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Could Scott Walker Be the Next Calvin Coolidge?
National Review ^ | March 13, 2015 | Garland S. Tucker III

Posted on 03/13/2015 1:42:40 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife

Much is being written today about the Republican party’s urgent need to find “the next Ronald Reagan.” With Governor Scott Walker’s recent rise in the polls, many pundits have rushed to dismiss his chances because “Walker is no Reagan.” But, hold on a minute. Are the pundits missing something here?

The two most successful Republican presidents in the last century were Calvin Coolidge and Ronald Reagan. A serious look at the two of them sheds light on the current question of Walker’s viability as a presidential candidate.

Different as Coolidge and Reagan were in looks and personality, there were striking similarities between these two men and their presidencies. Success for both was marked by significant reductions in income taxes and domestic spending, strong economic growth in the private sector, reelection by huge margins, and the trust and affection of the American people.

As Fred Barnes has written, “When Ronald Reagan took down the portrait of Harry Truman in the Cabinet Room at the White House and replaced it with one of Calvin Coolidge, the press treated it as act of meaningless eccentricity. It wasn’t. Reagan had been an admirer of Coolidge for many years. For him, the change of portraits had real meaning. Their experiences, their values, even the issues that most engaged them were the same for Reagan and Coolidge.”

They both were above all men of character. Coolidge embodied the classic New England virtues upon which the Republic was founded: hard work, independent thinking, lack of pretense, sense of duty, perseverance, scrupulous honesty — these were the bedrock upon which he had been raised in rural Vermont and upon which he built his political career.

Reagan came from a modest Midwestern background. He exhibited an honest openness and total lack of pretense that were a bit old-fashioned but also deeply appealing to the American people. The public instinctively believed that Reagan would tell them the unvarnished truth and that they could trust him.

Modern pundits seem not to appreciate the importance of these traditional virtues. Could it be that the liberal voters of Wisconsin saw something in Walker that the sophisticated opinion leaders missed? When Walker looked the people in the eye and said, “I kept my promises,” they believed him — and reelected him.

Contemporaries often dismissed the New England puritan and the Hollywood B-grade actor as intellectual lightweights. Howard Dean’s recent sneers at Walker’s lack of academic credentials were reminiscent of the attacks on Coolidge and Reagan.

The guiding tenets of governing for these two presidents were quite similar. Both believed the role of government was appropriately limited by the Constitution. They were equally convinced of the creative power of individual initiative. Coolidge explained, “I want the people of America to be able to work less for the government and more for themselves. I want them to have the rewards of their own industry. That is the chief meaning of freedom.” Similarly, Reagan famously admonished, “In this present crisis, government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem.”

Walker’s message is similar — and clear: “I believe that smaller government is better government.”

Two similar events were of seminal importance in the careers of Coolidge and Reagan. In 1919, as governor of Massachusetts, Coolidge was confronted with a bitter police strike in Boston. He labored for weeks to avoid a showdown, but when the police union leaders called a strike, Coolidge acted decisively. He issued the following terse statement that resonated around the country, swiftly ended the strike, and catapulted Coolidge onto the national stage: “There is no right to strike against the public safety by anybody, anywhere, anytime.” When faced with a crippling strike by the air-traffic controllers in 1981, Reagan quoted Coolidge’s statement and acted similarly. Both men rejected the conventional wisdom of their political advisers, and history proved them right. Coolidge and Reagan did not require public-opinion polls to tell them what to think or how to act.

Here the parallels are obvious. Walker’s famous showdown with the public unions elevated him onto the national stage. The liberal press was confident that this confrontation with the unions would be the end of Walker, but the Wisconsin voters felt differently. The manner in which Coolidge, Reagan, and Walker handled their respective crises won the admiration of the American people.

Despite the sobriquet “Silent Cal,” Coolidge was an expert at communicating his message. The first president to utilize radio, Coolidge consistently employed terse one-liners that resonated with the public. Americans recognized Coolidge for what he was — a straight-talking, common-sense conservative who, in the words of one commentator, “never wasted any time, never wasted any taxpayers’ money, and never wasted any words.”

Although Reagan’s personality was very different from Coolidge’s, he was widely hailed as “The Great Communicator.” Both men were able to get across to the people a handful of basic conservative principles.

Walker’s style of communication seems to fall somewhere in between Coolidge’s and Reagan’s. While not so sparing of words and quirky as Coolidge, he is not the natural communicator that Reagan was. However, the main point the pundits seem to be missing is that Walker’s personality and message do come through forcefully to voters.

