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Reagan, Ronald, 10/1975-12/1975 (4)
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Reagan, Ronald, 10/1975-12/1975 (4)
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The original documents are located in Box G05, folder "Reagan, Ronald, 10/1975-12/1975 (4)" of the President Ford Committee Campaign Records at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Copyright Notice The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Gerald R. Ford donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections. Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Some items in this folder were not digitized because it contains copyrighted materials. Please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library for access to these materials. November 24, 1975 MEMORANDUM FOR: Bo CALLAWAY FROM: FRED SLIGHT SUBJECT: Reagan Newspaper Editorials I have completed a brief analysis of Ronald Reagan's weekly newspaper column and find that throughout his editorials, he has addressed a variety of subjects involving questions of policy, types of programs currently in action, direction of government in the future, etc. Only in several of these editorials has Reagan actually discussed or directed his criticism directly at the President. In general, his commentary has referred to the govern- ment or to the United States, as a nation. On the domestic issues, Reagan's criticism of the President has focused primarily on economic matters. His most direct challenge has been to the President's budgetary program. It is Reagan's con- tention that it is poor economic policy to grant a rebate or a tax cut to taxpayers, while at the same time refusing to insist on cuts in existing and proposed Federal budgets. The President's re- cent $28 billion tax cut coupled with a $28 billion cut in Federal sponding would seem to address this criticism very effectively. In a second domestic area, Reagan has criticized the Pres- ident for his failure to veto the pay increase that Congress voted for itself, and for senior governmental officials. He went on to add that as a result, the President "blew" a golden opportunity to both strengthen his position with the Congress, and to show his con- cern for the economic plight of many Americans. In the area of foreign affairs, Reagan's strongest direct criticism of the President involved the latter's failure to meet with Soviet author Alexander Solzhenitsyn. Reagan cited Ford's fear of endangering detente as his motive for snubbing the Soviet author. Reagan further suggested that Solzhenitsyn's concerns should have been addressed directly to the President, and in turn, the President should have listened carefully to the expatriot's expression of viewpoints. Reagan indirectly criticized the President by finding fault with Secretary Kissinger's handling of the Turkish and Panamanian problems. Initially, Reagan attacked Congress for their embargo of FORD & GERALD LIBRARY -2- arms to Turkey. However, he felt that this was their way of punishing both the President and Kissinger for their support of detente on the one hand, and the Solzhenitsyn imbroglio on the other. With regard to Panama, the former California Governor totally dis- agrees with Kissinger's plan of negotiation concerning the gradual turning over of control of the Canal to Panama. Reagan firmly believes that acquiescence to the dictatorship in Panama would lead to a total takeover of the Canal, which in turn would have a dis- astrous effect on our economy, and would also have ramifications on national security. I currently have on file each of Reagan's editorials (except one) for the period of January 24 through November 17. The missing October 3 column should be obtained within the next two weeks. With his official announcement yesterday, these articles have ter- minated. These items may be very helpful in keeping Reagan "honest" once he is drawn out into the open after the first of the new year. CC: Stu Spencer Peter Kaye FORD i LIBRARY GERALD SUMMARY OF THE REMARKS OF DAVID KEENE CITIZENS FOR REAGAN The George Washington University Washington, D. C. October 25, 1975 1. President Ford has been part of the Washington establishment for twenty-four years. If we have national problems, he has cer- tainly been part of them for a long time. In contrast, Reagan governed the "third largest government" in the world for eight years. He was more than one of 435 legislators. 2. Whenever Reagan makes a major address, President Ford seconds it within a matter of days. The Ford strategy is obviously to move as close to Reagan as possible, so that there is no reason to replace the incumbent with someone who is philosophically the same as the incumbent. 3. President Ford has no policy of his own as he relies totally on naive White House advisors whose motivations are obviously based on politics not principle. As an example, just last week Ford ad- visers were dispatched to Capitol Hill to instruct the Florida dele- gation to back off on their criticism of new Cuba negotiations as the President was stopping any new initiatives until "the day after the Florida primary." 4. President Ford is greatly lacking in personal leadership which is clear in the constant inconsistencies of his Administration (ie. he gives rhetoric to cutting spending while presiding over the lar- gest budget and budget deficit in the nation's history). Reagan has always held the line on government spending - you know where he stands. 5. The President is spending too much time away from Washington and is not paying adequate attention to the nation's business. More- over, his trips, despite explanations to the contrary, are purely political in nature. 6. President Ford has already lost New Hampshire. His campaign swing into the state on behalf of Louis Wyman hurt as opposed to helping the Republican Senate candidate. Ford had no "coat-tails" because he has no constituency. 7. The South, compromising the single larest block of delegates at the 1976 Republican National Convention, will be instrumental in determining the nominee. Reagan is in very good shape in this ord region. 8. Reagan will announce before Thanksgiving, and he will not RALD LIBRAR accept any proposed compromise to make himself the Vice Presidential nominee. FACT SHEET Keeping the size of the California state government constant TAXES DURING REAGAN YEARS Total State Total Adjusted & Per capita for Fiscal Local Taxes State Taxes Local Taxes Tax Load Inflation Year (in billions) (in billions) (in billions) (in dollars) (in dollars) 1966-67 $4.3 $3.8 $8.1 $426.26 $426.26 1967-68 4.7 4.7 9.4 484.66 466.92 1968-69 5.2 5.2 10.4 529.56 489.88 1969-70 5.7 5.4 11.1 556.49 489.01 1970-71 6.6 5.6 12.2 605.29 508.65 1971-72 7.3 6.6 13.9 682.98 555.72 1972-73 8.0 7.2 15.2 739.82 577.98 1973-74 8.4 7.6 16.0 768.44 556.84 Source: Board of Equalization BUDGET GROWTH UNDER REAGAN (in billions) Fiscal State % of Local % of Total Year Operations Total Assistance Total Budget 1966-67 $2.2 48.0 $2.4 52.0 $4.6 1967-68 2.3 45.6 2.7 54.4 5.0 1968-69 2.5 43.9 3.2 56.1 5.7 1969-70 2.7 42.8 3.6 57.2 6.3 1970-71 2.6 39.2 4.0 60.8 6.6 1971-72 2.6 39.3 4.1 60.7 6.7 1972-73 2.9 39.4 4.5 60.6 7.4 1973-74 3.4 35.6 6.2 64.4 9.6 1974-75 3.5 34.5 6.7 65.5 10.2 Source: Department of Finance & FORD GERALD LIBRARY anti- RR your now 19th 18th date FORD & GERALD LIBRARY Sections 431 (b), Title 2, United States Code and 591(b), Title 18, United States Code, both define "candidate" as follows: "(b) 'candidate' means an individual who seeks nomination for election, or election, to Federal office, whether or not such individual is elected, and, for purposes of this paragraph, an individual shall be deemed to seek nomination for election, or election, if he has -- (1) taken the action necessary under the law of a State to qualify himself for nomination for election, or election, to Federal office; or (2) received contributions or made expenditures, or has given his consent for any other person to receive contributions or make expenditures, with a view to bringing about his nomination for election, or election, to such office; In an Opinion of Counsel (OC 1975-28) which was noted by the Federal Election Commission without objection on Thursday, November 13, John G. Murphy, Jr., the FEC's General Counsel, concluded: "Under 2 U.S.C. 431 (b) and 18 U.S.C. $591(b), a "candidate" is an individual who seeks nomina- tion for election or election to Federal office, whether or not a public declaration of candidacy is made. One may become a candidate by (1) taking & FORD GERALD LIBRARY - 2 - the necessary action under State law to qualify for nomination or election; or (2) by receiving contributions or making expenditures or consenting to others receiving contributions or making expendi- tures with a view toward bringing about one's nomination or election to Federal office. If any of the activities outlined above give rise to any expenditure for the purpose of influencing your nomination or election, then you would be regarded as a candidate and required to take those steps prescribed by the Act, 2 U.S.C. §431 et seq. You would also at that point be subject to the relevant provisions of Title 18, United States Code, including 18 U.S.C. §608. (emphasis added) In a letter, dated July 14, 1975, Governor Reagan authorized the "Citizens for Reagan" committee to work on his behalf and consented to the filing of reports by that committee with the Federal Election Commission (see attached). Although, Governor Reagan attempted to distinguish between his becoming an "active Presidential candidate" from being a technical candidate under the Act, it is now apparent that he has authorized a committee to collect and expend funds on his behalf in connection with his seeking the nomination for the Presidency and is a "candidate" for purposes of the Act. As a candidate, pursuant to Section 434, Title 2, United States Code, he is required to file Reports of Receipts and Expenditures with the Commission. This provision sets out various reporting dates, including the requirement of filing a quarterly report following the close of any calendar quarter in which the candidate or political committee concerned received contributions or made expendi- tures in excess of $1,000. Any person who knowingly violates any provision of this chapter shall be fined not more than $1,000 or imprisoned not more than 1 year, or both. 2 U.S.C. $431(a). It is also interesting to note that subparagraph (b) of this section provides that in case of any conviction under this chapter "where the punishment inflicted does not include imprisonment" such conviction shall be deemed a misdemeanor conviction only. In view of the above, I believe it would be appro- priate to raise the following questions with regard to Mr. Reagan's "candidacy": FORD & LIBRARY GERALD - 3 - (1) Are you a "registered" candidate under the new Federal Election Campaign Laws? (2) Have you authorized a committee to expend or collect funds on your behalf in connection with your seeking the nomination for the Presidency of the United States? (3) Have you met all of the filing and disclo- sure requirements of the Federal Election Campaign Laws? In particular have you filed a candidate's Report pursuant to Section 431 (b) If not, why not? (4) Are you aware that the statute provides criminal penalties for any knowing violation of its provisions? If the response indicates that a different construction is placed upon the statutory language, the following questions should be asked: (a) How can you maintain that the statute requires a "public announcement" of your candidacy when the FEC has issued an Opinion of Counsel that public announcements do not matter and that the strict terms of the act define a "candidate". (b) If you now intend to file a report on your behalf, for