Above, I am presenting you with a picture of Peggy Noonan. Noonan was one of President Ronald Reagan's speechwriters, and in a commentary that appeared in the Saturday/Sunday, April 4-5, 2026, edition of The Wall Street Journal, she contrasted former President Reagan with our current president. Noonan's column was titled, "A Republic, Not A Mood." Here's her observation about President Reagan:
Ronald Reagan late in his presidency, in a valedictory appearance at a Republican National Convention, spoke of how he personally experienced the office: “You don’t become president of the United States. You are given temporary custody of an institution called the presidency, which belongs to our people.” He approached his two administrations as “a sacred trust.” This was pushback against the idea of an imperial presidency, in which man and office are fused and personal power the point. But man’s life is limited and the institution is continuous, an inheritance accumulated across time. It was also a rebuke to the idea of grandiosity, in which inflated self-regard amounts to a distorted relationship with reality (emphasis added).
As the title of her column indicates, Noonan was presenting her readers with a "comparison." Here's Noonan's characterization of our current president:
I was thinking this week that Mr. Trump’s vision of himself as primarily a dealmaker is unsuited to a necessity of presidential leadership, which involves laying out the logic of a difficult case. Deal makers gain advantage through strategies that don’t necessarily involve transparency and forthrightness. I went back to Mr. Trump’s 1987 “The Art of the Deal.” A strong undercurrent of that lively book is that it’s good to be unreadable and sneaky: “I play it very loose.” “Sometimes it pays to be a little wild.” “The truth is I’m keeping my options open.” “I also protect myself by being flexible. I never get too attached to one deal or one approach.” “I keep a lot of balls in the air.” “Once I’ve made a deal, I always come up with at least a half dozen approaches to making it work because anything can happen.” Money is a way of keeping score. “The real excitement is playing the game.”I want to swerve here to talk about the word that keeps coming to mind when I look at the president’s leadership, and it is “mood.” A lot seems to depend on matters of personal choice, will and mood. In Iran for instance, maybe he’ll bomb the rubble until it jumps, maybe he’ll declare victory and withdraw by May, maybe he’ll send in troops. But it will be his choice, no consultation needed with that pesky branch, the legislative.There is something not at all right when the weightiest decisions of a democratic republic depend so much on the mood of one man (emphasis added).
I have previously noted that it is my view that electing our current president was a significant "mistake." A mistake, in fact, that has pushed me, at times, into real depression.
Noonan's column outlines one reason that it was such a mistake to put our current president into power. The presidency belongs to the people, and what the president does, on behalf of the people, needs to depend on the people, not on the "mood" of the current incumbent.
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