Reagan myth vs. Reagan reality

The centennial birthday celebration for Ronald Reagan Simi Valley, Calif., on Feb. 6, 2011. Credit: Getty/ROBYN BECK
Dick Polman is a columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer, where this first appeared.
If Ronald Reagan were governing today the way he governed back in the day, he would be defaced on tea party placards and dogged by rumors that he was born in Kenya.
Reagan the icon - the one feted by conservatives on his centennial Sunday - is very different from Reagan the reality. That's why conservatives persist in airbrushing the Reagan record while endeavoring to affix his name to every possible road, airport and school. Soon, each of the 2012 Republican presidential candidates will be insisting that he or she is the true heir to Reagan, seemingly oblivious to the inconvenient truths.
The myth can be reduced to a sentence: Reagan "cut taxes" and "ended the Cold War." The reality is far more nuanced - starting with the fact that, in his first year as governor of California, he broke a campaign promise and signed the largest tax hike in state history, slapping increases on corporations and inheritances. The increase was worth $6 billion in today's money.
In today's Republican Party, Reagan wouldn't be able to get himself nominated. The anti-tax zealots at the Club for Growth would kill him with negative TV ads. And because as governor he also signed one of the nation's first laws legalizing some of the circumstances for abortions (six years before Roe v. Wade), today's religious conservatives would bury him in the Iowa caucuses.
If the real Reagan were a first-term president today, the tea party would be branding him a RINO (Republican in Name Only) and clamoring for a right-wing challenger in the next round of primaries.
After all, in 1982 Reagan signed into law two tax increases - one of which was later characterized in a Treasury Department report as the heftiest peacetime tax hike in American history. All told, he gave back roughly one-third of the tax cuts enacted a year earlier. Then, in 1983, he saved Social Security with a $165 billion bailout by signing a hike in payroll taxes and ushering a new category of recipients into the program: newly hired federal workers. That year, he also hiked the federal gasoline tax. In 1984, he signed a deficit-reduction bill that mandated yet another tax increase.
That was just the first term. After his re-election, Reagan signed the Tax Reform Act of 1986, which imposed the largest corporate tax hike in history ($120 billion over five years), while closing $300 billion in corporate loopholes. In that same law, Reagan agreed to exempt millions of low-wage earners from paying any income tax. In today's conservative parlance, such deeds would be assailed as "socialism."
And imagine how he'd be attacked today for his immigration policy. In 1986, he signed the last major reform law, mandating a path to citizenship for agricultural and seasonal workers - and offering amnesty to illegal immigrants who had lived here continuously for many years. If Reagan were campaigning with that record today, he'd get whacked so hard by the Republican right he'd end up like chastened ex-reformer John McCain, yelling, "Build the dang fence!"
Because Reagan's tenure is tucked away in the '80s, the current Republicans who worship the myth are free to indulge their amnesia. Apparently they don't know, or choose not to acknowledge, that a lot of conservatives constantly groused about Reagan. It's understandable that Reagan's fans prefer idolatry to empiricism. But the man is far more interesting than the myth; reality enhances his standing.
What's most worth celebrating, on the centennial birthday, is his gift for compromise. Guided by his conservative principles, Reagan bent when necessary. He negotiated with the Soviets, and he negotiated with the Democrats in Congress. He embodied Benjamin Franklin's famous metaphor about the efficacy of political flexibility: "When a broad table is to be made and the edges of the planks do not fit, the artist takes a little from both, and makes a good joint."
We'd all do well to honor that key facet of the Reagan legacy.