Then, lo and behold, the economy recovered. As the historian Wilentz put it: "The slogan links of london charms the course,' which had once sounded like whistling in the dark, now reverberated like an irresistible battle cry."Reagan was good at framing his opponents as villains, even if Links of London Heart Charm smiled while he said it. His opponent Walter Mondale, for example, was "Vice President Malaise." Reagan said: "We were being led by a team with good intentions and bad ideas--people with all the common sense of Huey, Dewey, and Louie." Democrats accused him of lacking compassion. He replied, "There's no compassion in snake-oil cures." Links of London Horseshoe Charm and now, to the public, Republican House Speaker John Boehner is still a cipher. If Reagan was in Obama's shoes, he'd already have painted him as the out-of-touch guy making time for the tanning bed during a recession, skipping state dinners in a time of war. But the president hasn't laid a finger on him. He's allergic to calling Republicans anything worse than "bad driver." To Links of London hot Pink Heart Charm any worse, he thinks, it to break faith with an electorate that reasonably craves national unity.Despite his skill at vividly conjuring his enemies, Reagan somehow managed to be seen by a large majority of the public as a unifying figure--then and now. "This belief that Reagan had 'brought the country' back together was a recurrent refrain in voter interviews during the campaign ... and in election-day exit polls," Lou Cannon writes--even among voters who said they didn't like his policies.
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