk Reagan into stretching out the tax cuts, but
- they did succeed in changing the whole rationale for them. Now it
- is admitted that the rate reductions themselves will not
- necessarily stimulate enough new revenues to offset the loss.
- Instead, a strict curb on new spending, plus the natural growth
- of the economy, would provide enough margin to permit the tax
- measure. Reagan accepted this substantial alteration without much complaint. However he got there, and however little he
- understood the trip, he arrived at a position that, while still
- highly debatable, certainly makes more sense than his simplistic
- preconvention stand.
- </p>
- <p> The second incident revolved around the firing of Campaign
- manager John Sears and his aides Charles Black and James Lake. In
- each of his presidential bids, Reagan relied heavily on one
- adviser. Sears was the man in 1976, and Reagan chose him again
- last year, despite the objections of his more conservative
- friends and despite that he did not much like Sears personally.
- Reagan was acting on the advice of his personal staff,
- particularly Mike Deaver, who deeply respected Sears' ability. So
- totally did Reagan rely on Sears last winter that he permitted
- him to eliminate two of the candidate's most loyal retainers, Lyn
- Nofziger and, of all people, Deaver. Not until his unexpected
- defeat in the Iowa caucuses in January did Reagan really rebel.
- He was also annoyed by the way the press was playing up Sears as
- a kind of Svengali, and the candidate as Trilby.
- </p>
- <p> Five weeks of anguish followed, during which Reagan worked
- behind the scenes to reorganize his conflict-ridden staff. Sears
- ended up trying to fire Ed Meese, his last important rival in the
- entourage. Finally fed up, Reagan discharged Sears and purged the
- whole top echelon of his campaign staff on New Hampshire primary
- day in February.
- </p>
- <p> Though that was a bold move, the long imbroglio and its
- aftermath raise some serious doubts about Reagan's ability to
- handle subordinates. After Sears left, Reagan for months was
- responsible for an untidy and ineffective operation.
- </p>
- <p> The staff now seems better organized; it has been
- strengthened by the rehiring of Deaver and, more recently, Stuart
- Spencer, which illustrates another side of Reagan. Spencer had
- helped elect and re-elect Reagan as Governor, but in 1976 he
- joined Gerald Ford. During that year's California primary, Spencer
- coined the slogan, "Governor Reagan couldn't start a war, but
- President Reagan could." Nonetheless, at convention time this
- year Reagan welcomed Spencer back as part-time consultant, and by
- the second week of September, Spencer was serving full time on
- the campaign plane. Usually he sits just a yard from Nancy
- Reagan, who curdled at the warmonger talk four years ago and who
- is known to hold a grudge. To her husband, winning is more
- important than any grudge, which he seldom feels anyway.
- </p>
- <p> Indeed, for a former actor, Reagan shows a narrow range of
- emotion of any sort. He rarely displays genuine delight or anger,
- a reserve that has served him well during the campaign. He has
- replied to Jimmy Carter's attacks with a kind of puzzled hurt
- that has been far more effective than rage. Reagan's substitute
- for strong emotion seems to be humor, both memorized and
- spontaneous. He is a walking repertory theater of show-biz
- anecdotes, one-liners, elaborate routines (interestingly, he
- almost never tells a political anecdote). On the campaign plane,
- Nancy Reagan has made a ritual of rising a few moments after
- takeoff to roll an orange toward the emergency exit at the rear,
- which she usually manages to hit. When she is not along, Reagan
- takes over the routine and converts it into an act. Sometimes he
- is a bowler, sometimes a football player, frequently a pitcher
- squinting toward an imaginary catcher, shaking off sign after
- sign, going into a full windup before finally releasing the
- orange, which almost never hits the exit.
- </p>
- <p> For all his geniality, Reagan seems very much a loner. The
- company of politicians, Nevada Senator Paul Laxalt and one or two
- others excepted, does not interest him. In fact, he has few
- intimates in any walk of life. He is not particularly close to
- his children. Only Nancy seems to receive much real warmth from
- him.
- </p>
- <p> Nancy and his love of horses, Old West bric-a-brac, cowboy
- shirts and boots, anything Western. Riding is more than a hobby,
- far more important to Reagan than, say, golf is to Gerald Ford or
- running to Jimmy Carter. It answers a need that Reagan finds
- difficult to put into words. Says he: "I always had the biggest
- yen in the world to ride. I don't really know where I got it."
