The British Embassy made a July 4th playlist.
Veterans of Carter-Era Inflation Warn Biden Has Few Tools
“When inflation surged in the late 1970s, President Jimmy Carter convened his top economic advisers for weekly lunch meetings in which they tended to offer overly optimistic forecasts of how high prices would rise,” the New York Times reports.
“But the political consequences of rising prices could not be escaped: By 1978, Democrats had lost seats in the House and Senate. A year later, Mr. Carter’s Treasury secretary, W. Michael Blumenthal, was ousted in a cabinet shake-up. In 1980, Mr. Carter lost his re-election bid in a landslide as the Federal Reserve, intent on bringing inflation down, raised interest rates so aggressively that it tipped the economy into a painful recession.”
“President Biden and the Democrats in power now face a similar predicament as they scramble to tame inflation after a year of telling Americans that price gains would be short-lived. In recent weeks, Mr. Biden has pressed oil refineries to ramp up production, proposed a three-month gas tax holiday and called on the Federal Reserve to do what is needed to cool an overheating economy. But to veterans of the Carter administration, the echoes of the past call for a greater sense of urgency from Mr. Biden despite his limited power to bring prices down.”
Roe Is the New Prohibition
David Frum: “The culture war raged most hotly from the ’70s to the next century’s ’20s. It polarized American society, dividing men from women, rural from urban, religious from secular, Anglo-Americans from more recent immigrant groups. At length, but only after a titanic constitutional struggle, the rural and religious side of the culture imposed its will on the urban and secular side. A decisive victory had been won, or so it seemed.”
“The culture war I’m talking about is the culture war over alcohol prohibition. From the end of Reconstruction to the First World War, probably more state and local elections turned on that one issue than on any other. The long struggle seemingly culminated in 1919, with the ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment and enactment by Congress of the National Prohibition Act, or the Volstead Act (as it became known). The amendment and the act together outlawed the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages in the United States and all its subject territories. Many urban and secular Americans experienced those events with the same feeling of doom as pro-choice Americans may feel today after the Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade.”
“Only, it turns out that the Volstead Act was not the end of the story. As Prohibition became a nationwide reality, Americans rapidly changed their mind about the idea. Support for Prohibition declined, then collapsed. Not only was the Volstead Act repealed, in 1933, but the Constitution was further amended so that nobody could ever try such a thing ever again.”
Did Kennedy Loyalists Squelch a 1968 ‘October Surprise’?
James Barron: “It was a 1968 October Surprise story that might have changed the course of history.”
“Imagine Hubert Humphrey taking office as President in January 1969, not Richard Nixon. We wouldn’t be at the 50th anniversary of the Watergate break-in, to name just one consequence with wide-reaching effects for American democracy.”
Flashback Story of the Day
From Roll Call and the Iowa Capital Dispatch on January 5, 2021: Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) told reporters that Vice President Mike Pence wouldn’t be available on January 6 to count the electoral votes for the 2020 presidential election.
Said Grassley: “Well, first of all, I will be — if the Vice President isn’t there and we don’t expect him to be there, I will be presiding over the Senate.”
Experts Consider Trump One of the Worst Presidents
A new Siena College poll finds that 141 presidential scholars rank Franklin D. Roosevelt, Abraham Lincoln, George Washington, Theodore Roosevelt and Thomas Jefferson as the country’s top five presidents.
For the second time, scholars include Donald Trump along with Andrew Johnson, James Buchanan, Warren Harding and Franklin Pierce in the bottom five.
Juneteenth Is at Risk of Losing Its Meaning
“Juneteenth is meant to acknowledge Black emancipation from enslavement, but there’s a risk it could turn into just another day off, defined more by road trips and sales on mattresses,” Axios reports.
“Juneteenth became a federal holiday just last year. This year is the first time it’s been a holiday that anyone has been able to plan for.”
“And it comes during a red-hot summer travel season, and against a backdrop of state-level efforts to state-level efforts to clamp down on teaching about slavery in schools.”
The Target of the First Watergate Burglary
Washington Post: “Before the infamous break-in, there was another. A former DNC official ponders the wiretap that changed his life.”
