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Obama Looks To Reagan For Transition Model

Nov 7th, 2008 · President-elect Barack Obama's transition team is expected to take tips from Ronald Reagan's carefully orchestrated transition. James P. Pfiffner, professor of public policy at George Mason University and author of The Strategic Presidency: Hitting The Ground Running, says that Obama, like Reagan, seems to have started planning early.

Keywords: policy · president · public · professor · transit · orchestral · Obama · Reagan · Ronald Reagan · james · George Mason University · Barack Obama

Reliving 'A Decade With Presidents And The Press' **

Aug 21st, 2008 · Marlin Fitzwater spent 17 years as a government employee before being appointed White House press secretary under Ronald Reagan. He also worked for George H. W. Bush.

Keywords: White House · president · employees · secretary · George · Reliving · Ronald Reagan · Marlin Fitzwater

Fact-Checking Clinton, Obama's Political Sparring

Jan 23rd, 2008 · New York Sen. Hillary Clinton and Illinois Sen. Barack Obama have been attacking one another's past jobs and voting records -- with charges of admiring Ronald Reagan, sitting on the Wal-Mart Board and working for a slum landlord. NPR sorts the truth from the fiction.

Keywords: politics · slum · fictional · Clinton · truth · Obama · Ronald Reagan · Hillary Clinton · landlords · Barack Obama · admiring · York Sen

GOP Debate in South Carolina Polite

Jan 11th, 2008 · Republican presidential hopefuls are courteous during a South Carolina debate exploring the economy, foreign policy, and the legacy of Ronald Reagan. That state holds the first southern primary. No GOP candidate has won his party's nomination without carrying South Carolina.

Keywords: Republicans · policy · politics · presidential · GOP · Economy · legacy · candidate · foreign · Carolina · explore · Ronald Reagan