Finally, Coolidge and Reagan were politicians of civility. One of Coolidge’s guiding political principles was “I will not attack an individual” — and he didn’t. Similarly, Reagan issued his famous Eleventh Commandment, forbidding speaking ill of any fellow Republican. In William Buckley’s words, Reagan was “almost certainly the nicest man who ever occupied the White House.”

Walker displays the same modest, self-deprecating attributes that were at the core of both Coolidge and Reagan. A frequent assessment is, “Walker’s just too unassuming — too nice — to be president.”

If the GOP can nominate a candidate for 2016 in the Coolidge–Reagan mold, the party — and the country — will be well served. Scott Walker might just be that candidate.

Garland S. Tucker III is the CEO of an NYSE-listed financial-services company based in Raleigh, N.C., a trustee of the Calvin Coolidge Presidential Foundation, and the author of The High Tide of American Conservatism: Davis, Coolidge and the 1924 Election (Emerald: 2010).


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: economy; jobs; scottwalker; wi
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To: 9YearLurker

Regardless of the new president’s views, the decision on immigration will be made by the Congress. The new President will likely not veto an immigration law crafted by both houses of a Republican congress


41 posted on 03/13/2015 7:45:21 AM PDT by bert ((K.E.; N.P.; GOPc.;+12, 73, ..... Obama is public enemy #1)
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To: bert

That’s not how it works—a GOP president doesn’t rubber stamp what a GOP Congress wants (though we’ve already seen how the GOP Congress has been bought and paid for on this issue anyway). Instead, a GOP Congress rolls over for whatever a GOP president wants. E.g., look at Congress’s spending record under Bush.


42 posted on 03/13/2015 7:48:30 AM PDT by 9YearLurker
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To: Bullish

I’d love a reincarnation of Coolidge. Greatest 20th century President. Wish he had served longer. Sorry about his son.


43 posted on 03/13/2015 12:06:40 PM PDT by 1010RD (First, Do No Harm)
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To: 9YearLurker

After 9 years of lurking and how many of posting and you’re still a absolutely-pure-or-nothing conservative?


44 posted on 03/13/2015 12:24:14 PM PDT by 1010RD (First, Do No Harm)
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To: 1010RD

No, it’s not a matter of purity, as in “this is my issue that matters to me above all”.

It is a matter of once this issue is lost there will be no conservative position that has a voting majority to support it.


45 posted on 03/13/2015 12:39:56 PM PDT by 9YearLurker
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

God knows we need one.


46 posted on 03/13/2015 3:52:06 PM PDT by Impy (They pull a knife, you pull a gun. That's the CHICAGO WAY, and that's how you beat the rats!)
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To: 9YearLurker

I believe that you are the FReeper who has the maximum score of (Loudest X Least informed X Most unwilling to listen)


47 posted on 03/14/2015 7:49:56 PM PDT by AFPhys ((Praying for our troops, our citizens, that the Bible and Freedom become basis of the US law again))
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To: 1010RD

Re: Coolidge. Same here. There are some great books out there about Coolidge. My favorites are Sobel’s Coolidge: An American Enigma, Claude Fuess’s Calvin Coolidge: The Man From Vermont, Silent Cal’s Almanack edited by David Pietrusza and Coolidge and the Historians by Thomas B. Silver, and let’s not forget Coolidge by Amity Shlaes. The Silver book demolishes liberal academia’s deliberate distortions about Coolidge.
Some little known facts about Coolidge:

1) elected to more public offices than any of our presidents

2) graduated from Amherst with honors

3) only president sworn in in his boyhood home (by his father who was a notary), which had no plumbing or electricity. A coal oil lamp was used to illuminate the scene

4) last president to write all of his speeches?

5) translated Dante’s Inferno and the Orations of Cicero

6) before “Reagan Democrats” there were “Coolidge Democrats”

7) his wife was the first First Lady to graduate from college (and also the first to smoke cigarettes) - she was delightful in everyway

8) Mencken, who didn’t care much for any politicos, had high praise for his prose style. He also said that Coolidge was our last Jeffersonian president

9) Will Rogers said (sincerely) that Coolidge was the funniest and wittiest man he’d ever met.

