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Ronald Wilson Reagan (February 6, 1911 – June 5,
2004) was the 40th (1981–1989) President of the
United States and the 33rd (1967–1975) Governor of
California. Reagan was also an actor in films before
entering politics. He lived longer than any other
President (93 years, 119 days) and was the oldest
elected President (69 years, 349 days when taking
office).
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Order: |
40th
President |
|
Term of
Office: |
January
20, 1981 - January 20, 1989 |
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Predecessor: |
Jimmy
Carter |
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Successor: |
George H.
W. Bush |
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Date of
Birth: |
Monday ,
February 6, 1911 |
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Place of
Birth: |
Tampico,
Illinois |
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First Lady
: |
Nancy
Davis |
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Profession: |
Actor |
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Political
Party : |
Republican |
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Vice
President : |
George H.
W. Bush |
Early life and career
Reagan attended
Eureka College in Eureka, Illinois, graduating in
1932. Child of an alcoholic father, Reagan developed
an early gift for storytelling and acting. He was a
radio announcer of Chicago Cubs games, getting only
the bare outlines of the game from a ticker and
relying on his imagination and storytelling gifts to
flesh out the game. Once in 1934, during the ninth
inning of a Cubs - St. Louis Cardinals game, the
wire went dead. Reagan smoothly improvised a
fictional play-by-play (in which hitters on both
teams gained a superhuman ability to foul off
pitches) until the wire was restored.
Film career
Reagan had a successful career in Hollywood as a
second-rank leading man, as his face and body were
as handsome as his voice. In 1940 he played the role
of George "The Gipper" Gipp in the film Knute Rockne
All American, from which he acquired the nickname
the Gipper, which he retained the rest of his life.
Reagan himself considered that his best acting work
was in Kings Row ( 1942 ). Other notable Reagan
films include Hellcats of the Navy and the campy
Bedtime for Bonzo. He has a star on the Hollywood
Walk of Fame at 6374 Hollywood Blvd.
Military service
Reagan was commissioned as a reserve cavalry officer
in the U.S. Army in 1935. After Pearl Harbor he was
activated and was assigned to the First Motion
Picture Unit in the Army Air Corps, which made
training and education films. He remained in
Hollywood for the duration of the war.
Television career
As
Reagan's film roles became fewer in the late 1950s,
he moved into television as a host and frequent
performer for General Electric Theater. His final
regular acting job was as host and performer on
Death Valley Days.
Early political career
Ronald Reagan began
his political life as a liberal Democrat, supporting
Franklin Delano Roosevelt and his New Deal. He
gradually became a staunch social and fiscal
conservative. He embarked upon the path that led him
to a career in politics during his tenure as
president of the Screen Actors Guild (SAG), aligning
himself with Senator Joseph McCarthy and cooperating
with the House Un-American Activities Committee to "expose
Communist influence in Hollywood". He turned in
several of his allegedly Communist co-workers,
although unlike many anti-Communists of the time he
was strongly opposed to the formal banning of the
American Communist Party. His employment by the
General Electric company, delivering anti-communist
speeches on radio broadcasts and speaking tours,
further enhanced his political image in the
anti-Soviet climate of 1950s America. By the 1964
election, Reagan was an outspoken supporter of
conservative Republican Barry Goldwater.
In
1966, he was elected the 33rd Governor of California.
Reagan tried to gain the Republican presidential
nomination in 1968, and again in 1976 over the
incumbent Gerald Ford but was defeated at the
Republican Convention. He succeeded in gaining the
Republican nomination in 1980. The campaign was
marked by the Iran hostage crisis. Overseas press
charged that the Reagan camp had made a secret deal
to keep the hostages imprisoned until after the
election. Most analysts believe President Jimmy
Carter 's inability to solve the hostage crisis
played a large role in his defeat and Reagan's
victory. Reagan went on to be elected President that
year and re-elected in a landslide in 1984.
Presidency
On March 30, 1981,
just 69 days into his Presidency, while leaving the
Hilton Hotel in Washington, DC President Reagan,
Press Secretary James Brady, a Secret Service agent
and a District of Columbia police officer were shot
by a delusional John Hinckley, Jr. Shortly before
surgery to remove the bullet from his chest (which
barely missed his heart) he remarked to his surgeons,
"I hope you're all Republicans," and to his wife
Nancy he jokingly commented, "Honey, I forgot to
duck."
