Henry B. González and Ronald Reagan
James Quillian, Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law
Most people judge politicians by the labels pinned on them — conservative, liberal, moderate, centrist, reformer, outsider, insider. These labels are cheap. They are marketing tools, not measurements. If you want to understand a person or an institution, you ignore the label and look at how they actually function.
Two men illustrate this principle better than most: Henry B. González and Ronald Reagan. One was branded a liberal Democrat. The other became a conservative icon. But when you strip away the slogans and examine their behavior, the picture changes.
This is not about what was said about them. It is about what they did.