what period will it relate back in terms of your activities for seeking the nomin- ation? (c) Have you been advised by counsel with regard to any of these matters? (d) Would you care to discuss the alleged complaint that has been filed against you with regard to your radio and TV programs? As we understand it, the complaint is that you are actively collecting and expending monies without reporting such activities to the FEC in violation of the Federal Election Campaign Laws. (e) Are you aware that a request for an Advisory Opinion has been filed inquiring as to your status as a candidate? As you know, corporate contributions to Federal candidates are illegal pursuant to Section 610, Title 18, United States Code. BERALD FORD LIBRARY - 4 - (f) Do your activities and your refusal to file a candidate's Report of Contributions and Expenditures place any corporately funded group sponsoring you in jeopardy of being in violation of the Federal Election Campaign Laws? The above questions are merely illustrative of the type of inquiry that may appropriately be raised in this matter. Please let me know if you have any further questions regarding this matter. FORD & LIBRARY GERALD RONALD REAGAN SUITE 812 10960 WILSHIRE BOULEVARD LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA 90024 213/477-8231 July 14, 1975 The Honorable Paul Laxalt Member, United States Senate Senate Office Building Washington, D. C. 20500 Dear Paul: I am writing this letter in response to your decision to chair the "Citizens for Reagan" committee. I deeply appreciate your action, but I want to inform you that I have not made up my mind whether to become an active Presidential candidate. I expect to make this decision before the end of the year. Meanwhile, I recognize that due to the technical require- ments of the law (including the requirement for the designation of a principal campaign committee), the committee must file with the Federal Elections Commission as working on my behalf. I trust this letter will suffice as my consent for purposes of allowing you to do SO. Sincerely, Ran RONALD REAGAN FORD & LIBRARY GERALD Reagan's simplistic solution to what is obviously a complex area is a bit overwhelming to analyze. I am taking the liberty of raising this matter with some of my former associates in order to get a much more thorough idea of the ramifications involved. To meet your immediate requirements, I am providing the following observations. AREAS OF AMBIGUITY Questions which arise concerning the implementation of such a pro- position are as follows: 1. A large portion of Federal expenditures are for programs which are mandated by law or obligations that are made by the government prior to the start of the fiscal year 1976. It appears as though Reagan is proposing imme- diate cuts that can in no way be carried out on a short- term basis. - Governor, what is your understanding of the percentage of the Federal budget that is discretionary to a President and his agency officials? (I have heard, Peter, that the figure is no greater than 20%.) -- Realizing that, at best, you have only 20% of the entire Federal budget within your discretionary authority, how would you realistically plan to bring about such drastic cuts from less than a dozen general program areas? - To carry out your plan, doesn't it mean that the Fed- eral government would have to renege on a significant number of program monies which have already been commit- ted to state and local governments and have been con- tractually obligated to private groups prior to the beginning of FY '76? & FORD GERALD LIBRARY -2- - Governor, it is my understanding that a great many programs are authorized and appropriated funds by Congress to operate on a basis of anywhere between one and five years. Doesn't your proposal fail to realize that a program authorized and funded in FY '75 may be in oper- ation through FY '76 and '77 and consequently cannot have its funds reduced except with the concurrence of Congress? - To follow up on the previous question, have you analyzed how many of your proposed changes would be subject to this funding problem and, if so, how do you justify your statement that you will reduce the Federal budget by $90 billion when probably a good portion of these expen- ditures are locked in? 2. Given the present composition of the Congress, it is unrealistic to expect a transfer to and/or reduction in Federal spending for programs such as education, food stamps, welfare, and school lunch programs. - Governor, the present Congress is overwhelmingly Demo- crat and knowledgeable leaders in both parties seriously doubt that the present composition is going to change significantly in 1976. How do you plan to get Congres- sional approval of your proposal when the majority of Congress diametrically opposes your view on this issue? - If President Ford's efforts to simply hold the line on the monstrous education budget failed by a nearly 9 to 1 margin in the override of his veto, how do you propose to bring about a several-billion dollar reduction in Federal education aid? - What specific actions do you plan to take to assure that your reductions and transferrals create no serious disruptions to a local school district, especially since you are talking about actions to be completed in the course of a single year? 3. If the present economic conditions persist, it is unlike- ly that local governments could remain solvent and assume additional costs in such areas as manpower and health services. - Do you feel that local governments can assume the financial burden your plan would bring about, especially given the financial difficulties that so many major cities now face? FORD & LIBRARY GERALD -3- - Some communities have a much stronger tax base than others and yet you seem to be saying that Federal dollars should remain locally as opposed to going to Washington. What would you say to the residents of a town who are too poor to afford to pay for their edu- cational system without additional monies from the Federal government? - New York City is a classic example of a city faced with enormous social services costs. Won't other localities follow in New York's path if faced with absorbing totally the costs for aiding the elderly, the disadvantaged, the unemployed? - Public opinion polls show that more and more people, and especially the elderly, are looking to the Federal government to provide them assistance in coping with spiraling medical bills. How does your proposal to transfer the $7.2 billion Medicaid program from Federal responsibility impact on the approximately 26 million Americans who are currently receiving benefits from Medicaid? - Governor, your assumption in proposing these sweeping changes seems to be that substantial net savings would be possible without ill effects to the recipients of the current benefits nor to state and local governments who must pick up the administrative responsibility for the programs. According to your studies, what is the projected savings involved and how did you arrive at these statistics? POSSIBLE RAMIFICATIONS OF REDUCTIONS In order to make an accurate assessment of the exact ramifications of Reagan's program, a more specific breakdown of the program areas must be conducted by persons with expertise in each area. However, potential effects might be: 1. High unemployment due to excessive cutbacks in Federal expenditures. 2. Bankruptcy, or fear of same, for states and municipal- ities. 3. Impeding new capital investment for expansion by busi- ness as a result of a disproportionate increase in their local tax burden. 4. Retard the recovery of the housing and construction industries, which are already suffering a severe reces- sion. FORD is LIBRARY 076830 -4- Finally, such grand rhetoric is completely out of touch with reality. The question of raising the public's expectations and over-promising on the Federal government's ability to deliver smacks of the same faults which Reagan has blamed on other Presidents, especially LBJ. & FORD GERALD LIBRARY WILL DECLARE CANDIDACY THURSDAY Reagan Strategy Against Ford Unfolds "Slowly but certainly, we are allow- will declare it all over again-in governor, Reagan still sees himself as ing government to intrude more and Miami, in Manchester, N.H., in Char- a former actor and mashed-potato more into our lives, to dig deeper and lotte, N.C., in Chicago and finally in circuit lecturer, a flag-carrier for the deeper into our pocketbooks. America Los Angeles-all in the space of 30 conservative cause, rather than as a and its people have great strength. hours. politician and office-seeker. They can reverse this erosion of free- It is hardly a coincidence that Rea- "I never have thought of myself as dom and I want to do everything I gan is going to those states-Florida, a kind of conscience-keeper of the can to help." Ronald Reagan, Dec. 30, New Hampshire, North Carolina, II- (Republican) party," Reagan has said. 1974. linois and California, where direct "but I'm not going to be hesitant primary elections next year almost BY RICHARD BERGHOLZ about speaking out on the direction I surely will pit him against President Times Political Writer think government should take. Ford-and Reagan already envisions "And if that can help influence It all began when Ronald Reagan, it as the insiders vs. the outsiders, things for the better, I'm going to do former actor, self-styled citizen-polit- the professional politician vs. the it." ician, came to the end of his eight "citizen-politician." years as governor of the nation's lar- For despite his eight years as The conventional political thinking is that an incumbent President can- gest state, and looked around for an encore, for new worlds to conquer. not be denied his own party's nomi- nation if he fights for it-and Ford And it reaches a significant bench- THE WEATHER clearly is ready to fight for it. mark next Thursday morning in the Similarly, the conventional think- National Press Club ballroom in National Weather Service forecast: ing is that Ford, after two decades in Washington. Fair today and Saturday with a Congress and more than a year in the Ronald Wilson Reagan, 64 years chance of some fog near the coast White House, has a track record as a old, onetime Democrat turned con- early this morning. Highs today near political conservative. So how could servative-libertarian, will declare his 80 and Saturday in the mid 70s. High he be bested in a party convention candidacy for the Republican nomi- Thursday 86; low, 59. usually controlled by conservatives? nation for President. Complete weather information and Reagan intends to posture himself Having so declared, Reagan then smog report in Part 3, Page 23. Please Turn to Page 3. Col. 1 FORD GERALD LIBRARY THE PRESIDENCY delegates awarded to the candidate He can deliver a serious pitch- who gets at least one more vote than that the government is spending it- his rival. self into bankruptcy-but do it with It also is significant because it is a flair that delights his audiences: the last of the major primaries before "Every minute I speak to you, the the August convention in Kansas federal government spends another City and the bandwagon effect-the $700,000. I'd stop talking if they'd inclination of voters to go with a stop spending." projected winner-is almost certain It is the me-vs.