Ronald Reagan probably didn’t realize he was starting a tradition when he wrote a note congratulating his successor and left it in the Oval Office desk drawer after two terms as president. He did that for George H.W. Bush, his successor and vice president of eight years. Bush did the same for Bill Clinton, who left a note for Bush’s son, George W. The younger Bush left behind written words for Barack Obama, who later put pen to paper for Donald Trump. Trump curiously continued this rite of presidential passage by writing a letter to Joe Biden, even as he opted out of other traditions, like attending Biden’s inauguration. History and politics now have intertwined to put President Biden in the unique position of writing a letter — if he so chooses — to Trump, his successor and the predecessor who left a note for him. “This will mark the first time that a president who has received a letter from an outgoing president may well be writing a letter to the same person who’s the incoming president,” said Mark Updegrove, president and CEO of the LBJ Foundation. When Trump takes office on Monday, he’ll be the first president to serve nonconsecutive terms since Grover Cleveland in the late 1800s, when the letter-writing tradition didn’t exist. “So this is a highly unusual situation, as so many things are in modern day Washington with Donald John Trump,” Updegrove said in an interview. How the note-writing tradition started Reagan was inspired to write to George H.W. Bush, who had become a friend during their eight-year partnership, Updegrove said. He chose a sheet of whimsical stationery illustrated by the cartoonist Sandra Boynton with an elephant — also the Republican Party mascot — surrounded by turkeys and the phrase, “Don’t let the turkeys get you down.” “Dear George,” the 40th president wrote in January 1989, opening the two-paragraph note. “You’ll have moments when you want to use this particular stationery. Well, go to it.” Reagan writes that he treasures the memories they share and “wish you all the very best.” He closed with, “I’ll miss our Thursday lunches,” and signed it, “Ron.” The tradition was elevated, Updegrove said, when the elder Bush turned over the presidency after one term, denied a second by Bill Clinton in the 1992 election. Bush used his note to wish Clinton “great happiness here” in the White House. He warned of tough times that will be made more difficult by criticism Clinton will think unfair, and he advised the man who defeated him to “just don’t let the critics discourage you or push you off course.” “Your success now is our country’s success. I am rooting hard for you,” Bush wrote. “It’s just a very bipartisan, genuine reflection of, I think, really, George H.W. Bush’s character,” Matthew Costello, chief education officer at the White House Historical Association, said during an online program about inaugural traditions. Letters from Clinton through Obama At the end of his two terms, Clinton told the younger Bush that the incoming president was embarking on the “greatest adventure, with the greatest honor, that can come to an American citizen” and wished him “success and much happiness.” “The burdens you now shoulder are great but often exaggerated. The sheer joy of doing what you believe is right is inexpressible,” Clinton wrote. Eight […]
Category:
Recent comments