The opposition party’s responses to presidential State of the Union addresses tend not to go well. Some of the speeches have gone so horribly, there’s been talk of a “curse.”
Last night’s Republican response from Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds wasn’t nearly that dramatic, though part of the GOP governor’s message stood out as notable.
“Like you, I just watched the president’s address. I listened as the governor of our state, as a mom and grandmother of 11, who’s worried our country is on the wrong track. We’re now one year into his presidency, and instead of moving America forward, it feels like President Biden and his party have sent us back in time — to the late 70s and early 80s.”
Such rhetoric hardly came as a surprise. Americans were worried about inflation in the 1970s, just like now. The public had reason to fear expansionist aggression from the USSR in the 1980s, and similar fears related to Russia have re-emerged of late.
The comparisons are not, however, altogether credible. For example, inflation in 2022 isn’t nearly as bad as it was in the 1970s. For that matter, unlike the fears from the Cold War, the Soviet Union collapsed decades ago.
But even more important is the underlying irony of the Republican response to Biden’s address — because there is an agenda that would send the United States “back in time,” but it’s not the White House’s.
On reproductive rights, one of the Republican Party’s principal goals is to turn back the clock to before 1973.








