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GOP Young Gun: 'Reagan Revolution' is over
The Hill ^

Posted on 12/10/2010 8:55:42 AM PST by Sub-Driver

GOP Young Gun: 'Reagan Revolution' is over By Michael O'Brien - 12/10/10 10:47 AM ET

The "Reagan Revolution" that spurred a GOP renaissance in Washington is dead, one of the party's new faces said Friday.

Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), the incoming chairman of the House Budget Committee and one of the Republican "Young Guns," said that the movement sparked by President Reagan's election in 1980 fizzled out with Democrats' wins in the congressional elections of 2006.

"The Reagan Revolution ended in 2006 when Pelosi took the gavel — definitely in 2008," Ryan said in a video interview with The Wall Street Journal. "So a new era is beginning."

Republicans had long credited the resurgence of the party led by Reagan for their victories in the 1994 congressional elections, in which they won control of the House and Senate, as well as for the victory of George W. Bush in the 2000 presidential election.

But Republicans have also sought to recast the party as the GOP of a new generation that has broken from past leaders and learned from its mistakes. That sentiment had in part animated the new crop of "Young Guns" — a trio of Ryan, incoming House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) and incoming House Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) — to promote themselves as new faces of the GOP.

The new Republicans coming to Washington, many of whom hail from a later generation than their predecessors, aren't interested in the kind of "small ball" that dominated political debate in the 1990s, Ryan said.

"No more school uniforms and prescription drugs — it's the big picture," he said. "And that's the kind of healthy conversation we've got to have in this country."


TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Wisconsin
KEYWORDS: cantor; kevinmccarthy; paulryan; reaganrevolution; ryan; wisconsin; younggun; youngguns
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To: LibLieSlayer

Right. Reagan was right and his Revolution lives on.


61 posted on 12/10/2010 10:35:39 AM PST by onyx (If you truly support Sarah Palin and want on her busy ping list, let me know!)
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To: Jim 0216
Let the Palin Revolution begin!

Roger that!


Frowning takes 68 muscles.
Smiling takes 6.
Pulling this trigger takes 2.
I'm lazy.

62 posted on 12/10/2010 10:40:40 AM PST by The Comedian (Government: Saving people from freedom since time immemorial.)
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To: Jim 0216

Me too Jim.

LLS


63 posted on 12/10/2010 10:46:41 AM PST by LibLieSlayer (WOLVERINES!)
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To: onyx
As you can see from some of the comments on this thread, there remains ignorance of who Reagan was and what he actually accomplished for America and conservatism.

I don't hear the libDems dissing FDR, Truman, JFK or Clinton for that matter. Too many FReepers acting like malcontents. Without Reagan there would have been no 12 year GOP control of the White House. No 1994 Republican Revolution and NO Contract With America.

Reagan's conservatism was a throwback agenda to the era of low taxes, a strong military and serious deregulation of the federal bureaucracy.

Some folks need to wake up!

64 posted on 12/10/2010 10:53:13 AM PST by Reagan Man ("In this present crisis, government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem.")
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To: Buckeye McFrog

Spoken like a good liberal.


65 posted on 12/10/2010 10:58:34 AM PST by Reagan Man ("In this present crisis, government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem.")
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To: Sub-Driver

I really try to like Paul Ryan — and then he goes and says something stupid like this...

Still, the Reagan Revolution has been dead for quite a long time. It was dead, in my opinion, in 1995, when Bill Clinton managed to shut down the Federal Government and blame it on the Republican Congress. And Newt Gingrich — all hot and bothered at the time in an illicit affair with his now wife — remained strangely silent and cowered before the Slick One. From that point on, Slick Willie got credit for everything that was accomplished, even if he coopted Republican ideas.

Even when Bush was elected — his tax cuts most certainly were Reagan-inspired policies — even Bush himself went along with Congress, both Democrats AND “Big Government Republicans,” on a spending spree that would have made Tip O’Neill blush.

The Reagan Revolution had been on life support, really, since the whole Bush 41 “Read My Lips, No New Taxes” debacle. the 1995 Government Shutdown KILLED it. But in 2006, the Democrats finally finished burying the corpse, retaking Congress, throwing dirt in the face of the few Conservatives left in Washington. 2008 made it even worse. The American People voted in Socialism. Now that they’ve got it, they have voter’s remorse — but Marxist’s and Progressives NEVER surrender the power given them, not without a fight.

So, today, we need a Reagan Renaissance. Ryan is wrong if he thinks the failures of Republicans are due to the failures of Reagan’s PRINCIPLES. No! Reagan’s principles were Constitutional, sound, true to the vision of our Founders, and sensible considering the threats our nation faced both internally and externally in the time that Reagan lived and governed. Reagan’s principles did not “fail,” at least, not insofar as they were tried!

Remember, Reagan’s principles were never fully implemented. He had to work with a predominantly Democrat Congress during most of his presidency. That he accomplished as much as he did is miraculous. Reagan once stated that the only thing he regretted was not using the veto and shutting down the government over the continued overspending of the Democrat Congress. Hindsight is 20/20. We can learn from the Master’s mistakes.

