Monday, December 30, 2024

Jimmy Carter’s Good Intentions Weren’t Enough

By Jim Geraghty

Monday, December 30, 2024

 

At 100 years of age, Jimmy Carter outlived a lot of his critics, and in at least one case, his obituary writer.*

 

The conventional wisdom about Carter might be an oversimplification, but that doesn’t mean the gist is wrong. In 1976, having experienced the shock and scandal of Watergate, Americans went to the ballot box and declared they wanted a good man, honest and decent, in the Oval Office — even if he’s relatively young, had only been governor of Georgia for one term, was once an obscure peanut farmer, and his brother was a good old boy best known for drinking beer.

 

Four years later, Americans returned to the polls and said, “Whoops, we forgot to mention that in addition to those traits, he has to actually be good at the job of president.”

 

It’s not that the Carter presidency had no successes; we’ll look at them in a moment. But by late 1979, it was no surprise that Ronald Reagan could conjure the killer, race-defining line of asking Americans if they were “better off now than four years ago.” The headlines of the late ’70s painted a grim portrait of runaway inflation, rising crime rates, chaos in the streets of America’s cities, Iran targeting Americans, and the vast military commanded by Moscow defying international law and invading its neighbor. I know all that sounds really familiar at this moment, but those were the domestic and international scenes in the late 1970s.

 

Thus, Jimmy Carter is widely remembered as a good man who was in over his head in the presidency. Maybe that’s nostalgia, or a way for Americans to explain to themselves why they never gave Gerald Ford much of a shot.

 

The Editors:

 

With an effort, one can recall a number of good things he did. He put missiles in Europe to defy Soviet buildups and bolster the NATO alliance. He brokered peace between Israel and Egypt. He installed Paul Volcker, the man who finally broke inflation, as chairman of the Fed. He approved an audacious plan for rescuing American diplomats held hostage in Tehran.

 

I would note Carter’s record on deregulation was considerably better than most people remember. Susan Dudley, the director of the George Washington University Regulatory Studies Center:

 

President Carter enticed Cornell economics professor Alfred Kahn to Washington to head the CAB. Although not initially inclined to remove price regulation altogether, Kahn, with support from President Carter, soon realized that complete deregulation was the only hope for a more competitive and consumer-focused airline industry. In 1978, President Carter signed the Airline Deregulation Act, clearing the way for the CAB to be abolished a few years later.

 

President Carter later appointed Darius Gaskins, one of Kahn’s deputies at the CAB, to chair the ICC. The great success of airline deregulation paved the way for deregulation in other transportation modes and in telecommunications. In 1980, President Carter signed the Motor Carrier Act, which deregulated the trucking industry, the Staggers Rail Act, which introduced competition in rail rates, and the Telecommunications Act, which removed restrictions on long-distance phone service. These actions allowed new entrants into the markets, increased efficiency, lowered prices, offered consumers more choices, and likely contributed to declining inflation. Thanks in no small part to President Carter, competition in formerly regulated markets has not just reallocated resources but unleashed innovation and generated tens of billions of dollars in lasting benefits for consumers and society as a whole.

 

Aside from Camp David Accords normalizing relations between Israel and Egypt, Carter’s foreign policy is largely remembered as a mess akin to the Hindenburg crashing into the Titanic. But after an initial approach to the Soviet Union focused on détente that was far too trusting, even naïve, Carter got tougher in his final years in the Oval Office. Daniel Fried, a former U.S. ambassador to Poland, argues, “By elevating human rights in the mix of US-Soviet and US-Soviet Bloc relations, Carter put the United States on offense in the Cold War and on the side of the people of the region.” He continues:

 

In 1978, a Polish cardinal, Karol Wojtyła, was elected pope John Paul II. In 1980, workers’ strikes at a shipyard in Gdańsk exploded into a national movement — Solidarity — that about ten million Poles joined within a year. Later that year, the Soviet Union, alarmed by Solidarity’s rise, started threatening to invade Poland, as it had Czechoslovakia in August 1968. At that time, the Lyndon Johnson administration, consumed with Vietnam, barely reacted. This time, the Carter administration warned the Soviets not to invade Poland. The United States under Carter was no longer ceding Central and Eastern Europe to the Soviets’ undisturbed control, as “their” sphere of influence.

 

But, as National Review’s editors continue, the Carter failures linger in the memories of those old enough to have witnessed them.

 

It needs an effort to recall these [successes] because so much else went wrong. The Soviet Union and its clients had been on a roll worldwide throughout the Seventies, from Africa to Indochina; during his administration, Afghanistan would fall too. Egyptian president Anwar Sadat paid for his peace with his life. Inflation, pre-Volcker, raged simultaneously with recession, something liberal economists said could not happen. The shah of Iran fell to a despotic anti-American zealot, and the helicopters sent to rescue our kidnapped diplomats crashed in the Iranian desert.

 

When American rendered their verdict on Carter’s performance in 1980, Carter won 41 percent of the vote — just six states and Washington, D.C. If Reagan hadn’t curb-stomped Walter Mondale in 49 states four years later, Carter would be more widely remembered as the paragon of presidential campaign failure.

 

Our Dan McLaughlin notes that the Carter years are gradually slipping out of living memory for most Americans:

 

The pervasive sense that events were spinning out of the control was not Republican propaganda. (Where would one even go to find a big conservative megaphone in the late ’70s, before Fox News and Rush Limbaugh? The closest beachhead in popular culture was Firing Line.) The president himself gave a prime-time address to the nation complaining of a national “crisis of confidence” that he was admittedly powerless to combat. There are those today who will still defend that speech, ranging from David French in the New York Times to Peter Van Buren and Sean Scallon in the American Conservative. It would have been one thing to defend Carter’s argument as if it were an op-ed. As a speech by the nation’s leader, however, it is properly remembered as an emblem of despair. We were told during the Carter years that the presidency itself was too big for one man, a complaint that looked ridiculous within a few years of his replacement by Ronald Reagan.

 

Our Phil Klein argues that Americans aren’t harsh enough on Carter, either on his presidency or on his long post-presidency career as a sort of freelancing diplomat:

 

After being booted out of office in landslide fashion, the self-described “citizen of the world” spent the rest of his life meddling in U.S. foreign policy and working against the United States and its allies in a manner that could fairly be described as treasonous. His obsessive hatred of Israel, and pompous belief that only he could forge Middle East peace, led him to befriend terrorists and lash out at American Jews who criticized him. . . .

 

Carter, who performatively carried his own luggage as president, tried to present himself as humble. But somebody actually humble would have taken the hint by the magnitude of his defeat. The real Jimmy Carter was stubborn and arrogant. He had plans for a second term, and he wanted to see them through despite the overwhelming rejection by the American people. So instead of stepping away, he spent the rest of his life simply pretending that he was still president and pursuing foreign policy goals even when it meant undermining the actual president.

 

No matter how you come down, we should hope Jimmy Carter, now reunited with Rosalynn, rests in peace. Both friend and foe alike would agree that Carter did his best.

 

His critics would argue that was the problem.

 

*Obituaries of famous figures are written way ahead of time and updated as needed when the famous person passes away. Thus, Carter’s obituary was partially written by Roy Reed, a New York Times national correspondent who died in 2017.

 

ADDENDUM: Dang it. At age 83, George Will still has speed on his fastball:

 

Jimmy Carter’s melancholy fate was to be a largely derivative figure: He was a reaction against his elected predecessor and the precursor of his successor. Richard Nixon made Carter tempting; Carter made Ronald Reagan necessary.

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