10) he was honest in everyway and also lived frugally. He rented a home (duplex) for $30.00 a month up until the time he became Vice-President

11) last president not to fly in an airplane

12) last Republican to carry New York city

13) like Lincoln he lost a son (Calvin Coolidge Jr.) while in the White House. Cal Jr. had stubbed his toe while playing tennis, it became infected, and he died of blood poisoning. All this in 1924 when he ran and won the presidency in his own right (he defeated a Wall Street lawyer, Davis and running mate FDR) in a landslide

14) called Hoover the “Wonder Boy.” “That man (Hoover) has given me nothing but unsolicited advice every since I’ve been president, all of it bad”

15) he loved reform but hated reformers which he called “world beaters”

16) had more press conferences (twice a week) than any president, 520 in all

17) he thought it better not to pass bad laws than to pass good ones

18) his White House Staff was smaller than his staff when he was Governor of Massachusetts

And one other thing, Grace Coolidge was one of our greatest First Ladies. There is a great photo out there of her with her pet raccoon at the White House. Cal on Grace: “For almost a quarter of a century she has borne with my infirmities, and I have rejoiced in her graces.”

And believe it or no, Mother Jones endorsed Coolidge for President! Reagan was right to have that painting of Coolidge in the Oval Office. And the link between Coolidge, JFK and Reagan?
Comparing the magnitude of the Coolidge, Kennedy and Reagan income tax cuts:
•In the 1920s, Coolidge cut the marginal tax rate from 70 percent to 25 percent; revenues increased from $719 million in 1921 to $1.164 billion in 1927, or by 61 percent.
•In the 1960s, Kennedy cut the marginal tax rate from 90 percent to 70 percent, increasing revenues from $94 billion in 1961 to $153 billion in 1968, or 62 percent (inflation adjusted 33 percent).
•In the 1980s, Reagan cut the marginal tax rate from 70 percent to 28 percent; revenues increased from $517 billion in 1980 to $990 billion in 1990, or 99.4 percent (inflation adjusted, 28 percent).

Comparing the impact of the Coolidge, Kennedy and Reagan tax cuts:
•The 1920s Coolidge tax cuts caused the percentage of income tax revenues paid by those with incomes over $50,000 to rise from 44.2 percent of the total in 1921 to 78.4 percent in 1928.
•The 1960s tax cuts caused the percentage of income tax revenues paid by those with incomes over $50,000 to rise from 11.6 percent of the total in 1963 to 15.1 percent in 1928.
•The 1980s Reagan tax cuts caused the percentage of income tax revenues paid by the top 10 percent of earners to rise from 48 percent of the total in 1981 to 57.2 percent in 1988.

Kennedy learned from Coolidge and his great Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_AAEp0J_hzU


48 posted on 03/14/2015 8:17:43 PM PDT by donaldo
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To: donaldo

https://southernlivingthedailysouth.files.wordpress.com/2012/11/grace-coolidge-racoon.jpg


49 posted on 03/14/2015 9:00:28 PM PDT by donaldo
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To: donaldo

Socialist Mother Jones with President Coolidge, Grace and Theodore Roosevelt Jr., who won a Congressional Medal of Honor, the only President and son to do so.

https://kaiology.files.wordpress.com/2011/09/cc_mother-jones_gc_trjr_260924_11.jpg

And below, Coolidge with his Veep, Charles G. Dawes, who won a Nobel Peace Prize. Dawes also wrote the music for a Billboard number one hit song, It’s All In The Game by Tommy Edwards in 1958! Dawes then, is the only Vice-President or winner of the Nobel Peace Prize to be credited with a No. 1 pop hit.

https://charlespaolino.files.wordpress.com/2012/10/dawes-3.jpg

Tommy Edwards:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gtizr2G_7Bk


50 posted on 03/14/2015 9:15:18 PM PDT by donaldo
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To: AFPhys

I’ve confirmed anything I’ve posted about Walker with links over and over again.

It’s posters who say, “Oh, but his record is so good on...” who are in denial about what 60 million new Latin voters will do our countru.

This early boomlet for Walker no doubt is only emboldening the GOPe in Congress to roll over on the issue for Obama—and enable Obama to slip millions of new Democrat voters in by 2016 anyway.


51 posted on 03/15/2015 4:48:00 AM PDT by 9YearLurker
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To: donaldo

Excellent and thanks for sharing. Of all you wrote this stood out to me:

17) he thought it better not to pass bad laws than to pass good ones

Too often we hear that government needs to do something. It’s more likely to do something wrong than right because markets cure themselves given enough time. We have too many laws and following precept 17 we would be much better off.


52 posted on 03/15/2015 6:51:08 AM PDT by 1010RD (First, Do No Harm)
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