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How Reagan and Congress Can Forge a Bipartisan Foreign Policy
| Article
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12628 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
6 / 1987 |
2,982 Words |
| Author
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Lee Edwards Lee Edwards is senior editor for the Current Issues section
of THE WORLD & I. His latest book is The Power of Ideas: The
Heritage Foundation at Twenty-five. |
While foreign policy makers in the United States, and our allies around the world, regard with dismay and apprehension the clash between a Republican administration and a Democratic Congress over such controversial issues as arms sales and control, terrorism and protectionism, foreign aid and the Contras, we sometimes hear the plaintive query, "Whatever happened to bipartisanship?" This is often followed by: "Is it even possible for a Congress dominated by one political party and a White House occupied by a member of the opposite party to conduct jointly an effective American foreign policy, particularly in the face of an approaching national election?"
Before surrendering to despair, we should examine a remarkably parallel period of political history, the years 1947 and 1948, when a Democratic president, Harry S Truman, and a Republican 80th Congress coproduced the Truman Doctrine, the Marshall Plan, and the Vandenberg Resolution, which prepared the way for NATO - the foundation upon which U.S. foreign policy rests to this day.
It was an extraordinary accomplishment for a very odd political couple. No one could call Truman anything but the most partisan of presidents, and Republicans had just won control of Congress after 14 years in the electoral wilderness and were looking forward eagerly to capturing the White House in 1948.
Why it worked
And yet, the overwhelming majority of Democrats and Republicans put aside partisan politics and worked together in the most exemplary bipartisan manner in the area of foreign policy for almost two years. Why? As in most things human, there were a number of factors, political as well as strategic.
1. Truman was determined to cooperate closely with Congress to obtain its approval of the Truman Doctrine, the Marshall Plan, and the Vandenberg Resolution, even insisting that his name not be associated with either of the latter two measures, for fear of endangering their passage. He accepted congressional amendments that significantly altered the original form of his Marshall Plan proposal, as when he agreed to the Brookings Institution's recommendation to make the Economic Cooperation Administration substantially independent of the State Department. Truman preached and practiced that "politics should stop at the water's edge." In short, he exerted the necessary leadership on the Democratic side to make bipartisanship
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