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Flipping Tables

58. Ronald Reagan Part 1: The Marriage

Flipping Tables

Monte Mader

Society & Culture

5.0 • 1.2K Ratings

🗓️ 11 May 2026

⏱️ 81 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Three decades before the White House, Ronald Reagan was being assembled in plain sight. This episode traces the apprenticeship most highlight reels skip: the New Deal Democrat who became FBI informant "T-10," the B-list actor who turned a corporate speaking tour into a political movement, and the lapsed Midwestern kid who would one day broker the marriage of the Republican Party and white evangelical America.

In postwar Hollywood, where Reagan, as Screen Actors Guild president, simultaneously fed names to the FBI and lent SAG's institutional cover to the blacklist. His October 1947 HUAC testimony was polite; the private file was not. Careers ended on the strength of "fraternal" reports.

Then in 1954, General Electric Theater, and eight years on the GE plant circuit under Lemuel Boulware, the hardline VP who handed Reagan a reading list of Hayek and Hazlitt and turned his pep talks into a portable free market gospel. Corporations were buying preachers and performers to sell their "anti-union, low regulation" gospel. By 1962 GE had cut him loose, but "The Speech" was finished and in 1964 it launched Goldwater and, with him, Reagan himself.

Finally, the wedding of cross and capital. Reagan, never a churchgoing adult, became the indispensable broker between corporate donors and a politically homeless evangelical electorate. In Dallas, August 1980, he closed the deal with one line: "I know you can't endorse me, but I want you to know I endorse you." That coalition outlived him still runs our country. In Part 2 we talk about the longterm staggering impact of Reaganomics.


References

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Critchlow, D. T. (2005). Phyllis Schlafly and grassroots conservatism: A woman’s crusade. Princeton University Press.

Dochuk, D. (2011). From Bible Belt to Sunbelt: Plain‑folk religion, grassroots politics, and the rise of evangelical conservatism. W. W. Norton.

FitzGerald, F. (2017). The evangelicals: The struggle to shape America. Simon & Schuster.

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Kohler‑Hausmann, J. (2017). Getting tough: Welfare and imprisonment in 1970s America. Princeton University Press.

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Perlstein, R. (2020). Reaganland: America’s right turn 1976–1980. Simon & Schuster.

Reagan, R. (1986, February 15). Radio address to the nation on welfare reform [Speech transcript]. Ronald Reagan Presidential Library. https://www.reaganlibrary.gov/archives/speech/radio-address-nation-welfare-reform

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Sick, G. (1991). October surprise: America’s hostages in Iran and the election of Ronald Reagan. Times Books.

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Unger, C. (2024). Den of spies: Reagan, Carter, and the secret history of the treason that stole the White House. Mariner Books.

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

In November of 1980, a former Hollywood actor walked into the White House promising morning in America.

0:06.6

He smiled, he told jokes, he told his government wasn't the solution.

0:10.8

Government was actually the problem.

0:12.7

His name was Ronald Reagan, and more than 40 years later, we're still living inside the country that he built.

0:18.7

Before the presidency, Reagan was a B-movie actor, a GE pitchman, and a union

0:23.2

leader who turned on his own union, and a two-term governor of California. But the real story

0:28.1

isn't the man, it's the marriage. Because when Reagan walked down the aisle with the modern

0:32.6

conservative movement, Buckley's National Review, the Heritage Foundation, the supply side economist,

0:38.0

the religious right, the corporate lobbyists, who spent 30 years plotting the rollback of the New Deal,

0:42.4

he gave them something they had never had before. A frontman the country actually liked,

0:47.9

a grandfather figure who could sell shareholder capitalism with a wink and a one-liner,

0:52.6

and once that coalition had power, it used it.

0:55.3

The top marginal income tax rate dropped from 70% to 28. Air traffic controllers went on strike in

1:01.0

1981, and Reagan fired all of them. A signal flare to corporate America that the federal government

1:06.6

had switched sides in a war between labor and capital, and it was no longer on the side of the worker.

1:12.2

Antitrust enforcement went dormant. Financial regulation got hollowed out. Wealth that used to flow to wages to public investment and to the middle class started flowing somewhere else.

1:21.7

Upward, and it never came back down. Trickled down economics is a lie. The promise that was prosperity at the top would trickle

1:28.7

down did not. Since 1980, worker productivity has roughly doubled, but typical wages have barely

1:34.4

budged. Almost all of the gains were captured at the very, very top. Today, the richest 1% of

1:39.5

Americans own nearly as much wealth as the entire bottom 90% of people combined.

1:45.4

And that isn't on accident.

1:46.5

That's a policy outcome that was a decision, and it has a date of birth.

...

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