A Reagan Renaissance can take Reagan’s principles — and then go BEYOND what Reagan accomplished. Take it to it’s logical, CONSTITUTIONAL ends. That was what Ronald Reagan ultimately envisioned. His greatest speech, “Rendevous with Destiny,” outlined his goals, which were only partially fulfilled in his lifetime. Their complete fulfillment still remains before US. We should take his vision as our goal.

Perhaps Mr. Ryan is right. Maybe the Reagan Revolution is “dead.” But if he is saying that with the slightest bit of disdain for or dismissiveness of the principles of Ronald Reagan, the Congressman need an attitude adjustment. We need to look back TO the vision of Ronald Reagan, remember the “shining city on a hill, “ and say, with him, that we can still get there, though the battle is going to be much harder than we had ever imagined. It will indeed, take a Reagan Renaissance — but we can honor the Gipper with one more victory.


66 posted on 12/10/2010 11:24:39 AM PST by patriot preacher
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To: dfwgator

Bingo!


67 posted on 12/10/2010 11:27:41 AM PST by BenLurkin (This post is not a statement of fact. It is merely a personal opinion -- or humor -- or both)
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To: dools0007world; Sub-Driver; OCCASparky; All
>>I’m thinking something like “Rebirth of America” Revolution.
 
Rebirth = Reformation
 
Observe that there have been many revolutions throughout history - but only ONE managed to produce this Free American Republic. 
 
"Revolution" is more akin to a Fire in the Minds of Men; and is usually a destructive anarchistic wildfire that simply burns down the village rather than forging anything of lasting virtue within it.
 
 
With that kind of Revolutionary Russian Roulette in historical evidence - it seems wiser to reform toward our proven American First Principles,  instead of allowing new ones to be cast in the image of  "new" would-be Revolutionary Vanguard Elites;  revolutionary "leaders" who, whilst mesmerizing the sheeple ala an HD 5.1 digital rendering of the post-modern epic of American Idol and Dancing with the Stars (in between commercials for Viagra and Soma), usually have nothing more "revolutionary" on their minds, or in their nature, than moving into the Farm House and eating all the milk and apples, again.
Meet the New Boss, same as the Old Ba'al
--The Who?
Ba'al being a Hebrew word for Lord, Owner, Possessor, MASTER... a systemic defect of human nature that always renders itself into the subjugation of the Individual via a collective tyranny --recognizable throughout history as a merger of religious, commercial, and governmental affairs where....
"COMMERCE BETWEEN MASTER AND SLAVE IS DESPOTISM"
--Thomas Jefferson
There is nothing new under the Sun so,  RTFM, and reform --- the writing is still on the Walls within...
 
"I HAVE SWORN UPON THE ALTAR OF GOD ETERNAL HOSTILITY
TO EVERY FORM OF TYRANNY OVER THE MIND OF MAN"
--
Thomas Jefferson


 

68 posted on 12/10/2010 11:32:50 AM PST by LomanBill (Animals! The DemocRats blew up the windmill with an Acorn!)
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To: Reagan Man

I won’t quibble on actual vs. percentage, however, I’m talking about making cuts of 50% not 1%. Granted it can’t happen in four years, but that needs to be the direction.

I remember the Reagan years well. I know precisely what he did to throw a cog in the socialist machine, but a lot of damage has been done in the last 100 years and we need 100 years heading in the opposite direction, not just stopping where we are at.


69 posted on 12/10/2010 11:46:44 AM PST by SampleMan (If all of the people currently oppressed shared a common geography, bullets would already be flying.)
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To: Jim 0216
He did everything he could to do so I think. I don't know how you could be more conservative than Reagan unless you were a Nazi.

In what universe were the NAZIs conservative??? They were socialists who believed that individual rights were simply a road block to the greater glory of the all encompassing state.

Please don't repeat Leftist propoganda.

Yes, Reagan did what could be done at the time. However, we now need to do more, far more.

70 posted on 12/10/2010 11:49:53 AM PST by SampleMan (If all of the people currently oppressed shared a common geography, bullets would already be flying.)
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To: SampleMan
This is off point, but the universe we're living in has Nazis and Skin Heads who ID themselves as extreme right wing.

Points here are:

1) Doesn't seem logical: totalitarianism doesn't seem to be a logical extension of the extreme right-wing version of freedom from government. But the hippies of the sixties were all for love, peace, and freedom and their extension into tyranny doesn't seem logical either.

2) The Nazi thing (and as far as I'm concerned a large part of the Democratic party) is about "extremism." By definition, "extremism" has the element of "fanaticism" that loses track of what it was originally trying to do. It has become unreasonable and, therefore, defies logic.