As
a politician and as President, he portrayed himself
as being:
-
anti-communist
-
in favor of tax
cuts
-
in favor of
smaller non- military government
-
in favor of
removing regulations on corporations
-
supportive of
business interests, both large and small
-
supportive of some
individual liberties
-
tough on crime
He
is credited with:
-
increasing
military spending
-
deploying US
Pershing II missiles in Germany in response to
the Soviet stationing of SS-20 missiles near
Europe
-
pushing for the
deployment of the Peacekeeper missile system
-
negotiating
nuclear arms reduction treaties
-
proposing the
Strategic Defense Initiative
-
arming and
training anti-communist groups like the Contras
and the mujahideen
-
selling arms to
foreign allies such Taiwan , Israel , Saudi
Arabia and, notoriously, Iraq
-
lowering taxes
significantly, reversing a historic trend
towards higher taxes
-
increasing the
federal deficit
-
greatly escalating
the " war on drugs "
-
ending the high
inflation that damaged the economy under his
predecessors, Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford .
-
helping to 'win'
the Cold War
-
firing air traffic
controllers when they illegally struck
Reaganomics
Part of President
Reagan's first term in office focused on reviving an
inherited economy exhibiting stagflation, or both
inflation and unemployment. Reagan's policies,
partially based on supply-side economics sought to
stimulate the economy with large across-the-board
tax cuts. Most economists agree that tax cuts
stimulate the economy, but supply-siders say that
they have a much greater effect than most economists
say they would. George H. W. Bush had called
Reagan's economic ideas "voodoo economics" prior to
becoming his vice-president. Reagan's policies soon
became known as " Reaganomics ", a nickname used by
both his supporters and detractors. These tax cuts
combined with heavy military spending increases led
to enormous deficit spending and a dramatic increase
in the national debt. The debt increased by
approximately 200% (tripled) between when Reagan
took office and when his successor, George H. W.
Bush, took office.
On
the other hand, this spending was slightly offset by
increased tax revenues, and some supporters of
Reagan attribute this to the successful use of
supply-side economics tax policies. Critics of
President Reagan argue that despite his frequent
pronouncements that he advocated smaller and less
intrusive government, federal spending and
bureaucracy increased in size during his
administration. Not surprisingly, there is
disagreement over how much Reagan's policies
contributed to the severe recession that took place
in 1982, the strong economic expansion that began
late in his first term and ran throughout his second
term, and the fall in the average inflation-adjusted
hourly wage for American workers that happened
between his 1981 swearing-in and his successor's
1989 swearing-in.
The Soviet Union and the Cold War
Like many successful
American politicians, Reagan had great stage
presence, as well as great instincts for cultivating
positive responses from the public. His calm
speaking voice and forceful language earned him the
nickname "the Great Communicator." On March 8, 1983
he called the Soviet Union an "Evil Empire" and
later in his presidency while speaking in front of
the Berlin Wall he challenged Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev to "tear down this wall". Some historians
believe that all of those traits would have been
meaningless without his perceived enthusiasm for
America and strong personal belief in the individual.
While many Reagan partisans credit him with winning
the Cold War, scholars attribute the collapse of
communism in 1989 in Eastern Europe and the Soviet
Union to the mounting Soviet economic crisis and the
failure of the economic and political reforms
initiated by Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev.
Reagan's policies included strong support of the
U.S. military and the doctrine of "peace through
strength." One of his more controversial proposals
was the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), a
missile defense system which he hoped would make the
U.S. invulnerable to nuclear missile attack by the
Soviet Union. SDI was dubbed "Star Wars" by
opponents, connoting the impractical or fantastic,
and Reagan was given the nickname "Ronnie Raygun" by
some wags.
Critics of SDI argued that the technological
objective was unattainable in practical terms, and
that the attempt would be likely to increase the
Arms Race , as well as increasing the instability of
future international crises. Other critics saw the
extraordinary expenditures involved in the multiple
distinct SDI programs as a military-industrial
boondoggle.