-them thing. what to be evident. he calls the "David and Goliath" as- Reagan tremains supremely con- pect of his fight against Ford. The fident that he still is immensely pop- "ins" VS. the "outs", and Reagan ular with Republicans in his home clearly is an "out" right now. state. that they will prove to be When he warns that "this collecti- much more willing in their volunteer vist, centralizing approach (in work, much more dedicated. than government), whatever name or par- will be the President's supporters ty label it wears, has created our eco- when it comes down to the June 8 nomic problems," he deliberately lets balloting. the audience know he is referring to Further. both candidates probably the Ford Administration, the Nixon will be pretty much out of campaign administration that preceded it, and money by the time the California pri- all the big-spenders who, in his mind, mary rolls around, and an army of have dominated Washington. volunteer get-out-the-vote workers is about the only substitute for money. Reagan relishes the opinion of him that seems to apply in conservative This time. for the first time. pres- circles wherever he goes-that he idential candidates are limited to $10 was a tough man with a buck when million to spend in primary cam- he was governor. paigns-unless the Supreme Court He pushes the concept along by re- acts soon to overturn the new federal counting. in almost every speech, spending limitation bill. how he balanced the budget in Cali- And, Reagan, who never has suf- fornia, cut taxes, increased efficiency fered from a shortage of funds in any and put a lid on the spiraling welfare campaign, appears reasonably con- growth. fident he can reach the maximum Obviously, Reagan does not re- amount allowable. count that to meet the state's budge- He already has raised $5,000 in tary problems, he had to raise taxes each of 20 states, all from contribu- almost $1 billion his first year in of- tions of $250 or less, and thus has fice, that the first full-year budget of qualified for federal matching funds his administration in Sacramento was provided in the new law. $5 billion, that his last budget was For awhile, he and his advisers $10.2 billion, that when he came into toyed with the idea of saying to the office the state and local per capita voters, "Look, we don't believe in tax burden in California was $426.20 federal funds going into campaigns and it was $768.44 when he left. and even though we're entitled to matching funds, we're going to turn There were a number of factors— them down as a matter of principle." inflation, for example-which had.a But attractive though this might large bearing on these developments, have been to died-in-the-wool conser- and Reagan hardly would be expect- vatives. it turned out to be foolhardy, ed to list all of his failures along with and the idea has been shelved. his triumphs. In addition to changes in the cam- He invariably draws applause paign financing laws, there is a when he contends he held down the marked upturn in the number of growth of government-there were wide-open primary contests, as com- 113.779 state employees in his first pared to the old-style party conven- year in Sacramento and the figure tion system, and Reagan thinks he had grown only to 129,435 when hg will do better under the new system. left. For instance. he still retains a sub- And his assault on welfare pro- stantial portion of the "star" quality grams, even including semihumorous he achieved as an actor and televi- versions of his constant battles with sion performer. And this, plus his the Democratic Legislature, also win ability to deliver jokes and serious him applause. messages and to smile and look Reagan has told newsmen he is youthful for his age, by contrast perfectly willing to be measured for FORD makes Ford look dull and uninspiring. Please Turn to Page 21, Col. 1 GERALD 4 LIBRARY 24 Part I-Fri., Nov. 14, 1975 Los Angeles Times Reagan to Enter GOP Continued from Third Page backed off. He was particularly dis- what he would do as a President by tressed by continued suggestions that what he has done as a governor. he and Alabama Gov. Geroge C. Wal- If anything, he has turned more to lace could somehow put the whole laissez faire economics, to libertaria- thing together. Reagan regards Wal- nism, since he left office. He says he lace as some kind of Democratic pop- F & GERALD Presidential Race umph over Unruh clearly showed the California voters thought he was doing a good job. Reagan thus far has made abso- lutely no approach to labor, minori- ties, the economically deprived, in his campaign tours and none is planned until the Republican presidential pri- mary nicture starts clearing March 10, 1967 Sacromento Bee REAGAN URGES LBJ USE FULL POWER TO END WAR Reagan said he agrees with former President Dwight D. Eisenhower's call for a speedy solutions by whatever means may be necessary. "I'm not in a position to make such a decision and no one certainly wants to use such weapons, he told the crowd news conference at the start of two days visit to the nation's capitol. "But the last person who should be told we won't use atomic weapons is the enemy in Vietnam. Once you ask young men to ffight and die for their country, you have an obligation to use the full resources of the nation to win as quickly as possible." July 11, 1976 Sacromento Bee (taken in Sacromento May 9th at press conf) REAGAN"S ATOMIC WEAPON QUOTE QUESTION Would you preclude the use of atomic weapons? ANSWER I do not think that any body would cheerfully want to use them, but I have also quoted ex President Eisenhower and I agree with him that the last person in the world who should know we wouldn't use them is the enemy. He should go to bed every night being afraid that we might. FORD & LIBRARY GERALD Reagan's simplistic solution to what is obviously a complex area is a bit overwhelming to analyze. I am taking the liberty of raising this matter with some of my former associates in order to get a much more thorough idea of the ramifications involved. To meet your immediate requirements, I am providing the following observations. AREAS OF AMBIGUITY Questions which arise concerning the implementation of such a pro- position are as follows: 1. A large portion of Federal expenditures are for programs which are mandated by law or obligations that are made by the government prior to the start of the fiscal year 1976. It appears as though Reagan is proposing imme- diate cuts that can in no way be carried out on a short- term basis. - Governor, what is your understanding of the percentage of the Federal budget that is discretionary to a President and his agency officials? (I have heard, Peter, that the figure is no greater than 20%.) - Realizing that, at best, you have only 20% of the entire Federal budget within your discretionary authority, how would you realistically plan to bring about such drastic cuts from less than a dozen general program areas? - To carry out your plan, doesn't it mean that the Fed- eral government would have to renege on a significant number of program monies which have already been commit- ted to state and local governments and have been con- tractually obligated to private groups prior to the beginning of FY '76? rurd GERALO LIBRARY -2- - Governor, it is my understanding that a great many programs are authorized and appropriated funds by Congress to operate on a basis of anywhere between one and five years. Doesn't your proposal fail to realize that a program authorized and funded in FY '75 may be in oper- ation through FY '76 and '77 and consequently cannot have its funds reduced except with the concurrence of Congress? - To follow up on the previous question, have you analyzed how many of your proposed changes would be subject to this funding problem and, if so, how do you justify your statement that you will reduce the Federal budget by $90 billion when probably a good portion of these expen- ditures are locked in? 2. Given the present composition of the Congress, it is unrealistic to expect a transfer to and/or reduction in Federal spending for programs such as education, food stamps, welfare, and school lunch programs. - Governor, the present Congress is overwhelmingly Demo- crat and knowledgeable leaders in both parties seriously doubt that the present composition is going to change significantly in 1976. How do you plan to get Congres- sional approval of your proposal when the majority of Congress diametrically opposes your view on this issue? - If President Ford's efforts to simply hold the line on the monstrous education budget failed by a nearly 9 to 1 margin in the override of his veto, how do you propose to bring about a several-billion dollar reduction in Federal education aid? - What specific actions do you plan to take to assure that your reductions and transferrals create no serious disruptions to a local school district, especially since you are talking about actions to be completed in the course of a single year? 3. If the present economic conditions persist, it is unlike- 1y that local governments could remain solvent and assume additional costs in such areas as manpower and health services. - Do you feel that local governments can assume the financial burden your plan would bring about, especially given the financial difficulties that so many major cities now face? GERALD FORD LIBRART -3- - Some communities have a much stronger tax base than others and yet you seem to be saying that Federal dollars should remain locally as opposed to going to Washington. What would you say to the residents of a town who are too poor to afford to pay for their edu- cational system without additional monies from the Federal government? - New York City is a classic example of a city faced with enormous social services costs. Won't other localities follow in New York's path if faced with absorbing totally the costs for aiding the elderly, the disadvantaged, the unemployed? - Public opinion polls show that more and more people, and especially the elderly, are looking to the Federal government to provide them assistance in coping with spiraling medical bills. How does your proposal to transfer the $7.2 billion Medicaid program from Federal responsibility impact on the approximately 26 million Americans who are currently receiving benefits from Medicaid? - Governor, your assumption in proposing these sweeping changes seems to be that substantial net savings would be possible without ill effects to the recipients of the current benefits nor to state and local governments who must pick up the administrative responsibility for the programs. According to your studies, what is the projected savings involved and how did you arrive at these statistics? POSSIBLE RAMIFICATIONS OF REDUCTIONS In order to make an accurate assessment of the exact ramifications of Reagan's program, a more specific breakdown of the program areas must be conducted by persons with expertise in each area. However, potential effects might be: 1. High unemployment due to excessive cutbacks in Federal expenditures. 2. Bankruptcy, or fear of same, for states and municipal- ities. 3. Impeding new capital investment for expansion by busi- ness as a result of a disproportionate increase in their local tax burden. 