Carl Cannon’s Morning Note

State of the Union; Trump’s GOP; Quote of the Week 

By Carl M. Cannon

Good morning. Another State of the Union address is in the books. These have been partisan affairs for decades, but in last night’s speech Joe Biden made no pretext that this was anything but a pure campaign speech. On the other hand, I feel obliged to note that his predecessor — the man Biden repeatedly lambasted Thursday night, albeit not by name — couldn’t even muster a nonpartisan speech on Inauguration Day. So there you have it.

This doesn’t mean that the exercise was meaningless. Many Republicans have been saying that in terms of his mental acuity, the current president is, well, one taco short of a combination plate. It seems the president passed that test, which should provide some measure of relief to loyal Americans of any party or faction.

Also, today is Friday, the day of the week when I pass along a quotation meant to be uplifting or educational. Today’s words of wisdom come from two U.S. presidents, the current incumbent and a Republican commander in chief who also had to bat away concerns about his age and mental adroitness to win reelection. (Ronald Reagan pulled it off, too, and then some.)

First, though, I’d direct you to RCP’s front page, which contains the latest poll averages, political news and video, and aggregated opinion pieces ranging across the ideological spectrum. We also offer the usual complement of original material from our stable of columnists and contributors. Recent highlights include the following:


Biden’s State of the Union Strikes Campaign Tone. Phil Wegmann reports from the gallery.

Katie Britt Rips Biden Over Age, Border, Inflation. And Susan Crabtree covers the GOP response.

Trump Never Lost Control of the GOP. He Only Tightened His Grasp. Phil Wegmann looks at the presumptive Republican nominee and his indomitable grip on what is now clearly his party.

Loudoun County and Super Tuesday. Matt Taibbi explores the issues that make the wealthy Virginia enclave an outlier.

Big Mysteries Surround the Predictable Presidential Rematch. Peder Zane asks the questions that launch the coming eight-month election season.

Nothing New Under the Sun? Campaign Departures and Parallels. Rick Marschall draws surprising comparisons between the 2024 election and the last time a president won a non-consecutive second term.

No Labels Could Give U.S. Someone To Vote For, Not Against. Greg Orman submits that there’s still time to field a ticket that gives Americans a more optimistic choice.

The Transfer Portal. Jack Hamilton and Bettsie Miller connect the dots between the professionalizing of college sports and the self-aggrandizement that subverts our political process.

Hey Senate: Don’t Fumble This No-Brainer Tax Bill. Adam Brandon implores Congress to put enterprising American taxpayers first and let them keep more of their hard-earned money. 

Pro-Choice Democrats Fight To Make Abortion the Only Option. Marjorie Dannenfelser shines a light on the progressive agenda to defund and eliminate pregnancy resource centers.  

When Classical Learning Meets Public Education, the Dialogue Isn’t Always Socratic; and Which Great Books Can Withstand the Canon Fire? In these two articles in RealClearInvestigations, Vince Bielski reports on a major flashpoint in the post-pandemic disruption of traditional public schools: opposition to schools that focus on liberal arts and the Western canon.

Ukraine’s Secret Weapon in War With Russia. At RealClearPolicy, James Glassman relates the importance of the Eastern European country’s private sector in the territorial conflict with Putin.

Slouching Toward World War III. At RealClearDefense, Francis Sempa again argues that the U.S. and the West in general are ignoring the real center of gravity — China and the Pacific — as they spend vast sums supporting Ukraine.

Replicating TX Energy Miracle Key To Winning Young Conservatives. At RealClearEnergy, Stephen Perkins makes the case for legislation that satisfies the concerns of all voters.

FDA Won’t Say How It Spends User Fees. At RealClearHealth, Michael Chamberlain works to uncover the murky details of the agency’s connection to special interest groups.

Americans’ Economic Confidence Dims in March. At RealClearMarkets, Raghavan Mayur takes a look at the latest gauge of consumer sentiment and what it signals about taxpayer stress levels.

Social Media Companies Aren’t Common Carriers. Also at RealClearMarkets, Harold Furchtgott-Roth & Kirk Arner look at two cases before the Supreme Court and how their outcomes will set important precedents.


On June 8, 1982, President Ronald Reagan appeared before British members of Parliament at the Palace of Westminster to explain his vision of the status of the Cold War. The Soviet Union and the bloc of nations under its control, he said, were in the throes of “a revolutionary crisis” within its own borders. The system, he added, was nearly bankrupt.

“It is the Soviet Union that runs against the tide of human history in denying human freedom and human dignity to its citizens,” Reagan proclaimed at Westminster. “It is also in deep economic difficulty.”

Reagan rhetorically tossed back at the Soviets the old Leon Trotsky boast, by proclaiming that he believed “freedom and democracy will leave Marxism and Leninism on the ash heap of history.” This was not “containment” Reagan was discussing, but ultimate triumph over Soviet-style communism.

But it was the following year when Reagan really walked into the foreign policy china shop and began clumsily breaking things, or so it was portrayed. It was March 8, 1983 — 41 years ago today — in a speech to the National Association of Evangelicals.

The president warmed to his task gradually, prefacing the gist of the speech with ruminations about his own religious faith and the animating beliefs of the nation’s Founding Fathers.

The most memorable passages of the address had little to do with that, however. Reagan believed that the “nuclear freeze” movement then sweeping the West was misguided and dangerous: that it not only undermined his hopes of real nuclear reductions by both sides, but was also based on a false moral equivalency between the United States and its adversaries. Reagan would have none of it. He referred to the Soviet Union as “the focus of evil in the modern world,” and made news — and history — with this passage:

“So in your discussions of the nuclear freeze proposals, I urge you to beware of the temptation of pride — the temptation of blithely declaring yourselves above it all and label both sides equally at fault, to ignore the facts of history and the aggressive impulses of an evil empire, to simply remove yourself from the struggle between right and wrong and good and evil.”

The “evil empire” speech engendered mass hysteria from Reagan’s critics, and even some of his friends. With the advantage of four decades’ hindsight, Ronald Reagan was proven correct in both his predictions and his perceptions, and his boldness hastened the demise of that empire. But totalitarian impulses were not permanently excised from Russia when the Cold War ended, nor from the hearts of would-be autocrats around the world and here at home. Only last night, President Biden was warning about the dangers in Eastern Europe — and reprising another tough Ronald Reagan speech about Russia and its leaders. Observant conservatives were quick to point out last night that Biden wasn’t a fan of Reagan’s famous challenge to Mikhail Gorbachev at Germany’s Brandenberg Gate. But better late than never, I say.

Here is what Biden said last night.

“It wasn’t that long ago when a Republican president, Ronald Reagan, thundered ‘Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!’ Now my predecessor, a former Republican president, tells Putin: ‘Do whatever the hell you want.’ My message to President Putin, who I’ve known for a long time, is simple: We will not walk away. We will not bow down. I will not bow down.”

And that is our quote of the week.

Carl M. Cannon
Washington Bureau chief, RealClearPolitics
@CarlCannon (Twitter)