Location: The Heritage Foundation's Lehrman Auditorium
Veteran journalist John O'Sullivan provides a dramatic account
of how three great figures - Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, Pope
John Paul II, and President Ronald Reagan - changed the course of
history and how their collaborative efforts revived faith,
prosperity, and freedom in the West. Each came to power and became
much-needed beacons of optimism cutting through the despair that
afflicted 1970s America, post-imperial Britain, and a Catholic
Church rocked by social revolution. Ultimately, this triumphant
political partnership resulted in the miraculous liberation of
Eastern Europe. Combining their unique strengths - Reagan's relaxed
self-confidence, Thatcher's stern abilities, and the Pope's
hopefulness and love - they were able to overcome the clutches of
Communism. Now, more than ever, everyone can benefit from their
lessons of fearlessness, strength, and wisdom.
JOHN O'SULLIVAN covered the Reagan presidency as a
Washington columnist, was a special adviser to Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher, and has written regularly on Pope John Paul II
and the Catholic Church's influence on international relations. A
veteran journalist in Britain and the United States, he was the
editor in chief of National Review, The National Interest,
Policy Review, and United Press International, editorial page
editor of the New York Post, op-ed and editorial page
editor for the London Times, and an editor with the
London Daily Telegraph. A Commander of the British Empire and
founder of the New Atlantic Initiative, he is currently editor at
large for National Review, a weekly columnist for the
Chicago Sun-Times, and a senior fellow with the Hudson
Institute.
More About the Speakers
John O'Sullivan
Author
Hosted By
Kim R. Holmes, Ph.D.
Vice President, Foreign and Defense Policy Studies, and Director, The Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies
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