4. Retard the recovery of the housing and construction industries, which are already suffering a severe reces- sion. GERALE FORD LIBRARY -4- Finally, such grand rhetoric is completely out of touch with reality. The question of raising the public's expectations and over-promising on the Federal government's ability to deliver smacks of the same faults which Reagan has blamed on other Presidents, especially LBJ. FORD & LIBRARY GERALD THE WASHINGTON POST, Nov. 19, 75 Ford Campaign Shift Set By Lou Cannon Washington Post Staff Writer "I'll work with and advise There also was brief President Ford's advisers the committee." Goldwater discussion of Mr. Ford's have agreed that he should told Dean Burch, who heads upcoming Supreme Court counter Ronald Reagan's the informal campaign group. appointment and general forthcoming challenge by On the steering committee agreement he should choose spending more time "being are such close presidential "the best qualified" person presidential" and less time at advisers as Melvin R. Laird, rather than trying to obtain FORD is GERALD LIBRARY eager, to go home when the play is THE NEW YORK TIMES Reagan's done and particularly if the audience disagrees. The astonishing thing is that this Nov. 19, 75 Theatrical amusing but frivolous Reagan fantasy is taken so seriously by the media and particularly by the President. It makes a lot of news, but it doesn't make Politics much sense. Mr. Reagan may run ahead of Mr. Ford in the New Hamp- shire, Florida, Illinois, and even Wis- consin primaries, but even if he does, By James Reston the Republican delegates at the Kansas City nominating convention, are not likely to abandon their own President, Ronald Reagan's bid for the Presi- and the power and majesty of the dency really should be tossed to the Presidency, in favor of a former gov- movie critics. In theatrical terms, win ernor of California, who has split the or lose, it is the best script the old Republican Party and has little chance trouper ever had, out in political terms, of picking up independent or Demo- even if he knocked off the President, cratic votes. he would divide his party, and almost But on the stage, as in politics, certainly assure the victory of the strange things happen and nobody GERALD R. FORD THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR, Nov. 17, 75 Reagan set to challenge Ford directly By Curtis J. Sitomer Staff correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor Los Angeles Clad in the garb of a "citizen-politician" and invoking a patriotic bicentennial theme, Ron- ald Reagan will formally announce his chal- lenge of Gerald Ford for the Republican presidential nomination this week. AP photo His campaign plan is to firmly root his Will Reagan split the GOP? candidacy early - by defeating the President in initial primaries in New Hampshire, Mas- sachusetts, Vermont, and Florida. Even a some believe, will be his political approach. showing in the He will likely not attack Mr. Ford directly - FORD i LIBRARY GERALD 12 Part I-Fri., Nov. 21, 1975 Los Angeles Times He was interested in the quick and dramatic solution- the Sunday punch-that would turn things around right now. ANALYSIS OF ROLE AS GOVERNOR In his first year Reagan ordered an across-the-board re- duction of 10% in all government expenditures. He ended Reagan Never Got His Act Together up that year supporting an overall increase of that much or more. His final effort, late in his second term, was to sponsor an initiative which once and for all, he hoped, would put BY TOM GOFF National inflation, which no governor could control, a permanent lid on government spending by placing a Times Sacramento Bureau Chief was rampant during his eight years in Sacramento. Its ef- mandatory limit on the state's taxing power. The people SACRAMENTO-Ronald Reagan, actor turned consum- fect on state government was as severe as it was on the turned him down. mate politician, never quite got his act all together in private economy. In sum, he offered surface solutions to deep-seated eight years as governor of California. Except for one year out of the eight, Reagan faced a government ills and the amorphous mass that is modern It was not that Reagan did not know what he wanted hostile Legislature that was as determined to thwart him state government simply oozed out from under him. to accomplish in Sacramento. as he was to succeed. State expenditures, as measured by the total budget, His target was as clear then as it is today. It was Perhaps the most serious problem, however, was that more than doubled from $5 billion a year to $10.2 billion government itself. His goal was to turn it around, to pare Reagan never displayed a deep understanding of the com- in the years Reagan sat in Sacramento. The total per capi- it back, to stem its ever-increasing demand for dollars. plexities of the system that he wanted to overhaul or the ta state and local tax load. even when adjusted for infla- Nor was it lack of effort. Reagan stubbornly pursued inertia that builds up in government once an established tion. increased from $466.92 to $556.84. his goal for two terms as governor with all the fervor course has been set. There are those who insist that while Reagan may with which he pursues it now on the national level. His critics build a convincing case that he never really never have accomplished the major fiscal reform he His problems in California were manyfold. bothered to try. Please Turn to Page 13, Col. 1 GERALD FORD LIBRARY Stee 8 THE JOURNAL HERALD Friday, Nov. 21, 1975 DAYTON, OHIO Reagan's style -veiled thrusts at Ford regime If Reagan does poorly in the early going, he will almost certainly pull out. "This is not an ego-trip," said Sen. Paul Laxalt, R-Nevada, chairman of the Citi- By Andrew Glass ence, continued in Miami and ended up zens for Reagan committee. Journal Herald Washington Bureau in New Hampshire. On the other hand, Reagan expects MANCHESTER, N.H. - On the first At each stop, Reagan told supporters: Ford to withdraw if he succeeds in day of his jet-propelled presidential "I don't believe for one moment that making an early and deep thrust into campaign, Ron- four more years of business-as-usual in the President's support. He is already ald Reagan set Washington is the answer to our prob- encouraging other GOP candidates to the tone of his lems and I don't think the American file on the theory that more entrants uphill battle for people believe it either." would draw votes away from the the Republic President. GERALD FORD COMING STARRING IN Ottawa increas blood Reading a C¹ "MPs ignore own pensions" is enough to mal It is simply another indication ernment works restraint and price controls. It is a month ment announce they are ignori tives and are award themselv icts to pro- increase in the overnment entitled to rec n, in both starting after 10 the minor- This is the that has declar er cent or 1 not come reducing its ey money) by rest overnment tures to only a ppointing a crease over 197 al districts What have this sort of pork Obviously must be mor choice of canc ortive since to government. ace of the If the prese tion of the heeded warni minance in ago when infla g that the 4.5 per cent. a bilingual the indescriba 0 launch a now put up with the advan- Today the n e the 1971 ly strangled by flation. Strikes board that strikes in pra ork for the services, and listricts by productivity March. price our ma has wisely out of the wor ew bloopers duce the valt st bilingual dollar to a ve in favor of its value only 1 Brunswick Those of u have watched delay any minished by tl of this vital tion. In four Canada. His AISLIN 75. reduced the va and possibly dollar by nearl nt linguistic The cost of in the kind by the burea f accommo- have increase unton com- e long delay LAW AND ORDER 1971 value. B1 a welcome the cost of c of rents have districts has than 41 per cel Finally, 01 ge of afford- been advertisi ration some to the public stic capabili- years whose bilingual dis- Letters to the editor than the annt and taxed th lar rates pa come! Is this a n Canadians thankful for good fortune? Hardly ics? Or is it scation? The future THURSDAY, NOV. 27, 1975 F Columbus Dispatch A-7 FOUR-STATE TOUR Reagan Outlines Opinions on U.S. Issues, Problems By George Embrey On whether his campaign ON ATOMIC energy power Chief, Dispatch Washington Bureau will destroy 1976 Republican plants - Scientists tell Re- Ronald Reagan, first Re- chances - At its most united, agan the chance of a plant publican challenger of an the Republican Party, said explosion is nil. that radia- incumbent Republican presi- Reagan, accounts for only 20 dent since Teddy Roosevelt percent of voters nationally. and William Howard Taft in To win, a Republican must tion leaks are the danger and legislation in final stages in attract votes from the 40 no one has ever died of that. Congress - Reagan said the 1912, talked on issues during percent of voters "disillu- He said government rules bill to allow one construction his four-state campaign sioned" with "business as require 11 years to build a union to shut down all work swing last week. usual in Washington new U.S. atomic electric at any site should be vetoed 11/28/75 Peter Kaye- Three interesting attack points. Can you do anything with them ? Fred LIBRARY GERALD R. FORD L.A. TIMES 11/16/75 Booth State GOP Chief Accuses Reagan of Divisiveness Tred BY GEORGE SKELTON Times Political Writer SAN FRANCISCO-In the stron- gest language yet used by a major California Republican, State GOP Chairman Paul N. Haerle Saturday accused former Gov. Ronald Reagan of party divisiveness and lack of can- dor in running against President Ford: The harsh comments were particu- larly significant because Haerle, compaign al- THE LOS ANGELES TIMES, Nov. 28, 75 Reagan Called "Too Old' to Hold Presidency BY WALTER P. COOMBS who now holds second position in the ranks make those tough decisions that can mean of our oldest President. Taylor, then 64, was When Ronald Reagan threw his hat in the war or peace. In his hands rests the fate of inaugurated in 1850 and died a year later of millions. ring two weeks ago and became a Republican natural causes. An obscure Whig politician presidential contender for 1976, lots of For all these reasons, the job demands named Millard Fillmore finished Taylor's tongues started wagging. someone in the prime of life-a vigorous. term. His administration was such a near-di- spirited someone who has GERAID FORD LIBRARY December 5, 1975 TO: PETER KAYE FROM: FRED SLIGHT The attached is for your information. N W-H 12-3-75 P.5 Reagan Questions Morality of Grain Deal By David Beeder Ronald Reagan raised a ques. tion Tuesday night about the morality of sending U.S. food to Russia and China, and he pro- vided Nebruska supporters with a preview of the campaign style he hopes will carry hun Into the While House. In an Interview In Omaha with . World-Herald newsman, Rengan said U.S. agricultural trade with Russia and China raises "u moral question' about providing food to total- Itarian countries which are trying to surpays the United States in arinaments, and at the same time control possibly restive, enslaved populations. "China does provide a poten. tial market (for U.S. agricul- ture), Reagan said in re- sponse to a question. "However, the only reason China is our friend right now is that she distikes Russia more than she dislikes us. That could change." "Enslavement" World Herold Photo In sending food to Russia and China, the United States should Reagan and Nebrasks backers From left: George Cook, Kay Orr and Milan Bish, continually evaluate "whother we are alding them in enslaving their own people" as well as captive satellite nations. NOTE If U.S. agricultural exports should be stopped to Russia and China, Reagan said, "we should not let the American farmer take the rap." He said CONT. the U.S. government would have to return to a system of buying farm surplus. GERALD FORD LIBRARY December 5, 1975 / Issue Number 125 THE WHITE HOUSE GAME: How The Players Are Doing Mervin D. Field, operator of the California Poll, released his newest survey about how Democratic and Republican Presidential hopefuls are doing last week in the state. And the results confirm the suspicions of many very seasoned political observers. President Gerald Ford, while in serious trouble with the state's electorate in terms of the way he is running the Oval Office and faced with a direct challenge from former Gov. Ronald Reagan, is listing but not sinking. Yet. The California Poll finds that Ford could beat either Alabama Gov. George Wallace (by 38 points), Minnesota Sen. Hubert Humphrey (by 23 points) or Washington Sen. Henry Jackson (by 20 points) if a general election were held now. Reagan, on the other hand, beats only Wallace in a simulated race (by 19 points). Reagan, the survey taken the first week of November indicates, is the big loser in a race against Democrats. He loses, for