I hate this woman with the energy of thousand dying suns.
"Ronald Reagan always had a lot of bipartisan support," says a Biden adviser. "It just wasn't in the Congress."
It may turn out to be too cute, but there's clearly an evolving definition of unity in the Biden White House. Same for bipartisan. In Bidenworld, bipartisan unity isn't just a Capitol Hill exercise. It's about convincing the public that Biden is right. Unifying the country, outside of Washington, a la Reagan.
Reagan wasn't bi-partisan, he was Trump 1.0 - a celebrity that was popular politically because the humiliated his opponents. This ahistorical deification of Reagan is pure brain rot, but not unsurprising from one of the most vapid political commenters on CNN. Maybe she sees a little of her own smooth-brainedness in the senile Reagan and instinctually empathizes.
I hate this woman with the energy of thousand dying suns.
Ronald Reagan, the nation's 40th president, became one of the nation's most revered public figures in recent years, a distinct turnabout from the more routinely average ratings he received while he served in office between 1981 and 1989.
Reagan wasn't bi-partisan, he was Trump 1.0 - a celebrity that was popular politically because the humiliated his opponents. This ahistorical deification of Reagan is pure brain rot, but not unsurprising from one of the most vapid political commenters on CNN. Maybe she sees a little of her own smooth-brainedness in the senile Reagan and instinctually empathizes.