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Working for President Ronald Reagan
Murray Weidenbaum
Murray Weidenbaum holds the Mallinckrodt Distinguished University
Professorship at Washington University in St. Louis and is the author of
Advising Reagan. This was an address given to Fontbonne
College, St. Louis, MO, August 31, 2005. It is a pleasure to
talk about working for Ronald Reagan. He was a great boss. He set clear
objectives and he appointed people dedicated to achieving those
objectives. Unlike some earlier presidents, he did not second-guess your
decisions on the day-to-day operations of your agency. He also backed
you up when you got flack for carrying out your job. As chairman of President Reagan’s Council of
Economic Advisers, I found myself deeply involved in making economic
policy from day one. Back in January 1981, inflation was the number one
problem facing the American people. Every public opinion poll showed
that. One of my initial tasks was to accompany
President Reagan in his first meeting with Paul Volcker, who then was
the head of the Federal Reserve System. It was clear that we all wanted
to get inflation down. But the President’s vision was much broader
than that. Soon after, he assigned me the job of performing an
audit of the American economy. He made my audit report public at a White
House press briefing that we conducted jointly. The report made it
clear: the American economy was suffering from a combination of
illnesses: high inflation and low growth as well as high taxation,
rising government spending, and excessive regulation. At the press
conference, I quickly learned that the questions would not be limited to
the announced topic. After the President left, I was asked why he said
he could not find his checkbook. I answered that, personally, I
delegated that task to my wife. Amidst the laughter that followed, I
started to answer another question. Then came the awesome task of putting together the
details of the President’s economic program. Cutting the budget
received stage center. That suited me fine because my first job in
Washington was working in President Truman’s Budget Bureau. As a very active member
of the three-member group that developed the Reagan budget cuts, I
frequently quoted Harry Truman’s famous statement, “I never saw a
budget that could not be cut.” To be nonpartisan, I also quoted a
former Republican budget director, “Good budgeting is the uniform
distribution of dissatisfaction.” During this time, the
President and his key advisers were focusing on his forthcoming address
to the nation in early 1981. That was going to be the occasion for his
publicly laying out what became Reaganomics. The process of writing the
speech revealed much about the man. He assembled the group
in his living quarters on the top floor of the White House (he loved to
say that he lived above the store). The first session was devoted to
developing the major themes of his first big economic speech. When the
President was satisfied, he adjourned the meeting with the understanding
that the speechwriters would work up a rough draft. The rest of the group
then polished the speechwriter’s first draft. The revised draft speech
was sent to the President who rewrote it in his own language. After his
handwritten draft was typed, the whole group reassembled. The President held the master copy and led us through
it paragraph by paragraph to get our comments. On several occasions, I
told him that a section was not accurate. He never pulled rank. After
all, it was his speech. He always responded the same way, “Ok, how do
I make the point accurately?” That was an example of how Ronald Reagan
inspired loyalty. During this period, there was an endless array of
White House meetings to deal with a host of detailed questions facing
the new administration: What economic forecast should we use in
preparing the budget? How should we deal with the rapid increase in auto
imports? Should the expiring quotas on shoe imports be extended? How
rapidly can we increase the military budget when the civilian agencies
are being cut back? Should the controls on gasoline prices be lifted?
These and many, many more issues of public policy. The pace was so hectic
that my staff had to postpone the party they had planned for February
10, my birthday. It was held a day late. I still remember the birthday
cake. It showed me on roller skates shuttling between the White House
and my office next door. After the Reagan
economic program was put together, the President called in Dave Stockman
(the budget director), Don Regan (the Treasury Secretary), and me to
give us our marching orders. He said something like, “Ok, boys, now
that we put the program together, our job is to go out and sell it.” That began a non-stop
round of testimony, speechifying, and other presentations to a great
variety of groups, ranging from congressional committees to business,
labor, farmers, and other interest groups. Not all of my
presentations were a resounding success. While I was preparing my
presentation to the Consumer Federation, I recalled that President
Roosevelt opened a speech to the Daughters of the American Revolution
with a wisecrack, “My fellow immigrants.” In that spirit, I
addressed the consumer group as “My fellow consumers.” To put it
bluntly, those particular consumers were not buying what I was selling. My reception was very
different when I testified before the Senate Banking Committee, who had
to pass on my nomination as chairman of the President’s Council of
Economic Advisers. Missouri’s two senators at the time, Jack Danforth
and Tom Eagleton, were the first to speak. Both said all sorts of nice
things about me and the Senate approved me by a vote of 95 to 0. My typical day started
with the 8:00 a.m. meeting of the White House senior staff. That was
often followed by a meeting of the Cabinet or one of the Cabinet
councils. Much of the actual decision-making was made at the meetings of
the Cabinet councils, which were smaller and more specialized groups. I
was most active in the councils dealing with Economic Policy and
Commerce and Trade. Occasionally I participated in the Councils on
Agriculture, Social Policy, and, a few times, National Security. I made many formal and informal presentations to these
and other interagency groups. On one occasion an anonymous colleague
circulated a parody of my usual economic briefing, referring to a
“slowing up of the slowdown” and an “upturn of the downturn.” I
don’t think that I really sounded like that—but. In retrospect, the Reagan economic
program, warts and all, really worked. Those painful adjustments in 1981
and 1982 led to the longest peacetime expansion in American history.
Escalating double-digit inflation has been consigned to the history
books. For me, it was a privilege to serve President Ronald Reagan
during this important period. Yes, it was very nice for U.S. News
to list me as one of the 30 most influential Americans in 1981 and again
in 1982. Of course, I was quickly dropped from the list when I returned
to St. Louis. On that note, I’ll give the last word to the lady who
stopped me as I was getting on the elevator of a Washington hotel just
two weeks after I left the White House, “Didn’t you used to be
somebody?” * “Call it faith, call it vitality, call it the will to live, call it the religion of tomorrow morning, call it the immortality of man, call it whatever you wish; it is the thing that explains why man survives all things and why there is no such thing as a pessimist.” --G.K. Chesterton |
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