example, to both Jackson and Humphrey by one-point margins. But the significant finding, which could prove devasting unless Reagan mounts a swift, hard-hitting campaign soon, is that the former governor loses to Massachusetts Sen. Edward Kennedy in a trial heat by a big 21-point margin. And to California governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. by 22-points. When compared to the showing of Ford against Kennedy (EMK wins by 10% with 6% undecided) and Brown (EGBJr. by 7% with 9% undecided) one gets a hint of the enormous task facing Reagan partisans before the GOP pennant is awarded next August in Kansas City. The clearest winners, then, in the latest California Poll sample are Kennedy, Brown and Ford in that order. GOP: The Republican primary next June 8 in California is a "winner- take-all" affair unlike the Democratic primary the same day which will be on a proportional basis. California will have 167 votes at the Republican National Convention, 7.3%, the largest bloc. So the Ford-RR battle will be intense. Reagan's cross-country announcement, which coincided almost perfectly with the new survey results showing him moving ahead of Ford, 48% to 47% (with 6% undecided) in California, had a kind of lightening rod effect on the media. Some people see a McGovern-style media setup. Whether RR can sustain that kind of coverage during much of this month, when his personal profile will be low, remains questionable. Reagan doesn't plan to hit what he calls "the sawdust trail" with any real intensity until after the first of the year and the start of the ORD heavy primary season, especially in New Hampshire and Florida where polls show him running even or ahead of Ford. Many of RR's personal + LIBRAR Copyright ©1975 by The Political Animal Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction without permission is strictly prohibited. The Political Animal is published weekly (except for the first week in September and the last week in December) by The Political Animal Inc., 5514 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, California 90036. Editorial offices (213) 938-9191. Subscription rates: one year $35; two years $60. Joseph Scott, Editor and Publisher. Second-class postage paid at Los Angeles, California 90052. Political/Inimal THE WHITE HOUSE GAME [More] financial "buddies" who played key parts in the earlier campaigns - Holmes Tuttle, Jack Hume, Justin Dart, Ed Mills, William French Smith, to name some - are aboard the White House Express. And the grassroots activists who compose the backbone of the California Republican Assembly and the California Federation of Republican Women are very pro-Reagan. How Reagan is going to crisp up the issues between himself and Ford without violating the mythical Republican 11th Commandment remains one of the primary campaign's most intriguing riddles. Ford, who has been told by his advisers that Reagan's winning margin in 1966 for governor of 56.6% dropped to 52.8% in 1970, made several strategic errors in the state in August, September and October. He tried to placate conservatives in the hope that they would abandon RR and that he would get the message and drop out. What appears to be key to Ford's survival is that the President needs to convince state Republicans that he is a leader and that he alone has the best chance as a sitting Chief Executive to be elected on the merits, not the coattails of the citizens of Grand Rapids. There is evidence that Ford is getting the message. And that he will remain in the Oval Office more and leave much campaigning to surrogates. DEMOCRATS What clearly emerges from the November California Poll is the fact that Sen. Edward Kennedy and Gov. Brown are the two favorite Presidential choices of state Democrats. Kennedy repeatedly has said he will not accept the nomination. And Brown, for the record, will only say that he will make up his mind when the time arrives to make a decision. The maneuvering, especially for Veep, is heavy, however. (An exclusive report in the Nov. 28 issue of The Political Animal that Brown has decided to enter California's Democratic presidential primary was branded "totally false" by Gray Davis, Brown's chief of staff and political handyman, last week. Several attempts to discuss the story prior to publication with Davis met with failure and, in any case, the newsletter stands by the story in its entirety. The headline flashed across the state in response to the story - "Brown not in '76 race" - appears to key Democratic operatives contacted by PA to miss the essential essence of what is really transpiring in the Brown camp. The latest California Poll survey surprised nobody, not even Brown.) Talk of a Humphrey-Brown ticket next July in New York is rampant among party insiders. Brown has moved up 7% in the survey since August (with EMK out) ; Humphrey 2%. PA has learned that HHH has written to Lt. Gov. Mervyn Dymally to find out the mechanics of how to get his name off the June primary ballot. Which only means that HHH, in Calif. Jan. 10-12 on a big Senate reelection fundraising push, is being very consistent in avoiding any primary clash. Wallace remains a static 13% as do ex-Gov. Jimmy Carter, Rep. Mo Udall and Sen. Lloyd Bentsen-each a poor 1%. The survey shows a drop of 1% for both ex-Sen. Fred Harris and Sargent Shriver down to the also-ran 1% class. The puzzle is the disastrous drop to 4% (from 11%) by Sen. Jackson since August despite a talented staff led by hard-charging state Treasurer Jess Unruh. Bayh (3%) and Church (4%) have each gained 1%. Church, in LA Dec. for heavy sessions with LIBRARY would-be liberal supporters, appears have best darkhorse momentum now Political/Inimal BRAYS AND TRUMPETS Sen. Adlai Stevenson 3d on ruling out a bid for either President or Vice President in 1976: "A candidacy today triggers a thousand skirmishes; a welter of endless, draining detail. It plunges him into a morass of unintelligible regulations and dervish-like activity, all largely beyond his control and comprehension. " Assem. Art Torres (D-L.A.), tag-lining a letter addressed to the state Fair Political Practices Commission in which he complained that he had not yet received an opinion about whether wedding gifts to him and his bride were reportable under Proposition 9: "I have another problem. My wife is now pregnant and baby showers are being planned. Must I report gifts to my prospective child, other than those covered under sec. 820306 of the Government Code?" ANIMAL CRACKERS California delegates to the Democratic National Convention next July in New York City are in for a surprise when they enter Madison Square Garden. In the draw for convention-floor seating California ranked 49 out of 56 lots. Which means that state delegates will be relegated to seats far back in the Garden. In 1972, at Miami Beach, California Democrats were in a front and center position. But California did better (No. 8) in the draw for hotel bunks. Which means that delegates won't have to hail taxis Superv. James Hayes, the former GOP assembly- man from Long Beach, now says he intends to run for reelection next year to the L.A. County Board of Supervisors. L.A. City Councilman Marvin Braude told PA that he is "seriously" considering a race against Hayes next year. Braude lost to Hayes in 1972 but some top deck Democrats think Hayes may be more vulnerable, especially in the northern end of the district (Santa Monica) this time Rep. George Brown (D-Colton) becomes the sixth California congressman to endorse the presidential bid of Rep. Morris Udall (D-Ariz.) Brown is also supporting the darkhorse bid of Democrat Robert Kholos, Mayor Tom Bradley's ex-press aide, for the seat being abandoned, apparently, by Rep. Alphonzo Bell (R-Marina del Rey). Bell has mounted a candidacy for John Tunney's Senate seat, a drive which would be aborted only by an affirmative decision (expected one way or another before Christmas) by Rep. Barry Goldwater Jr. (R- Canoga Park) to enter the primary A recent 3-day poll by S.F.'s KQED-TV had state Sen. George Moscone leading Superv. John Barbagelata, 46.5% to 41.8%. With 11.7% undecided in the Dec. 11 mayor's race. Democrats hold a huge registration edge which would seem to put it away for the liberal Moscone. But the steep rise in crime and the strike by police and firemen last August, typified by the meteoric shot of rightist Barbagelata into the runoff, make the mood of the city's electorate unpredictable. A key might be the rather high undecided vote caught by the KQED sample among primary backers of Democratic Superv. Dianne Feinstein and GOP state Sen. Milton Marks As the state's new protocol chief Secretary of State March Fong Eu will be California's representative at receptions and other social events for foreign dignitaries and consular members Assem. Speaker Leo McCarthy has created three GERA permament subcommittees of the Assembly Resources, Land Use and Energy Political Inimal ANIMAL CRACKERS [More] Committee. Terry Goggin (D-San Bernardino) will chair the subcommittee on Energy; Lawrence Kapiloff (D-San Diego) will steer Land Use; and Parks and Forestry will be helmed by Herschel Rosenthal (D-L.A.) Carol Welch, from Washington. D.C., will replace the efficient Jay Berman as press secretary for L.A. DA John Van de Kamp. Welch, said by reliable sources to be a heavy political operative, worked at OEO and in the White House during the regime of Lyndon Johnson The Public Commission on County Government, which has been examining the central executive structure of L.A. County (Bd. of Supervisors, CAO, Sheriff, DA and Assessor) for several months will make its highly anticipated report in mid-January. If one of the recommendations supports the concept of a county mayor look for at least four supervisors to put the issue on the June, 1976 L.A. County ballot That chart titled The Nuclear Web which the People's Lobby has published to show an alleged conspiracy between elected officials, lobbyists and corporate sources to determine public policy is a sellout collector's item. Names are named and the chart is pasted on many walls in the Capitol. People's Lobby supports strongly the nuclear power plants initiative on next June's state ballot along with many environmental organizations Ex- Gov. Brown opposes the initiative, together with William Robertson, new Secretary-Treasurer of the L.A. County Federation of Labor (AFL-CIO) PA has learned that a privately commissioned poll done by Field Research Corp. in early November showed that 54% oppose the nuclear initiative while 33% support it with 13% undecided. The poll results indicate virtually no shift from previous samplings in February and May George Takei, the TV actor and RTD Board member, is considering a race against Assemblyman Charles Warren (D-L.A.) Takei lost a tight race to L.A. Councilman David Cunningham in 1974 and later was appointed to the transit post by Mayor Bradley San Marino savings and loan executive Charles Reed seems to have the inside track for appointment as the new GOP National Committee- man for California. The party's executive committee votes Dec. 2 in Sacramento. But L.A. County Superv. Pete Schabarum, acceptable to Reagan zealots (Reed is pro-Ford), is gaining ground. And another pro-Ford loyalist, Pasadena attorney Cliff Anderson, claims the backing of ex-Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke +Assem. Bruce Nestande (R-Orange). Resigned National Committeeman William Slater Banowsky, who urged Reed to enter the race, is in his capacity as Pepperdine University president, granting an honorary degree to Schabarum in early December at the institution's L.A. campus in South L.A. Some observers are curious about the timing and whether it represents a move on the part of Banowsky to placate conservatives. Schabarum does not represent either Pepperdine campus The