The competition among Republican presidential hopefuls to claim the mantle of former President Ronald Reagan, who died ten years ago today, remains so fierce that two months ago the Web site Wonkette counted no fewer than 32 references to the Gipper in a single 699-word op-ed by Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky.
Not to be outdone, Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Tex., commissioned an oil painting of Reagan’s “tear down this wall” speech, which hangs in his Senate office nearby a red leather replica of a paperweight Reagan kept on his Oval Office desk with the words “IT CAN BE DONE.”
Then there’s Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., who in a 2011 speech suggested that none but those “born and raised in Ronald Reagan’s America” were fit to govern. “We, perhaps better than any other people who have ever lived in this nation, should understand how special and unique America truly is.”
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The feverish devotion that conservatives heap on our 40th U.S. president calls to mind the 1975 film “The Story of Adèle H,” about a young Frenchwoman’s romantic obsession with a lieutenant in the British army. In a famous late scene in the film, Adèle’s amour fou has progressed to the point that when she encounters her beloved in a dusty street, she walks right past him, no longer able to recognize his non-idealized self.
It’s easy to do an Adèle H with Reagan, because the Great Communicator was always much more conservative in word than in deed. “In this present crisis,” Reagan intoned in his first inaugural address, “government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem.” Yet government spending grew by one quarter on his watch. The civilian executive branch workforce, too, grew close to its historic peak. As I noted on the occasion of Reagan’s death, it’s more fitting than most admirers know that the largest free-standing structure in Washington, D.C. is a government office building bearing Reagan’s name.









