Edwin Meese III: The Judge’s Strategic Gavel



Townhall carries this article by Edwin Meese III discussing the role that Bill Clark played in the Reagan Administration. He writes:

Most of the inner circle who served Ronald Reagan from his governorship in Sacramento all the way to his presidency in Washington, DC are now gone. In 2006, Cap Weinberger and Lyn Nofziger left us. Only a few months ago, Mike Deaver departed. All of these men, as well as myself, wrote books about their experiences. Some of us have been the subject of biographies. A major exception has been the one Reagan adviser that many believe was closest to Reagan and had an especially interesting personal story to tell, not to mention a story of substantial historical value: William P. “Bill” Clark.

Thanks only to the persistence and diligence of authors Paul Kengor and Pat Clark Doerner, only now has Clark’s fascinating story—a true insider’s account of the life and presidency of Ronald Reagan, and especially Reagan’s effort to undermine Soviet communism—at long last been revealed . . .



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