This kitty has more than nine lives.
A little history for the Real Conservatives
not that it will help ....(you wont recognize who you were in the 1980s)
The carping continued after Reagan left office but gradually dissipated ....Reagan’s reaction to the Real Conservatives? He just laughed
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Conservatives Disappointed with Shift by Reagan NYTimes June 26, 1983:
Ideological conservatives, who provided the core of Ronald Reagans support in 1980, have been deeply disappointed with his performance as President, especially what they regard as his growing moderation in advance of the 1984 campaign. The conservatives said in interviews this week that they agreed with most of Mr. Reagans goals but felt he had been too timid in fighting for them. As an example, they noted that he was no longer pressing Congress to abolish the Department of Education. Howard Phillips, chairman of the Conservative Caucus, said Mr. Reagan, in adopting a nonconfrontational political strategy to mollify the Washington establishment, seemed to have forgotten the people who sustained him in the political wilderness for all those years.
President Reagan has not proposed, much less achieved, a balanced budget; has not fundamentally changed the nations arms control policies, and has not stopped the buildup of Soviet power in the Western Hemisphere, Mr. Phillips said. The failures are a result of his overarching strategy: articulating policy aspirations that inspire conservative hopes, but then pressing to implement those objectives only to the degree they can be accomplished by consensus. And consensus is impossible to achieve if fundamental change is the goal. Betrayal of Principles Seen
Joel M. Skousen, executive editor of Conservative Digest, a monthly magazine published by Richard A. Viguerie, the conservative fund-raiser, said that Mr. Reagan is now seen as untrustworthy by many conservatives who believe he has betrayed his own principles in an effort to appease his critics on such domestic issues as education, welfare, the budget and taxes. Ideological conservatives have been expressing similar views for at least a year, but their concerns take on special urgency as the 1984 election approaches. Many conservatives said the President seemed to take their support for granted, on the assumption that they had no place to go and would have to back him if he ran for re-election. The conservatives conceded they were unlikely to support another candidate, but said the more significant question was how hard they would work for Mr. Reagan if he ran. If the present trend continues, as we expect, ideological conservatives would withhold their support from the President, Mr. Skousen said. We would not actively campaign for him.
John D. Lofton Jr., a conservative columnist for The Washington Times who calls himself an unreconstructed Reaganite, said: The President lacks the courage of his convictions, which are sound. Conservative activists are the core constituency of the Republican Party. If they sit on their hands in a close contest, Republican candidates for the Presidency, for Congress and for local office would all be in trouble. Reagan Aide Acknowledges Debt Morton C. Blackwell, a special assistant to the President who serves as his liaison agent with conservative organizations and religious groups, said he often heard such complaints. Insisting that Mr. Reagan did not take them for granted, Mr. Blackwell said, Without the support of these conservative groups, we would never have won the nomination or the general election in 1980. M. Stanton Evans, a syndicated columnist who is former chairman of the American Conservative Union, said the President had been illserved by some members of his staff who do not seem to share his commitment to the conservative program on which he ran. Mr. Evans contended that Mr. Reagan was surrounded by pragmatic advisers who were too willing to compromise. Foremost among these advisers, he said, are James A. Baker 3d, the White House chief of staff, and his deputy, Richard G. Darman, and Kenneth M. Duberstein, assistant to the President for legislative affairs. It is very difficult to administer a conservative revolution with people like that as your agents, Mr. Evans said, because they are not conservative revolutionaries but pragmatists.
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NYTimes Jan 22, 1982 Paul Weyrich deserts Reagan:
Forty-five conservative activists and organization leaders warned President Reagan today that he was allowing the abandonment, reversal or blunting of the policies that got him elected, such as opposition to abortion, lower taxes and a tough line with the Soviet Union. After meeting for most of the day at a Washington hotel, spokesmen for the group repeatedly denounced Administration aides, whom they would not identify, contending that they were subverting Mr. Reagans conservative instincts. Howard Phillips, national director of the Conservative Caucus, said these individuals were responsible for what they felt was the Reagan Administrations mistake of trying to woo his adversaries rather than mobilize his supporters. Paul M. Weyrich, director of the Committee for the Survival of a Free Congress, said the Administration has been getting the image of not caring about some of the Middle-American voters who elected them. He contended that ignoring issues like abortion or relations with Taiwan carried a serious political risk, too. From a political standpoint, if all the issues in the 1982 election are economic issues, we may well suffer losses that we would not have to suffer, he said. Cannot Support Reagan Foes The spokesmen conceded that they faced a difficult time because they could not plausibly threaten to support Mr. Reagans foes. Mr. Phillips said support of Mr. Reagan and the hope of influencing him was our best option, indeed our only option for the time being.
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William Safire, NYTimes, January 21, 1982
President Reagan, the former hard-liner, having turned his State Department over to a crew of waffling accommodationists, probably feels he occupies the middle ground in foreign affairs and that his old supporters have nowhere else to go. He is profoundly mistaken. The revolt of the hawks is under way, the ranks are swelling with the most surprising volunteers, the search for new leadership has begun, and if Ronald Reagan fails to awake to the hard-liners anger at his betrayal, he will discover that he has lost this bedrock constituency .