Committee for a 2/3 Vote on Taxation is still trying to round up enough petitions to put that constitutional amendment on the ballot which would require a 2/3rds vote of the Legislature before any tax could be imposed or raised The group technically has until the end of the month to circulate petitions PA has learned that Gov. Brown is very close to filling the D.C. post as his personal liaison in Washington to the California congressional delegation and federal agencies. The choice has narrowed to one person One aspect of the major political rebuff to Mayor Bradley by the L.A. City Council which rejected his nomination of a replacement for Anne Sullivan Rehr on the Municipal Arts Commission is that Rehr has known Tom and Ethel Bradley for 25 years But Rehr refused to be a rubber stamp and, with the aid ofo freshman Council Zev Yaroslavsky, scored a dramatic victory Tunney is endorsed by Jerry Brown, Jess Unruh leans toward Hayden and other state officers in the Democratic column are as yet uncommitted in Senate race LIBRAR on is a political animal In a greater measure than any bee or any gregarlous animal, is clear. For nature does nothing without purpose, and man alone of the animals possesses speech" NICS See 10 the Diam LAT - 12-12-75 Reagan Tests New Campaign Message Says Nation Needs Leader Who Has No Ties to the 'System' BY RICHARD BERGHOLZ which contained numerous allusions said, have discovered it is popular to Times Political Writer to him, was Reagan's first "new" condemn proliferating government Americans who are fed up with the message since he announced his can- and stifling bureaucracy. "system" in Washington are going to didacy for the Republican presiden- But he said these Democrats "suf- turn to him and his fight against tial nomination last month. fer from a kind of political schizo- President Ford because he, unlike It was crafted for the Southern Re- phrenia-they know the problem but the President, is not part of the sys- publican Conference this weekend in can only solve it with more of the tem, former Gov. Ronald Reagan said Houston, where he will be jousting same doctrinaire liberalism that RONALD REAGAN QUESTIONS & ANSWERS HOUSTON DECEMBER 13, 1975 Q Comment, if you have any comment at all, on what I think is the biggest ripoff the federal government has going for them now, and that's the social security system. A Young people in the room, perk up your ears, because you're the biggest victims of this. Social security, for a number of years--Barry Goldwater, God bless him, tried to warn the people years ago and nobody would listen -- CHEERS -- and now it happens. Social security, on an insurance actuarial basis, is about two and a quarter trillion dollars out of balance, meaning that if all the people presently paying in when it comes time for them to receive, that's how the difference could be, between what's being paid in and what has to be paid out. Every wealthy young people under forty years of age in this country are paying in probable more than twice as much as they can hope to get back from social security. If they have the money, in their own hands, they could go into the open insurance market today and buy an insurance (policy) that would pay them more than double and give them a life protection policy from the first day at the same time. (applause) There are plans that are being discussed by a number of economists. One very interesting plan is one that would legitimize that imbalance by imply Well, here's roughly what the plan would do. I just offer this as an example of the thinking of some knowledgeable people. This one would stop the FORD payroll tax, and make the employer's share of social security be LIBRARY given in the paycheck to the worker, so that he would have in effect -2- a raise of pay. He's no longer paying the tax. But, you then create retirement bonds that have an annuity effect, in other words an insurance feature with them. Retirement bonds, the worker would have to buy ten percent of his income in bonds or 2500 dollars worth, whichever was less. Those who are presently getting would be guaranteed their income, who are presently receiving social security. Those who have been paying in would be given bonds in the amount of the money they have already paid in, and start from there on the buying of additional bonds. But another feature of this system that once they have those bonds, under this plan it is proposed that they could if they saw a better chance to invest those bonds in say a private pension plan, they could do it, which would make the government competitive with private pension plans and there's never anything wrong when you've got competition instead of monopoly. (applause) Q Until we return to lower levels of government, many functions that have been usurped by the federal government and that are not the federal government's business, not, shouldn't properly do them. I used the 1976 budget figures to estimate that if these federal programs were turned back, what was the cost of them and therfore what could the federal government conceivable reduce in its budget. And it comes to about 90 billion dollars. Now if this were done, and if at the same time the federal government as it turned that spending back, reduced its taxing of the people, local and state governments would have the leeway then to meet the increased tax they would have to pay for these programs. As I said FORD in my remarks, I am confident from our own welfare experience and some other things in California, that they could be run far more LIBRARY -3- economically at the local level, than at the federal level, and there would be a net gain, so that there would be, even though local and state taxes, for those to continue the program would be raised, there, federal taxes would be decreased more and there would be a net reduction in the total cost of government, federal and state and local. Now, again, as I said in my remarks here, some are trying to portray that I think you could go in and wave a wand and say, stop everything that you're now doing and if they want to pick it up in South Succotash Wisconsin, let 'em do it. Well, that's stat's, of course, ridiculous. I think we've got programs on our state level in California that prove that I never thought in this term. This would have to be phased and ordered. You would have to make an orderly transition in turning a program back to the local levels. Well, let's take welfare for example. Let's look at it. Welfare is shared by the state, the local levels of government, usually the county level, it is in California, and the federal government. The federal government puts up about half of the money, but the program is administered at the state and local level now. The only trouble is you've got a giant bureaucracy and a great administration overhead in Washington that's using up dollars, and that has forced thousands of regulations on you that interfere with what you at the local level, faced with your own problem know you could do if you weren't bound in to those federal rules. Now why don't we just cancel that administrative overhead in Washington and cancel those thousands of regulations, and then as I say turning the tax, the taxing source back to the local and you'll find that welfare would suddenly be run the way it people, FORD LIBRARY -4- should be run. What is the principal wrong with welfare? Very simple. Welfare is a program that if it's successful we should be boasting each year how much less welfare there is, that we've succeeded in solving (applause.) Well, that isn't HEW's idea at all. They've now got a hierarchy there, and a bureaucracy built up for professional welfarists, and the ratcatcher's not about to let the rats be eliminated. FORD is LIBRARY GERALD RONALD REAGAN QUESTIONS & ANSWERS HOUSTON DECEMBER 13, 1975 Q Comment, if you have any comment at all, on what I think is the biggest ripoff the federal government has going for them now, and that's the social security system. A Young people in the room, perk up your ears, because you're the biggest victims of this. Social security, for a number of years Barry Goldwater, God bless him, tried to warn the people years ago and nobody would listen -- CHEERS -- and now it happens. Social security, on an insurance actuarial basis, is about two and a quarter trillion dollars out of balance, meaning that if all the people presently paying in when it comes time for them to receive, that's how the difference could be, between what's being paid in and what has to be paid out. Every wealthy young people under forty years of age in this country are paying in probable more than twice as much as they can hope to get back from social security. If they have the money, in their own hands, they could go into the open insurance market today and buy an insurance (policy) that would pay them more than double and give them a life protection policy from the first day at the same time. (applause) There are plans that are being discussed by a number of economists. One very interesting plan is one that would legitimize that imbalance by imply Well, here's roughly what the plan would do. I just offer this as an example of the thinking of some knowledgeable people. This one would stop the payroll tax, and make the employer's share of social security be RAOD FORD LIBRARY given in the paycheck to the worker, so that he would have in effect -2- a raise of pay. He's no longer paying the tax. But, you then create retirement bonds that have an annuity effect, in other words an insurance feature with them. Retirement bonds, the worker would have to buy ten percent of his income in bonds or 2500 dollars worth, whichever was less. Those who are presently getting would be guaranteed their income, who are presently receiving social security. Those who have been paying in would be given bonds in the amount of the money they have already paid in, and start from there on the buying of additional bonds. But another feature of this system that once they have those bonds, under this plan it is proposed that they could if they saw a better chance to invest those bonds in say a private pension plan, they could do it, which would make the government competitive with private pension plans and there's never anything wrong when you' ve got competition instead of monopoly. (applause) Q Until we return to lower levels of government, many functions that have been usurped by the federal government and that are not the federal government's business, not, shouldn't properly do them. I used the 1976 budget figures to estimate that if these federal programs were turned back, what was the cost of them and therfore what could the federal government conceivable reduce in its budget. And it comes to about 90 billion dollars. Now if this were done, and if at the same time the federal government as it turned that spending back, reduced its taxing of the people, local and state governments would have the leeway then to meet the increased tax they would have to pay for these programs. As I said in my remarks, I am confident from our own welfare experience some other things in California, that they could be run far more FORD & are LIBRARY -3- economically at the local level, than at the federal level, and there would be a net gain, so that there would be, even though local and state taxes, for those to continue the program would be raised, there, federal taxes would be decreased more and there would be a net reduction in the total cost of government, federal and state and local. Now, again, as I said in my remarks here, some are trying to portray that I think you could go in and wave a wand and say, stop everything that you're now doing and if they want to pick it up in South Succotash Wisconsin, let 'em do it. Well, that's stat's, 5, of course, ridiculous. I think we've got programs on our state