As Newt Gingrich observed, the totality of his personality and of his presidency gave Reagan “a moral force that was unique.”
Where have you gone, Ronald Reagan? Our nation turns its lonely
eyes to you.
And now, thanks to a remarkable new documentary film, "Ronald Reagan:
Rendezvous with Destiny," all Americans can take inspiration from the life and
works of our 40th President.
The world premiere was held at the Kennedy
Center in Washington, D.C.
on Friday night-the Gipper's 98th birthday.
Narrated by Newt and Callista Gingrich, "Rendezvous" takes us through
Reagan's life, from his birth in 1911 to his death in 2004, with special
emphasis, of course, on the years of his presidency, 1981 to 1989. Along
the way, we are reminded of the long journey he took, from small-town boyhood
in the Midwest to Hollywood moviedom, from
labor-union activism to political activism. In the film, there's a
great shot of a 30-something Reagan sitting on stage while President Harry
Truman is speaking.
The film focuses on two big missions of the Reagan presidency: reviving the US economy and
defeating communism.
So we go back to the '70s, to Jimmy Carter, stagflation, and
"malaise." What was needed was something new: the supply-side revolution,
as explained on camera by Jack Kemp, who made marginal tax-rate cuts his life's
work, and other later converts to the cause, such as Reagan's White House chief
of staff-turned Treasury Secretary, James Baker.
And so the introductory remarks of Newt Gingrich before the film took on
added significance; as the Georgia Republican told the Kennedy Center
audience, "We have been here before." That is, at a time when America, in
2009, is beleaguered by the bad effects of careless fiscal and monetary policy,
we should remember that Reagan faced similar challenges 30 years ago-and that
he, and all Americans, triumphed over them.
Or as David Bossie, co-producer of the film, quipped in his opening remarks,
"Ronald Reagan was the original ‘yes we can' president."
The film's treatment of foreign policy-turning
back the "evil empire"-is, if anything, longer and stronger.
Bolstered by interviews with Margaret Thatcher, Lech Walesa, Vaclav Havel, and
Natan Sharansky, "Rendezvous" shows how Reagan, veteran negotiator that he was,
built up his anti-Soviet hand with a combination of rhetoric, military spending
increases, and economic growth. Of course, Reagan had allies,
most notably Thatcher and the late Pope John Paul II; as John O'Sullivan and
George Weigel explain on camera, the trio of Reagan, Thatcher, and the pope
changed history in a way that almost nobody (but the three of them) foresaw.
Yet just as crucially, when the Soviet Union
finally produced a leader, Mikhail Gorbachev, who could see that communism was
failing, Reagan was willing to deal-and so the result was an arms control
agreement in 1987 that calmed the situation prior to the collapse of the Berlin
Wall. That epochal event, the film reminds us, occurred just a few months
after Reagan left office.
As Newt Gingrich observed, the totality of his personality and of his
presidency gave Reagan "a moral force that was unique."
And that brings up one omission in the film: Good as it is, "Rendezvous"
doesn't deal with other aspects of the Reagan presidency, such as the role of social
conservatives, including the pro-life movement, and of supporters of the Second
Amendment, school prayer, and traditional family values.
But of course, this is only a movie. And it is a first-the first-ever
feature-length documentary about Reagan.
At a time when Hollywood is grinding out four-hour love songs to the
communist Che Guevara, it is laudable that others outside of the
Hollywood "leftstream"-Bossie, the Gingriches, and writer-director Kevin
Knoblock-have done something different: They have begun a vital process of
historical reassessment. It is now for others to fill out the portrait of
Ronald Reagan and his times-or perhaps for the "Rendezvous" team to make a
sequel to their pioneering effort.
One useful subject for a future film would be the role that Gingrich and the
Congressional Republicans played during the Reagan era-how they worked
together, sometimes bumpily, but ultimately constructively, to create the
Reagan Revolution.
Newt Gingrich modestly makes no mention of his own role in the political and
policy battle of the 80s, but he was there, and he made himself into a great
force at a young age by the strength of his intellect and personality.
Elected to Congress in 1978, Gingrich was a backbencher in the minority
party all through the Reagan years, and yet he was hugely influential in
reshaping the House Republicans and, eventually, the entire Republican
Party. Gingrich and his young-turk allies in the House-Dick Armey,
Vin Weber, Bob Walker-used the then-radical idea of appearing on C-SPAN at
night to beam out support for what Gingrich dubbed the "conservative
opportunity society" and opposition to the "liberal welfare state" of Tip
O'Neill and the Democrats.
It might seem like long ago and far away, back to the days when cable TV was
the cutting-edge technology, but Gingrich's insurgent efforts made a big
difference, undercutting the stale liberalism that dominated
Congress. There's a whole ‘nother documentary right there.
Because, as Gingrich said on Friday night, the great debate in the 1970s was
"the party of the American people vs. the party of government." To
today's Republicans, emerging from the haze of the last few years, that
dichotomy, the people vs. the government, is a crucial tool for understanding
both policy and politics. Reagan understood that people-against-the-state
dichotomy then, and Gingrich understands it now.
As Newt said on February 6, 2009, "We have been here before."
Such wisdom is the Gipper's greatest gift to us: the realization that just as
we have overcome big challenges in the past, so we can do it again in the
future.
Please log in below through Disqus, Twitter or Facebook to participate in the conversation. Your email address, which is required for a Disqus account, will not be publicly displayed. If you sign in with Twitter or Facebook, you have the option of publishing your comments in those streams as well.
Your tax-deductible gift will help bring promising new voices and ideas into our nation's discourse, and help shape the future of vital public policies.
Join the Conversation
Please log in below through Disqus, Twitter or Facebook to participate in the conversation. Your email address, which is required for a Disqus account, will not be publicly displayed. If you sign in with Twitter or Facebook, you have the option of publishing your comments in those streams as well.