Lott Looks Back on a Complex Legacy

Nov 29th, 2007 · One year ago, Trent Lott asked the voters of Mississippi for six more years in the Senate and the voters said yes. Now he wants to leave after serving just one of those years. Some of his constituents are sure to feel abused by the turnabout. But is Lott really quitting early? That's got to depend on what you mean by early. Lott may be only 66, but his 40 years in Washington already span a great gulf in the history of the Congress, not to mention the history of his state, region and country. Lott's lifetime has seen the decline of many traditions, not a few of which he defended personally. These include the race-based customs of the Deep South and also the time-honored courtesies of a Senate where even mortal political enemies knew they eventually had to get down to dealing with one another. How you feel about Lott's departure depends on how you feel about those traditions, and for more than a few people in Washington that stirs a strong brew of emotions. The shadow of the Old South seemed to hover just behind this Mississippian at every juncture of his career. He first arrived on Capitol Hill in 1968 as an Ole Miss law school grad on staff for William Colmer, the last Dixiecrat to chair the House Rules Committee. When Colmer retired in 1972, he helped Lott shift the seat to the GOP (breaking a tradition that dated back nearly a century). Lott went to work encouraging his region's partisan shift, campaigning for underdog Republicans in Southern districts. One whom he championed in the 1970s was a Georgia college professor named Newt Gingrich. Lott rose during the presidency of Ronald Reagan, becoming the No. 2 Republican in the House. At the time it was the highest any member from the Deep South had risen in the ranks of the House GOP. In 1988 he made the move to the Senate, replacing the legendary John Stennis, the last Democrat from the state to serve in the chamber. Lott's roots also led to the transgression that cost him his job as Senate Majority Leader in 2002. It began with a remark at Strom Thurmond's 100th birthday party and farewell. Lott said his own state of Mississippi had voted for Thurmond in 1948 when Thurmond was the presidential candidate of the segregationist States Rights Party. Lott added that if more states had done the same, the country might have avoided a lot of problems that came after. Lott always maintained he was just being nice to his retiring colleague and meant nothing racial with his remark. But lots of ears heard it differently, including some at the White House. The president bailed out on Lott and within days Lott was out as Senate leader. Many expected him to retire when his term ended. Then Hurricane Katrina ravaged his beloved Gulf Coast (leveling his own home), and Lott got his groove back. He took on insurance companies and the Bush administration and easily won re-election in 2006. Then he went after the Number Two job in the Senate GOP and won it by a single vote. It was a double shot of redemption. It also happened at a moment when Democrats had clawed back on top by a narrow margin in the chamber, making cantankerous Harry Reid the new Senate Majority Leader. The new Republican boss was to be the equally battle-ready Mitch McConnell. Lott looked like the guy who could dilute that otherwise combustible mix and make it possible for both sides to do business. After all, that had been part of his history as party leader in the 1990s, when he still saw himself as preserving the courtly ways of the Senate of yore. The mid-1990s saw nearly constant combat between President Bill Clinton and the newly-elected Republican majorities in Congress, symbolized by Gingrich, the new House Speaker. Lott had celebrated his party's new majority status in the Senate by getting elected whip, and when Majority Leader Bob Dole stepped down to concentrate on his presidential bid in 1996, Lott became his party's Number One. What followed in the middle months of that year was a remarkable catalog of bipartisan achievement. Bridging the partisan divide within the Senate, and also the chasm between Gingrich and Clinton, Lott was the vital center for one deal after another. The Congress and White House enacted a minimum wage increase and a historic overhaul of the welfare system few had thought possible. They also struck a bargain permitting health insurance portability and a new law protecting drinking water. By so doing, Lott made it easier for Republicans to retain majority control of both chambers in the 1996 elections. He also made it easier for Clinton to win re-election over Dole that same November. It was a tradeoff that made sense to Lott, an institutional pragmatist who preferred moving the merchandise to closing the store. So why did Lott pull the plug so abruptly now, leaving the Senate he clearly loved? Perhaps he was hoping to become the next chancellor at Ole Miss, his alma mater. Or perhaps, as most assume, he will surface soon as a million-dollar lobbyist. But he may also have concluded it's no longer possible to practice the politics he knew best: talking tough but coming to the table. Before dismissing Lott as one more former leader on the make, or as one more reminder of the Southern past, we should also ask who will fill his role as a deal maker in this Congress, and the next. It may not be a skill that inspires admiration or presidential nominations, but it is sorely missed in the current leadership in both parties in both chambers of this wartime, war-torn Congress. Related NPR Stories Political Junkie: Lott's Move Leaves Miss. with Two Seats to Fill

Keywords: Republicans · Congress · White House · administration · politics · Democrats · Senate · 2006 · country · presidential · parties · GOP

Actress Wyman, Reagan's First Wife, Dies at 93

Sep 10th, 2007 · Academy Award-winning actress Jane Wyman, the first wife of fellow Hollywood star Ronald Reagan, has died at 93. She won a best-actress Oscar in 1948 for Johnny Belinda and starred on television in the 1980s in the prime-time soap opera Falcon Crest.

Keywords: television · Oscar · Academy Award · wife · Hollywood · actress · 1980 · Opera · Reagan · Ronald Reagan · Wyman · 1948 for Johnny Belinda

Reagan Image-Maker, Michael Deaver, Dead at 69

Aug 18th, 2007 · Michael K. Deaver, a close adviser to Ronald Reagan who directed the president's picturesque and symbolic public appearances, dies of pancreatic cancer at his home in Bethesda, Md.

Keywords: president · public · cancer · adviser · Md · picturesque · Reagan · Ronald Reagan · Michael · Bethesda · pancreatic · Deaver

Coma Patient Awakens 19 Years Later ****

Jun 4th, 2007 · Back in 1988, Jan Grzebski was hit by a train. He fell into a coma, and if that wasn't enough, doctors found cancer in the Polish railroad worker's brain. Doctors said they couldn't do any more for him, so his wife took him home. She cared for him for 19 years -- until he woke up. She noticed Jan Grzebski trying to talk earlier this year. When he was last awake, Ronald Reagan was still President, and Poland was still Communist.

Keywords: president · cancer · Poland · Patient · workers · wife · coma · Railroad · 1988 · Communist · Ronald Reagan · Polish

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