The Salon - Monday, Dec 28, 2015
Reagan embarrassed himself in news conferences, Cabinet meetings. Recalling how GOP cringed at his lack of interest
William Leuchtenburg
No one had ever entered the White House so grossly ill
informed. At presidential news conferences, especially in his first
year, Ronald Reagan embarrassed himself. On one occasion, asked why he
advocated putting missiles in vulnerable places, he responded, his face
registering bewilderment, “I don’t know but what maybe you haven’t
gotten into the area that I’m going to turn over to the secretary of
defense.” Frequently, he knew nothing about events that had been
headlined in the morning newspaper. In 1984, when asked a question he
should have fielded easily, Reagan looked befuddled, and his wife had to
step in to rescue him. “Doing everything we can,” she whispered. “Doing
everything we can,” the president echoed. To be sure, his detractors
sometimes exaggerated his ignorance. The publication of his radio
addresses of the 1950s revealed a considerable command of facts, though
in a narrow range. But nothing suggested profundity. “You could walk
through Ronald Reagan’s deepest thoughts,” a California legislator said,
“and not get your ankles wet.”
In
all fields of public affairs—from diplomacy to the economy—the
president stunned Washington policymakers by how little basic
information he commanded. His mind, said the well-disposed Peggy Noonan,
was “barren terrain.” Speaking of one far-ranging discussion on the MX
missile, the Indiana congressman Lee Hamilton, an authority on national
defense, reported, “Reagan’s only contribution throughout the entire
hour and a half was to interrupt somewhere at midpoint to tell us he’d
watched a movie the night before, and he gave us the plot from War
Games.” The president “cut ribbons and made speeches. He did these
things beautifully,” Congressman Jim Wright of Texas acknowledged. “But
he never knew frijoles from pralines about the substantive facts of
issues.” Some thought him to be not only ignorant but, in the word of a
former CIA director, “stupid.” Clark Clifford called the president an
“amiable dunce,” and the usually restrained columnist David Broder
wrote, “The task of watering the arid desert between Reagan’s ears is a
challenging one for his aides.”
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