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RealAudio 14.4 | RealAudio 28.8
Reagan, as Governor of California as in so much of his political career was
something of a contradiction. He runs in 1966, as a staunch Goldwater
conservative who will combat the radicalism on the Berkeley campus, combat
crime, combat the loss of law and order in the society, will reduce taxes, will
be against big government, will restore to the people their autonomy and
freedom from government. Coins the phrase "Government is not he solution,
government is the problem." But yet, as Governor, he's also a pragmatist, he's
a great pragmatic figure and he's willing to sign on to a withholding tax,
which one would have assumed from everything he said, to the moment he signed
the tax bill that he would never do that. He spoke of family values and saw
abortion as something that offended his religious values and his sense of the
autonomy of the individual again. And yet he signs into law the abortion, the
liberal abortion statute in California, because he's also a practical
politician. And he's very effective at getting away with this, with these
contradictions, because he's a very appealing figure. And his rhetoric is what
is so appealing to so many people in the state. People don't pay that much
attention to what he does. Oh, I mean his career there was nothing but
contradictions, which it wasn't. There were some major contradictions. But he
gets away with this, because he does rhetorically and in terms of his actions
largely live up to his conservative agenda.
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