Supporters call SDI the nail in the coffin of the
arms race with the Soviet Union through the
application the strategy of technology. They saw SDI
as an attempt to convince the Soviets that their
nuclear missile arsenal wwould become obsolescent,
burdening the Soviets with addition spending on new
technology to maintain a credible nuclear deterrent.
Reagan had a close friendship with many other
conservative political leaders across the globe,
especially Margaret Thatcher in Britain, and Brian
Mulroney in Canada. Reagan had a great desire for
establishing personal relationships with other heads
of state, often inviting them to his ranch or Camp
David for casual retreats.
As
part of the policies that became known as the Reagan
Doctrine, the United States also took an
increasingly hard line against Communist influences
in Latin America, which often involved the
controversial support of anti-Communist military
dictatorships with poor human rights records. This
has led some to charge that Reagan was undertaking
secret and illegal guerilla wars. In 1983 Reagan
ordered a formal military invasion of the small
island nation of Grenada after it underwent a
Communist coup. Near the end of his term, Reagan was
also instrumental in supporting the transition of
Latin American democracy, giving generous foreign
aid packages to states who held free elections.
Iran-Contra Affair
During his
administration, there was a major scandal and
investigation of his administration's covert support
of wars in Iran and Nicaragua in what came to be
known as the Iran-Contra Affair. Two members of
administration, National Security Advisor John
Poindexter and Col. Oliver North had hatched an
elaborate plot to sell arms to the Iranian
government and give the profits to the
anti-Communist Contras guerillas in Nicaragua, who
were engaged in a bloody civil war. Both actions
were contrary to acts of Congress. Reagan professed
ignorance of the plot, but admitted that he had
supported the initial sale of arms to Iran, on the
grounds that such sales were supposed to help secure
the release of Americans being held hostage by the
Iranian-backed Hezbollah terrorist group in Lebanon.
Reagan's quick call for the appointment of an
Independent Counsel to investigate the wider
scandal, and cooperation with counsel, kept
Iran-Contra from ending his presidency. It was found
that the President was guilty of the scandal only in
that his lax control of his own staff resulted in
his ignorance of the arms sale. Although considered
personally honest by most Americans, President
Reagan and his term in office saw several other
scandals of bribery, corruption, and influence
peddling involving Reagan's aides and subordinates,
resulting in more than 130 officials in the Reagan
Administration either being convicted or forced to
resign their posts to avoid prosecution. The failure
of these scandals to damage Reagan's reputation led
Congressman Patricia Schroeder to dub him the "
Teflon President", a term that has been occasionally
attached to later Presidents and their scandals.
"War on Drugs"
Reagan's policies in
the " War on Drugs " emphasized imprisonment for
drug offenders while cutting funding for addiction
treatment. This resulted in a dramatic increase in
the USA's prison population. Critics charged that
the policies did little to actually reduce the
availability of drugs or crime on the street while
resulting in a great financial and human cost for
American society. Nevertheless, it was an important
part of Reagan's policy of being tough on crime. Due
to this policy and various cuts in spending for
social programs during his Presidency, Reagan was
regarded by some critics as indifferent to the needs
of poor and minority citizens.
Miscellaneous
On August 5, 1981,
Reagan fired 11,359 striking air traffic controllers
who ignored his order to return to work. Ironically,
PATCO , the air traffic controller's union, had been
one of the few unions that had supported Reagan over
Carter in the election nine months previous.
In
the spring of 1983, Reagan sent US Marines into
Lebanon. Following several smaller bombings, a truck
bombing of their barracks killed 241 Marines. Two
days later Reagan invaded the tiny Caribbean nation
of Grenada. Three months later, Reagan withdrew the
Marines from Lebanon.
On
July 13, 1985, Reagan underwent surgery to remove
cancerous polyps from his colon, causing the
first-ever invocation of the Acting President clause
of the 25th Amendment. On January 5, 1987, Reagan
underwent prostate surgery which caused further
worries about his health.
Reagan was widely criticized in 1985 for an incident
related to an official visit to West Germany. On
April 11, the White House announced that Reagan
would be visiting the Bitburg military cemetery, to
lay a wreath in honor of German soldiers who died in
both World Wars. This became controversial when it
came to public attention that a small number (variously
reported as 49 or 56) of gravesites contained
remains of soldiers who had served in Waffen-SS
units. Despite protests from various quarters, most
notably Elie Wiesel, Reagan proceeded with the visit
on the grounds that it would promote reconciliation
between the former adversaries.
