In the early years of Reagan the band of South haters hadn’t yet metastasized and didn’t have much of a presence in the GOP. Or in the Democrats for that matter. So without the campaign of character assassination waged by the neocon Trotsky fan club Bradford wouldn’t have had a problem.
“A letter supporting Bradford’s nomination, sent to President Reagan during the controversy, was signed by John East, Jesse Helms, John Tower, Strom Thurmond, Orrin Hatch, Jeremiah Denton, Dan Quayle and James McClure and eight other Republican senators. Gerhart Niemeyer, Russell Kirk, Jeffrey Hart, William Buckley, M. Stanton Evans, Andrew Lytle, Harry Jaffa (”Bradford’s principal intellectual antagonist”), and “dozens of others” were also named as supporters. Norman Podhoretz, Irving Kristol, William Kristol, Michael Joyce and William Simon were among Bennett’s supporters.”
However things might have looked at the time, Reagan was smart not to reopen century-old wounds when we still had the Soviets to worry about.
Thanks for Posting an excellent history lesson:
In the early years of Reagan the band of South haters hadnt yet metastasized and didnt have much of a presence in the GOP. Or in the Democrats for that matter. So without the campaign of character assassination waged by the neocon Trotsky fan club Bradford wouldnt have had a problem.
A letter supporting Bradfords nomination, sent to President Reagan during the controversy, was signed by John East, Jesse Helms, John Tower, Strom Thurmond, Orrin Hatch, Jeremiah Denton, Dan Quayle and James McClure and eight other Republican senators. Gerhart Niemeyer, Russell Kirk, Jeffrey Hart, William Buckley, M. Stanton Evans, Andrew Lytle, Harry Jaffa (Bradfords principal intellectual antagonist), and dozens of others were also named as supporters. Norman Podhoretz, Irving Kristol, William Kristol, Michael Joyce and William Simon were among Bennetts supporters.
South haters? Haters on Free Republic?
Maybe you mean South Hatters since the first spelling is ridiculous.