America Is Two Nations Barely on Speaking Terms
Edward Luce: “The ironic outcome is nostalgia for the Watergate era. Watergate proved that the American republic could withstand assault by a popular and very effective sitting president. The system worked. January 6 shows that an unpopular former president can wield a veto over the fate of democracy. The irony stems from the fact that declining trust in government began during Watergate and is now at rock bottom. Apart from a couple of interludes during Ronald Reagan’s presidency in the 1980s and Bill Clinton’s in the 1990s, trust in government to do the right thing some or all of the time has been on the slide since Watergate. It is now at a record low of 20 percent.”
“Part of the cure for today’s partisan mutual loathing would be a display of the admirable objectivity shown by the Watergate committee. But the America that was stunned into forcing Nixon’s resignation seems almost as lost in time as the royal tyranny that it expelled. The past is another country, as the saying goes. America’s present feels like two different nations that are barely on speaking terms.”
It Started with a Phone Call to Bob Woodward
The Washington Post has “the untold story of how Martha Mitchell took revenge against her husband.”
Worse Than Nixon
Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein: “Donald Trump not only sought to destroy the electoral system through false claims of voter fraud and unprecedented public intimidation of state election officials, but he also then attempted to prevent the peaceful transfer of power to his duly elected successor, for the first time in American history.”
Man Who Shot Reagan Granted Full Freedom
John Hinckley, the would-be assassin who shot President Ronald Reagan two months after his inauguration in 1981, was deemed by a federal judge on Wednesday to no longer be a “danger to himself or others,” New York magazine reports.
As a result, he will be free of all remaining restrictions by June 15.
The Plot to Out Ronald Reagan
Politico excerpts the untold story of how a group of Republicans tried to expose “a nefarious homosexual network” within Ronald Reagan’s presidential campaign on the eve of the 1980 Republican convention.
The book from which this is excerpted, Secret City: The Hidden History of Gay Washington by James Kirchick, looks worth reading.
- Amazon Kindle Edition
- Kirchick, James (Author)
- English (Publication Language)
- 830 Pages - 05/31/2022 (Publication Date) - Henry Holt and Co. (Publisher)
How Reagan Distanced Himself from AIDS
Playbook has excerpts from James Kirchick’s new book, Secret City: The Hidden History of Gay Washington which details how far Ronald Reagan distanced himself from AIDS, even as thousands of Americans were dying.
Kirchick writes about a draft of Reagan’s statement after actor Rock Hudson died of AIDS in 1985: “In his public statement about the most famous figure in the world to die from AIDS, the president purged all references to the nature of their decades-long friendship, turning an expression of personal grief into one of anodyne regret.”
- Amazon Kindle Edition
- Kirchick, James (Author)
- English (Publication Language)
- 830 Pages - 05/31/2022 (Publication Date) - Henry Holt and Co. (Publisher)
Key Watergate Witness Died Two Years Ago
“Alfred Baldwin, a former FBI agent who served as the chief eavesdropper and lookout for the Watergate burglars, but then became a key government witness in the scandal that brought down President Richard Nixon, died Jan. 15, 2020,” the Washington Post reports.
“Like Watergate conspirator James McCord, whose death in 2017 was not widely reported for two years, Mr. Baldwin did not want his death publicized.”
Understanding Roe v. Wade
A must-listen: The “Slow Burn” podcast will return next month with the new season focused on the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision.
Washington Post: Memories of pre-Roe America, from people who were there.
The Presidential Speeches Never Given
“President John F. Kennedy in 1962 readied a speech that would have announced a punishing bombing run on Cuba, which could have led to nuclear war. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower drafted an apology speech in case the D-Day operation of 1944 failed,” Axios reports.
“Jeff Nussbaum, a veteran Democratic speechwriter who left the White House last month, unearths these historical gems in a new book, Undelivered, out next week.”
- Amazon Kindle Edition
- Nussbaum, Jeff (Author)
- English (Publication Language)
- 366 Pages - 05/10/2022 (Publication Date) - Flatiron Books (Publisher)
Harvard Leaders Enslaved More Than 70 People
“Harvard University leaders, faculty and staff enslaved more than 70 individuals during the 17th and 18th centuries when slavery was legal in Massachusetts,” the Washington Post reports.
New York Times: “Harvard University is committing $100 million to study and redress its ties to slavery, the university’s president announced Tuesday, and with that money will create an endowed ‘Legacy of Slavery Fund,’ which will continue researching and memorializing that history, working with descendants of Black and Native American people enslaved at Harvard, as well as their broader communities.”
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