level in California that prove that I never thought in this term. This would have to be phased and ordered. You would have to make an orderly transition in turning a program back to the local levels. Well, let's take welfare for example. Let's look at it. Welfare is shared by the state, the local levels of government, usually the county level, it is in California, and the federal government. The federal government puts up about half of the money, but the program is administered at the state and local level now. The only trouble is you've got a giant bureaucracy and a great administration overhead in Washington that's using up dollars, and that has forced thousands of regulations on you that interfere with what you at the local level, faced with your own problem know you could do if you weren't bound in to those federal rules. Now why don't we just cancel that administrative overhead in Washington and cancel those thousands of regulations, and then as I say turning the tax, the taxing source back to the local people, R. FORD LIBRARY and you'll find that welfare would suddenly be run the way it of -4- should be run. What is the principal wrong with welfare? Very simple. Welfare is a program that if it's successful we should be boasting each year how much less welfare there is, that we've succeeded in solving (applause.) Well, that isn't HEW's idea at all. They've now got a hierarchy there, and a bureaucracy built up for professional welfarists, and the ratcatcher's not about to let the rats be eliminated. & FORD GERALD LIBRARY THE WHITE HOUSE washington GERALO FORD LIBRARY January 22, 1976 National YWCA ducks Phyllis Wh TO: HON. HOWARD CALLAWAY High hopes of a pre-Christmas gift Board of the YWCA has again duck- YWCA national board. with a 70-minute exchange of views Phyllis Wheatle the form of the release of escrow ed the issue and declined to discuss Telephonic communication between with United Way officials, who had clarified by the FOR YOUR INFORMATION nds by the United Way to the Phy- the Phyllis Wheatley status in a joint United Way officials to the Phyliis set up the meeting. Phyllis Whea ; Wheatley YWCA were crushed session with all parties concerned. Wheatley YWCA board members member of the it week. Tuesday was too late to prevent the Oral Suer, executive director of the YWCA, but at 1 GERALD FORD Representatives of the National No explanation was given for the local board members from arriving at United Way, advised the Phyllis been officially ard of the YWCA, U.S.A., who late cancellation, but the prospect of Unitea Way's 95 M St., SW, headquar- Wheatley YWCA board members that dependent YWC reed by letter to attend a joint the Phyllis Wheatley YWCA getting ters as previously scheduled. UW was prepared to release the al Board. Sue eting with United Way officials the long delayed escrow funds before More than a dozen Phyllis Wheatley funds if it could get a clear recom- settle the ma d the Phyllis Wheatley YW&A offi- the end of 1975 are slim. board members were on hand with menaation from the National YWCA. delay. JOHN CALHOUN last Tuesday, cancelled the ses- According to officials of the local or- hign expectation of having the long Sucr indicated that United Way n only a few hours before the ganization, United Way is prepared to smouldering issue settled in a face-to- could not "in good consciousness" re- National YWC Special Assistant to the President eduled 2 p.m. time, release the funds provided it can get face discussion with other parties con- lease the funds, which to date amount letter on Dec. 3 he net result was the National such a recommendation from the cerned, but they had to be content to more than $100,000, until the meeting in Wasl To Peter Koye Merry Washingto America FYI Christmas and THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE Christmas Year No. 33 Copyright 1975 by the AFRO-AMERICAN Co. for all material previously printed in the current National Edition WASHINGTON, D.C., DECEMBER 23, 1975 RED EDITION 25 CENTS ONE YEAR $12.00 Reagan calls welfare recipients 'rats' Bank takes Keith becomes Jesse says AVAK THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON January 22, 1976 TO: HON. HOWARD CALLAWAY FOR YOUR INFORMATION FORD GERALD LIBRARY JOHN CALHOUN Special Assistant to the President To Peter Koye FYI National YWCA ducks Phyllis Wheatley issue High hopes of a pre-Christmas gift Board of the YWCA has again duck- YWCA national board. with a 70-minute exchange of views Phyllis Wheatley status as a YWCA is situation with United Way and Phyllis in the form of the release of escrow ed the issue and declined to discuss Telephonic communication between with United Way officials, who had clarified by the National Board. Wheatley officials, but then suddenly funds by the United Way to the Phy- the Phyllis Wheatley status in a joint United Way officials to the Phyllis set up the meeting. Phyllis Wheatley is no longer a cancelled the meeting. Ilis Wheatley YWCA were crushed session with all parties concerned. Wheatley YWCA board members member of the National Capital Area last week. Phyllis Wheatley officials have ad- Tuesday was too late to prevent the Oral Suer, executive director of the YWCA, but at the same time has not Representatives of the National No explanation was given for the local board members from arriving at United Way, advised the Phyllis been officially recognized as an "in- vised national officials of the urgency Board of the YWCA, U.S.A., who late cancellation, but the prospect of Unitea Way's 95 M St., SW, headquar- Wheatley YWCA board members that dependent YWCA" by the the Nation- of settiing the matter, and expressed agreed by letter to attend a joint the Phyllis Wheatley YWCA getting ters as previously scheduled. UW was prepared to release the al Board. Such recognition would meeting with United Way officials "disappointment" in their failure to the long delayed escrow funds before More than a dozen Phyllis Wheatley funds if it could get a clear recom- settle the matter without further and the Phyllis Wheatley YWCA offi- the end of 1975 are slim. boara members were on hand with menaation from the National YWCA. delay. attend the "cancelled" meeting. cers last Tuesday, cancelled the ses- According to officials of the local or- hign expectation of having the long Suer indicated that United Way They also are seeking some imme- sion only a few hours before the ganization, United Way is prepared to smouldering issue settled in a face-to- could not "in good consciousness" re- National YWCA officials agreed by diate relief, hopeful that something scheduled 2 p.m. time x release the funds provided it can get face discussion with other parties con- lease the funds, which to date amount letter on Dec. 3 to attend the proposed can be done before the end of the The net result was the National such a recommendation from the cerned, but they had to be content to more than $100,000, until the meeting in Washington to discuss the year. - A.M. Carter Merry Washing American Merry Christmas and THE WASHINGTON TRIBUNE Christmas 84th Year No. 33 Copyright 1975 by the AFRO-AMERICAN Co. for all material previously printed in the current National Edition WASHINGTON, D.C., DECEMBER 23, 1975 RED EDITION 25 CENTS ONE YEAR $12.00 Reagan calls welfare recipients 'rats' Bank takes Keith becomes Jesse says over Stax; 'rats' can album set 2nd chief judge stop 'cat' MEMPHIS, Tenn. - A bank which bought most of the assets of Stax Records, (See recap of key Keith de- By Alverta Moore Inc. after the firm de- cisions inside) BALTIMORE - A state- faulted on a $3 million ment by conservative Re- loan, is planning to pro- DETROIT - Federal publican presidential hope- duce a black history album Judge Damon J. Keith has ful Ronald Reagan which to help put Stax back on its become the second mem- seemingly compared wel- feet and to finance a na- ber of his race to assume fared recipients to rats tional memorial io Dr. the influential post of chief has been denounced by Martin Luther King Jr. judge of a U.S. district black leaders who feel the court. Bill Matthews, board ex-governor of California is chairman of Union Plan- Judge Keith, whose prec- unsympathetic to the needs ters National Bank said he ed n t-setting decisions of the poor. has discussed the idea with have covered a broad "It certainly shows a "several internationally scope from civil rights to lack of sensitivity on Mr. known black artists" and illegal government wire- Reagan's part," said Mrs. is nearing the contract-si taps, moved up to chief Audrey Williams, execu- ning stage of the deal. judge of the U.S. District tive assistant to the direc- He said the album would Court, Eastern District of tor of the department of so- be produced with a Bicen- Michigan, on Dec. 13. cial services here in re- tennial theme. Appointed by the late ferring to the comment Earlier this month, son in 1967, Judge Keith's speech in Houston. Union Planters bought seniority put him in line JUDGE DAMON KEITH In response to a question, Stax's subsidiary, East for the powerful judicial Reagan said he felt the Memphis Music Corp., in post when his predecessor, major defect of the present charge of other court func- Frank M. Kaess, to k se- welfare system was that an auction. It also pur- tions. nior status. its success is not judged chased the Stax-East Earlier this year Judge Memphis catalog of musi- There are 12 judges in by its ability to remove James B. Parsons became cal copyrights. The pur- the Eastern District, three people from the welfare chief judge of the Northern roles. CHRISTMAS SMILE comes from Tiare Jones, 3, building. She was treated to a visit last week to chases amounted to $3 mil- of them on senior status, District, Illinois, in Chi- "That isn't HEW's (De- who miraculously escaped death July 23 as she the Bide-A-Wee animal home in New York. The lion. meaning they carry only cago. half a work load. partment of Health, Edu- fell five stories to the ground when the fire es- babysitter died in the fall. Behind her is the fan- Between 1970 and 1974 In the next four to six cation and Welfare) idea cape she and her babysitter were standing on col- tastic picture made of the fall by Stanley Forman the bank tended Stax about As chief judge, Judge years there could be two at all," he said. "They've lapsed as they awaited rescue from a burning of the Boston Herald-American. (UPI Telephoto) $10.5 million. Union Plan- Keith speaks for the court, more black chief judges of got a hierarchy there, and ters began foreclosure pro- presides at regular meet- U.S. district courts, Judge a bureaucracy built up for ceedings on Stax in No- ings, empanels grand Aubrey Robinson in Wash- professional welfarists, and vember after East Mem- juries, approves hiring and Fort Lincoln has groundbreaking phis defaulted on a $3 mil- promotions and is in (Continued on page 2) (Continued on Page 3) lion loan. On the eve of the auc- tion, Stax attorney Michael A recent groundbreaking eventually will have a pop- Theodore R. Hagans Jr., acres will be developed in Pleasants had attempted to this morning signaled the ulation of 15,000 persons president of Fort Lincoln a series of sections of stop the sale for Stax. Yule spirit lives: start of construction at living in a wide variety of New Town Corporation, re- about 800 to 1,200 units He told U.S. District Fort Lincoln New Town, a h S and con- ported that he is waiting each so that detailed plan- Judge Robert M. McRae Jr. planned 360-acre "city dominiums, and rental for a final decision from ning can be responsive to the sale "would virtually within a city" on vacant apartments, with at least the administration on the changing market condi- kill efforts to ressurrect" land at the northeast edge 70 per cent of the residents previously announced plans tions. Stax. of the District of Columbia. owning