As we celebrate President’s Day,
I will take this opportunity to make some of my observations of these men, and
their humanity and how it has played a vital role in their performance in
office. I am no historian, I am just a guy who has had a lifelong fascination
with the office and the men who have occupied it. There is no perfect
President. Every one of these guys was corrupt in some manner or another. Some
much more so than others. But what makes a good President to me is one who gets
the big things right. The number on big thing is the economy, the second is foreign
policy and advancing American interests worldwide. Regarding the economy, I do not want a
President that seeks to micromanage the economy, but one that creates favorable
conditions for economic prosperity for now and after he leaves office.
I will keep my observations to
the Presidents who have occupied the office during my lifetime. I was born
during the Lyndon Johnson Presidency. We have seen the whole gamut of humanity
from happy and optimistic to paranoid and prickly. I do not attempt to rank
these men from best to worst. Just to comment on their humanity, their
strengths and weaknesses and how that affected the mindset that they brought to
the office. Without further ado, let’s
get started.
The Paranoid President –
Richard Nixon Nixon is quite possibly the most intellectually gifted man to
occupy the Presidency during my lifetime. I will watch YouTube interviews that
he did back in the 1980s and be mesmerized by his thoughtfulness and his
overall intelligence. Yet he thought the world was out to get him. He was not
altogether wrong, as it is well known that the Washington press hated him. But
it led him to do things like put together an enemies list, raid journalists
offices, and ultimately try to bug the phones at the Democratic National
Headquarters at the Watergate office complex. It was that last act that ultimately
brought down his Presidency. I know it is hard to believe but some historians
have speculated that Nixon might have gone down as a great President if it were
not for Watergate. I do not completely agree with this analysis. While he was
the best at foreign policy, his domestic policies leave a lot of room for
doubt. His appointment of Arthur Burns
as Federal Reserve chairman – and Burns’s easy money policies – led to the
record high inflation that we would see in the late 1970’s.
The “Do Nothing” President –
Bill Clinton Obviously, those of us who remember the 1990’s would see the “do
nothing” label as a misnomer. We all remember that there was a lot of “doing”
going on the White House during those days, mostly between the President and
any female not named his wife. And this cost him a lot of political capital with
the American people. Clinton came to Washington with an ambitious agenda, but
when the Republicans took both houses of Congress in 1994, that put it all on
hold. The overall lack of legislative accomplishment actually helped his
Presidency. He inherited a strong economy, and it remained strong all
throughout his Presidency. Clinton deserves credit here because – and this is
saying a mouthful – he did not screw it up. Clinton was a great politician. He knew how to read a room. He was great at both speaking to a large audience and one-on-one. He
was the master at finding a long line and getting in front of it. Because he
didn’t screw it up, I ultimately rate him as an above average President.
The Underrated President –
Jimmy Carter Jimmy Carter is widely
viewed as having a failed Presidency. Most notably, Carter took the blame for
the inflation of the late 1970’s, which topped out at about 12.5% in 1980.
However, Carter took the single most significant step to beating back that
inflation by appointing Paul Volcker as Federal Reserve Chairman in 1979.
Carter was clearly the most good and decent man to occupy the office during my
lifetime and perhaps of all time. He did some remarkably good things as
President. First on the list was the peace agreement that he brokered between
Egypt and Israel. A peace agreement that undoubtedly went a long way towards
costing Egyptian President Anwar Sadat his life. The Carter Administration was
also responsible for deregulating the airline, trucking and brewery industries.
Funny that Carter’s successor, Ronald Reagan, was seen the Great Deregulator,
yet that title belongs to Carter. I view all these moves as being positive
overall. Carter had his downside, as he was prickly and difficult to deal with,
even with his fellow Democrats in Congress. He also made some notable mistakes
at the beginning of the Iranian Hostage Crisis that prolonged that crisis far
beyond what was needed (although he deserves credit for getting the hostages
home alive). Finally, his overall leadership skills left something to be desired.
The Happy President – Ronald
Reagan A few years ago my Dad took a trip to California to visit my sisters
living out there and a trip to the Reagan Presidential Library was part of that
trip. The overwhelming observation that my Dad had of Reagan after visiting the
library was that Reagan was a genuinely happy man. That was not the type of
observation that came naturally to my Dad, so this struck me. We do remember
Reagan being endlessly optimistic. This upbeat, optimistic outlook undoubtedly served
him and this country well during the early days of his Presidency as the country
went through a horrifying recession in 1980-82. Actually, a double dip
recession as a result of Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker’s fight against
inflation. The recession would have happened whether Reagan won in 1980 or
Carter was re-elected. I do not think that Jimmy Carter could have effectively
led the US through that recession. Reagan did. By 1982, inflation was down to
4%, which is about where it would remain throughout the 1980’s. Of course, we
really saw Reagan’s good humor in the immediate aftermath of a failed
assassination attempt in 1981, an attempt that left 4 wounded including the
President. His relentless belief in America, and in the American free
enterprise system bordered on complete idealism. It was this idealism that led
to the United States winning the Cold War against the Soviet Union, and led to
the INF treaty in 1987 that would eliminate an entire class of nuclear weapons.
Reagan deservingly gets a lot of credit for winning the Cold War, but not
nearly enough. He saw to it that it was won relatively peacefully, as we never
engaged the Soviet Union in a direct confrontation, and the regional spats
never spread into a large global conflict. Finally, Reagan was never seen as an
intellectual of any kind, but he had the best leadership skills of any
President of my lifetime. What I will most remember about Reagan was that in
1980 and throughout his Presidency he told us that America’s best days were
ahead of it, not behind it. In 1980 that was a very difficult thing to say. From
1973-1980, America lost a war in Southeast Asia, saw a Presidency brought down
in utter disgrace, endured record breaking inflation (and loss of tons of
purchasing power in spite of record income gains), an embarrassing hostage situation
in Iran and so-called “intellectual elites” saying that our children and all
future generations of Americans would have to get used to lower living
standards, and that Communism was a competing, but equal, economic system to
American free enterprise. History has been kind to Reagan, not so kind to the
so-called “smart people” Obviously, I rate Reagan an above average President.
The Childish President –
Donald Trump No matter what you may
think of a President’s policies or his overall demeanor, the very minimal
expectation that we should have of any officeholder is that they act like an
adult. Instead, we elected this man who disrespected the military service of
John McCain, who spent 5 ½ years as a
POW in the Hanoi Hilton, one of the world’s most horrifying POW camps. He
mocked the disability of a handicapped reporter, in an utterly gross display. Trump
has no governing center. He is a narcissistic authoritarian. He is not a
conservative, not a liberal, not really an anything. He will do what is best
for Trump. He will sell his supporters down the river in a heartbeat if he has
to. And they think he’s the greatest thing since sliced bread? He said we would
get sick of all the winning? I am still wondering where it all is. A great
leader brings out the best in all of us. He brings out the worst in all of us,
both his supporters and his opponents. I never admired him as a businessman, he
has zero leadership skills. Quite honestly, his Administration probably did
some good things, but it all got lost in his inflammatory and damaging rhetoric.
Needless to say, I rate him a below average President.
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