- </p>
- <p> At Rancho del Cielo, his 688-acre spread in the Santa Ynez
- Mountains, north of Santa Barbara, Reagan is a man transformed,
- serene, under no compulsion to entertain. He shows off the fences
- that he and the hired man, Lee Clearwater, put up together. He
- displays his black thoroughbred, Little Man, a handsome brute
- that knows its master. From about 30 yds. away the horse responds
- to Reagan's call, trotting up for a pat on the nose and a piece
- of carrot.
- </p>
- <p> Wandering around the hilly acreage, oblivious to the dry
- heat and flies, Reagan tries to explain what the place means to
- him: "It casts a spell on you when you're here for a while.
- Seclusion is the thing. Here there is real privacy." The roar of
- the crowd, theatrical or political, has been important to Reagan
- since adolescence, but equally important are the sounds of
- solitude.
- </p>
- <p> If Reagan is elected, what would his Administration be like?
- Reagan could be counted on to live up to his rhetoric in areas
- where a President has a high degree for control, such as
- appointments to the judiciary and the top echelons of the State
- and Defense departments. He would attempt, to the extent that
- Congress would permit, to make good on his promises about beefing
- up the military, focusing initially on personnel.
- </p>
- <p> If Congress remains Democratic and goes for big-spending
- programs, Reagan would use vetoes the way he did in California.
- He cast nearly 1,000 during his eight years as Governor, and only
- a handful were overridden. He would make a pass at dismantling
- the Department of Education and the Department of Energy. Reagan
- would use commerce and industry as a talent pool far more than
- Carter has. The regulating agencies would take on more of a pro-
- business cast.
- </p>
- <p> Reagan's aides talk about attempting to restore the
- Cabinet's prestige and decrease the clout of the White House
- staff. Most incoming regimes give lip service to that idea;
- Reagan would be more likely to follow through. To fill Cabinet
- posts, he would seek men widely recognized as experienced,
- competent and stable. Speculation centers on such Washington
- veterans as George Shultz, Caspar Weinberger and Charles Walker,
- all onetime Nixon Administration policymakers. Two Democratic
- Senators, Henry Jackson of Washington and Sam Nunn of Georgia,
- are mentioned often. In the Reaganites' view, either would
- provide good performance and good public relations.
- </p>
- <p> A Reagan Administration would likely focus its energy on a
- relatively small number of high-priority items. Reagan would move
- quickly to submit a tax program and a revised 1981 budget
- containing some spending cuts. Another early goal: some
- attention-getting elimination of Government regulations that
- affect business. A tyro in foreign affairs, Reagan probably would
- move more slowly in that sphere. But because he is a suspect
- stranger in capitals abroad, he would be likely to make some
- early gestures of reassurance to U.S. allies. One crucial
- difference most previous Presidents taking office for the first
- time is that, because of his age, Reagan would start out widely
- regarded as a one-term Chief Executive. That might have a
- liberating effect on his behavior and decision-making.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever its specific policies, the general thrust of a
- Reagan Administration would be clear. The point arose during a
- discussion of his intellectual abilities. Asked if he thought
- that criticism of his mind was based on snobbery, was instantly
- answered yes. Then he elaborated: "I think there is an elite in
- this country and they are the very ones who run an elitist
- Government. They want a Government by a handful of people because
- they don't believe that the people themselves can run their
- lives. And this, I believe, is what the political contest has
- been all about in recent years. Are we going to have an elitist
- Government that makes the decisions for people's lives, or are we
- going to believe, as we had for so many decades, that the people
- can make these decisions themselves?"
- </p>
- <p> That is distilled Reaganism, pure and very, very simple.
- Down with the feds, up with "the people," which in practice means
- state authorities and the movers of industry and commerce. Reagan
- believes this message in every cell of his 6-ft. 1-in., 185-lb.
- body. If he starts sleeping in the Lincoln bedroom next January,
- the U.S. will see the biggest change in tone and direction from
- Washington since F.D.R.'s wheelchair rolled into the Oval Office
- nearly 50 years ago.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-