71 posted on 12/10/2010 12:20:17 PM PST by Jim W N
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To: Sub-Driver

We need a movement far more serious than the Reagan Revolution. Cutting taxes is a must but tax reform and elimination of whole programs are called for. All areas of government needs top to bottom review on the federal, state and local level. Serious cuts need to be made. Government employees need to be cut loose. Military also needs to trim the fat. No stone should be left unturned.


72 posted on 12/10/2010 12:31:00 PM PST by upsdriver (to undo the damage the "intellectual elites" have done. . . . . Sarah Palin for President!)
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To: skeeter

there is a big difference between dead and over.

The american revolution of 1776 us over but the results are not dead.

I take issue with the term “dead” in that it implies “came to nothing”

The tea party movement and the RINO roundup this last election (see kicking castle out, and forcing Crist to reveal himself) is a proper continuation of the results of that revolution.


73 posted on 12/10/2010 12:57:39 PM PST by longtermmemmory (VOTE! http://www.senate.gov and http://www.house.gov)
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To: Jim 0216

The extreme extension of conservatism goes through libertarianism and continues on to American Mountain men. The extreme extension for the American right is no state, not a hyper state of any kind.

Your confusion is in looking at the political world as a single line that goes from one extreme to the other. It is not. There are a multitude of paths (monarchist, fascist, tribal, communist, socialist, theological, and a plethora of other utopian schemes) that all end in total state control when taken to their extreme.

Running personal liberty to its extreme does not result in a larger more powerful state, it results in the absence of a state. The only reason that the NAZIs got tagged as being on the “right” is because they were attack Soviet Russia and it served the purposes of the American Left.


74 posted on 12/10/2010 1:53:32 PM PST by SampleMan (If all of the people currently oppressed shared a common geography, bullets would already be flying.)
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To: SampleMan
This is a political theory discussion we're having here which is fine but not germane IMO.

Hard to tell what you're basing your assumptions on about what I'm saying. I never said anything about a straight line - far from it. You're not addressing the points and examples I made about the nonsensical and illogical nature of extremism (like how "love and peace" turns into tyranny). You're example of mountain men may be one branch of right wing extremism. You haven't addressed the question why today's Nazis and Skin Heads ID themselves as another branch of right wing extremists.

It's a interesting subject to me but no big deal. The theory is that at some point the extremes on both the left and right bend around and meet at some crazed point.

75 posted on 12/10/2010 2:19:57 PM PST by Jim W N
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To: LomanBill

I disagree about using the word “reformation”. It has a distinctly religous connotation and would—like using Reagan or conservative revolution—immediately turn off the very people we’re trying to reeducate. I am a Christian and proud of it, but too many people in this country do not like anything with a religious connotation.

I appreciate your thoughtful response, LomanBill.

Thanks.


76 posted on 12/10/2010 2:29:13 PM PST by dools0007world
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To: LibLieSlayer

I understand and share your enthusiasm for Pres. Reagan. Hard to believe but its been a long time since Reagan’s passing. In the meantime the left has reletlessly demonized him and conservatism.

I think it prudent to carry his banner quietly. IMHO we must find a name for our revolution that does not immediately raise the hackles of the very people we are trying to win over.


77 posted on 12/10/2010 2:34:35 PM PST by dools0007world
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To: onyx

Paul Ryan is definitely a straight shooter. Paul has integrity and is willing to take on the old dirty dogs in the GOP.


78 posted on 12/10/2010 2:38:57 PM PST by Wisconsinlady (DEFUND NPR, PBS, THE TSA AND THE U.N.)
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To: Jim 0216
I don't know how you could be more conservative than Reagan unless you were a Nazi.

It's idiotic statements like this that indicate the Reagan revolution is over. Naziism was National Socialism and a leftist totalitarian ideology. To put the Nazi's to the right of Reagan is either a gross misunderstanding of politics or a disgusting lack of education. Ergo an indication that the Reagan revolution is over.

79 posted on 12/10/2010 2:42:12 PM PST by SwankyC ("I'm no bigot. I will pray with any man." - Samuel Adams)
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To: SampleMan
>>>>>I won’t quibble on actual vs. percentage, however, I’m talking about making cuts of 50% not 1%.

Its important we keep the facts straight about the actual record of Reagan's Presidency and not dismiss his accomplishments. Its also critical we set realistic goals. A 1% cut in the feds share of GDP is not insignificant. Lets not forget, Newt and the GOP Congress eventually balanced the budget by holding spending near the rate of inflation. Bush then raised spending from 18.2% of GDP to 20.7% --- even with the War in Iraq placed off budget. Obama has upped the ante to 25.4% in 2010.

Philosophically, I'd say we agree. Things have been headed in the wrong direction for far too long. While the new GOP House has to set the bar high, its goals also have to be realistic. Boehner&Company has to somehow hold Obama in check and not allow him to run amok and continue his fiscal insanity. The GOP needs to hold its ground until we can hopefully vote in more changes come 2012.

80 posted on 12/10/2010 3:06:09 PM PST by Reagan Man ("In this present crisis, government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem.")
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