Legacy and retirement from public life
Reagan was in many
ways the founder of the modern Republican Party. His
redefinition of fiscal conservatism as being focused
on tax cuts without significant regard to a balanced
budget (" Reaganomics "); his opposition to
progressive taxation, greater environmental
protection and regulation, and abortion; the
importance of the Moral Majority and its supporters
in his governing coalition; and even his support of
missile defense systems have all become trademarks
of subsequent Republican leaders, including George
W. Bush. Reagan's immediate predecessors such as
Richard Nixon and Dwight Eisenhower would not have
recognized any of these as part of the Republican
platform.
In
1992, four years after leaving office, Reagan was
diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease. As the years
went on, the disease began to slowly take over the
former President's brain and body, forcing him to
live his post-presidency in quiet isolation. He
informed the nation of his condition himself when on
November 5 , 1994 a letter he wrote was released
announcing he had Alzheimer's disease. He can now no
longer speak coherently and has trouble with even
the most basic tasks. His health was further
destabilized by a fall in 2001, which shattered part
of his hip and rendered him virtually immobile.
On
February 6, 1998, Washington National Airport in
Washington, DC was renamed Ronald Reagan Washington
National Airport. Also, the aircraft carrier USS
Ronald Reagan (CVN-76) was christened March 4, 2001,
making it one of the very few United States Navy
ships to be named for a living person.
In
November 2003, Reagan and his family were the
subject of a controversial television miniseries,
The Reagans. In response to the unflattering
docu-drama, a number of Congressional Republicans
introduced the "Ronald Reagan Dime Act" (HR 3633), a
bill that would replace Franklin Delano Roosevelt 's
portrait on the United States dime with Reagan's.
The bill did not have widespread support and
appeared unlikely to be put up for a vote. In 2004 ,
Reagan turned 93, making him the oldest former
president in American history.
Death
Reagan
died at his home in Bel Air, Los Angeles, California
on June 5, 2004 at 1:09 PM local (Pacific) time. He
died of pneumonia, with his wife Nancy and their
children Patti and Ron present. He is survived also
by his son Michael, from his first marriage to
Wyman; his daughter Maureen preceded him in death in
2001.
Reagan was given a full presidential state funeral
on June 9, the first since Lyndon Johnson. With
4,000 people in attendance, Reagan's national
service at the National Cathedral on June 11
included eulogies by George W. Bush, George H. W.
Bush, Margaret Thatcher and Brian Mulroney. Numerous
other past and present world leaders attended the
service, including Mikhail Gorbachev. He was buried
that evening at sunset in a private ceremony, with
600 people in attendance, at the Ronald Reagan
Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California,
which included remarks from his three surviving
children.
Nancy Reagan lays her head on the flag draped casket
of President Reagan.Reagan holds the record for the
longest-living President in American history. John
Adams lived a record 90 years and 247 days before
Reagan surpassed it on October 11, 2001.
Quotes
- "This is the issue
of this election: Whether we believe in our capacity
for self-government or whether we abandon the
American Revolution and confess that a little
intellectual elite in a far-distant capital can plan
our lives for us better than we can plan them
ourselves.", nationwide televised speech supporting
Barry Goldwater's presidential campaign, October 27,
1964.
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"Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!", speech at the
Brandenburg Gate, Berlin, June 12, 1987.
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"Information is the oxygen of the modern age. It
seeps through the walls topped by barbed wire, it
wafts across the electrified borders. ... The
Goliath of totalitarianism will be brought down by
the David of the microchip."
-
"What does an actor know about politics?",
criticising Screen Actors Guild president Ed Asner
for his views on foreign policy.
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"I know all the bad things that happened in that
war. I was in uniform for four years myself,"
defending his visit to the Bitburg Military
Cemetery.
-
"My fellow Americans, I'm pleased to tell you today
that I've signed legislation that will outlaw Russia
forever. We begin bombing in five minutes," during a
radio microphone test in 1984.
Supreme Court appointments
-
Sandra Day
O'Connor - 1981
-
William Rehnquist
- Chief Justice, 1986 (an associate justice
since 1972)
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Antonin Scalia -
1986
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Anthony M. Kennedy
- 1988
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