their own homes. to go ahead with a one mil- H. R. Crawford, assistant Housing construction is lion sq. ft. federal office McRae refused to issue A 30-acre Town Center churchmen aid family expected to total 500 to 700 secretary of HUD, joined with offices, stores, ser- building to house the Na- an injunction to stop the District of Columbia Mayor homes a year. vices and restaurants is tional Oceanic and Atmos- auction, saying the firm Walter Washington, Theo- expected to employ about pheric Administration in When the Town Center is appeared to be asking for By Gail Hamer lies in the District as well dore Hagans Jr., the devel- a 'free ride" in light of its Clark's son-in-law, Leroy underway, construction 7,000 persons. Fort Lincoln's Town Cen- AFRO Staff Writer as across the nation cele- oper and other federal and will create about 2,500 default. Scott (Joyce's husband) Two schools and a 78- ter. brate the birth of Jesus community officials at It's Christmastime again entered, awoke Clark and Christ, the prayer of one groundbreaking ceremo- Fort Lincoln's residential and while millions of fami- told him he smelled smoke. acre open space recrea- (Continued on page 2) (Continued on Page 3) family will be that they Clark said that he im- nies attended by some 300 tional area with a seven- will once again have a mediately called the fire persons. acre lake also will be part home. department and momen- Fort Lincoln New Town of the development. In the spirit of good will tarily after he finished the toward men, the D.C. Lay- call he heard his daughter men's Association of the yell, "Mrs. Williams' Progressive Baptist Con- kitchen Was in a light Reformers oppose vention have come to the blaze of fire." aid of the William 0. Clark family whose home was The Williamses and the destroyed by fire. Clarks are next door neigh- criminal justice bill Clark, a deacon at Guid- ing Star Baptist Church, (Continued on Page 2) received clothes, money and other necessities from "critics charge that its fellow laymen all over the Notes 95th The Committee to Re- Involve Ex-Offenders (S.1's) effect would be to city when the Laymen's Association learned of their is strongly opposed to the establish a total police member's plight. birthday Scientologists For Freedom state, and dozens of social According to Raymond recently announced that it reform groups, newspaper Smith, pastor of Guiding Daughter of a woman is stronglz opposed to the a n d publishers associ- Star. the Isle of Patmos who died last year at the Criminal Justice Reform ations, legal and religious Baptist Church and Israel age of 119, Mrs. Jennie Act of 1975, Senate Bill 1, organizations are calling Baptist Church were par- Allen of 1140 N. Capitol St., generally referred to as for its defeat." ticularly generous in aid- Washington, celebrated her 1." Kathy Flanagan, spokes- ing the unfortunate family. 95th birthday on Saturday, The S. 1 bill "is a recodi- person for the committee, Benjamin Johnson, a Dec. 20. fication of federal criminal stated, "One of the general deacon at Mt. Pleasant Among her visitors was justice statutes, largely purposes of the bill, is 'to Baptist Church and direc- Father Horace McKenna of drafted by the Nixon ad- promote the correction and tor of the project to aid the St. Aloysius Catholic ministration,' according to rehabilitation of persons Clarks, said that not only Church who brought bless- the committee. have the churches through- ings. Other wellwishers in- It further holds that (Continued on Page 2) out the city been coopera- cluded her live-in nurse, tive but also Curtis Calip Mrs. Lois Richardson: a Jr. of Northeast Ford devoted friend, Mrs. Holiday notice pitched in and gave clothes Frances Cooper; a great- after merely hearing of the grandniece whom she project. reared, Mrs. Sharon Gard- The Washington AFRO-AMERICAN will pub- In biting 18 degree ner and husband, John and weather Clark stood in lish only one big special holiday edition this week. Mrs. Lillie Mae Johnson front of his home last week The combined AFRO Christmas Week Edition is and recounted the disaster. Mrs. Allen is the daugh- on the newsstand and the street (today) Tuesday, On the afternoon of Dec. ter of Mrs. Emma Spriggs the regular publication day for the Red Star 10 Clark was taking a nap who died in December, edition. on his sofa. Rest was nec- 1974, three months short of The same schedule will be followed next week essary for Clark who works h 120th birthday on March 22. because of the Christmas and New Year's holidays. D.C. LAYMEN'S Association members present a Ralph Morton, deacon at Guiding Star Baptist part-time because he is check to Alice and William Clark, who were burn- Church; James U. Smith, president of D.C. Lay- disabled. Requiring use of a cane The AFRO office will be closed on Christmas Day and New Year's Day. ed out of their home earlier this month. (L to R) men's Association and deacon at United Baptist His 19-year-old daughter for walking, Mrs. Allen Deadlines for the New Year's Week Edition William Harris, deacon at Israel Baptist Church; Church; Mr. and Mrs. Clark; Olson Jackson, dea- Joyce Clark Scott and his was in good spirits on her mother-in-law, 87-year-old birthday. Asked what she are Friday, for advertising, and Saturday noon for Theodore Wilson, president of the Eastern Region con at Isle of Patmos Baptist Church and Rev. Ray- Sally Morton, were also in wanted for Christmas, she correspondents' news copy. Call 332-0080 for sub- of the Laymen's Association and deacon at Israel; mond Alexander Smith, pastor of Guiding Star the living room of the two replied "Health and under- scriptions or home delivery Baptist Church. story home at 1109 Mich- standing and to live anoth- (AFRO photo by Cabell) igan Ave., NE, er year. San Diego Evening Tribune 12-23-75 POLITICAL FRONT Reagan's plan in for scrutiny By GEORGE DISSINGER to enact a sales or income tax to the programs could be run more TRIBUNE Politics Writer cover the costs of assuming the efficiently and less costly at state Those who remember Sen. George shifted programs. Reagan replied: and local levels. McGovern's 1972 presidential cam- "But isn't this a proper decision paign proposal to pay every Ameri- for the people of the state to make?" But the key element in his plan is can $1,000 a year from the federal the option for state and local govern- treasury may now want to study Reagan doesn't know and neither ments to pick up or drop the pro- Ronald Reagan's plan to cut the do the citizens of Now Hampshire grams. IBRAR VIRGINIA PAYETTE Reagan Ignores Ladies, Runs Political Risk Ronald Reagan likes to vetoed a maternity leave joke about how, back in his bill and killed day-care leg- movie-actor days, he never islation that would have got the girl. And unless he helped welfare mothers be- mends his ways, he isn't come self-suppporting. going to get her next vear So far. he's the only se- THE SACRAMENTO UNION 12-20-75 Legislative Report Reagan Blamed for Malpractice Mess A legislative report charged Friday telephone interview. for years to the Department of Insur- Legislature. Reagan and Gov. Edmund that the State Department of Insurance The report issued by the Joint Legisla- ance,' said Assemblyman Mike Cullen. G. Brown Jr. of the impending medical under Gov. Ronald Reagan contributed to live Audit Committee asserted that the D-Long Beach, committee chairman. malpractice crisis as early as 1973. the current medical malpractice insur- Department of Insurance added to Cali- "Why these storm warnings did not GERALD FORD LIBRARY San Diego Evening Tribune 12-23-75 POLITICAL FRONT Reagan's plan in for scrutiny By GEORGE DISSINGER to enact a sales or income tax to the programs could be run more TRIBUNE Politics Writer cover the costs of assuming the efficiently and less costly at state Those who remember Sen. George shifted programs. Reagan replied: and local levels. ERA RAR VIRGINIA PAYETTE Reagan Ignores Ladies, Runs Political Risk Ronald Reagan likes to vetoed a maternity leave joke about how, back in his bill and killed day-care leg- movie-actor days, he never islation that would have got the girl. And unless he helped welfare mothers be- mends his ways, he isn't come self-suppporting. going to got her novt voor So for he's the only CA- GERALD THE SACRAMENTO UNION 12-20-75 Legislative Report Reagan Blamed for Malpractice Mess A legislative report charged Friday telephone interview. for years to the Department of Insur- Legislature. Reagan and Gov. Edmund that the State Department of Insurance The report issued by the Joint Legisla- ance," said Assemblyman Mike Cullen, G. Brown Jr. of the impending medical LIBRARY GERALD FORD December 30, 1975 MEMORANDUM FOR: BO CALLAWAY FROM: FRED SLIGHT SUBJECT: Reagan's Proposed $90 Billion Plan For your information, I attach an outline listing of the specific programs and general areas affected by Reagan's proposed reduction in the Federal budget for FY '76. The categories are Reagan's own as are the dollar amounts "saved" which are indicated in parentheses. The programs themselves are taken largely from the Stout, Ottenad, and Buchanan articles and encompass both "Plan I" and the revised "Plan II". Noone outside the Reagan campaign, except selected members of the media, apparently have seen either of these proposals. I am now seeking to identify Federal outlays to New Hampshire and Florida for these categories, however the complexity of this task combined with the very short time frame in which we have to operate is not very encouraging for obtaining specific dollar amounts. Attachment CC: Stu Spencer Bob Marik Peter Kaye LIBRARY GERALD R. FORD SPECIFIC PROGRAMS & GENERAL AREAS AFFECTED BY PROPOSED REDUCTIONS & TRANSFERS I. Education, Manpower & Social Services ($13.7 billion) -- Elementary education -- Secondary education -- Vocational education -- Head Start program -- Full range of "social services" (including total elimination of some special rehabilitation efforts for the severely re- tarded and those with cerebral palsy) -- Federal-State Employment Service (totally eliminated, including $50 million in special funds to help veterans find jobs) -- Meals for elderly (some 200,000 persons receive one/day) II. Community & Regional Development ($5.5 billion) -- Community Action Agencies -- VISTA -- Legal services -- Economic Development Administration -- Community Services Administration -- Regional Action Planning Commission III. Commerce & Transportation ($10 billion) -- Mass transit -- Postal Service subsidies -- Airlines, ship operators and builders, & airport subsidies -- Non-interstate highway consturction -- Army Corps of Engineers (suspend most domestic projects of Corps) -- Bureau of Reclamation -- Soil Conservation Service IV. Income Security ($22 billion) -- Food Stamps program -- Aid to Families with Dependent Children program -- School lunch program -- Certain housing assistance for the needy -- Certain funds for unemployment benefit V. Law Enforcement & Justice ($1 billion) -- Law Enforcement Assistance Administration (totally eliminate ORD -- Legal Services Corporation (erase current plans to create GERALI agency) Specific Programs Transfers Page Two VI. Revenue Sharing ($6.3 billion) -- Cut program altogether VII. National Defense ($2 billion) -- Military personnel pensions (require employee contribution to retirement fund -- initial savings of $2 billion would not lead to a net reduction as savings would be applied elsewhere) VIII. Health ($10.3 billion) -- Medicaid -- Hospital construction -- Health service scholarships -- Grants and contracts for medical schools' special training and education funds -- Grants to state-administered centers which provide maternal and child health care, family planning services, alcohol and drug abuse treatment, migrant, and mental health care FORD & LIBRARY GERALD