"There's no limit to what a man can do or where he can go if he doesn't mind who gets the credit."
That slogan, emblazoned on a small bronze desk plaque that sat on Ronald Reagan's desk in the Oval Office, formed the basis of Reagan's approach to public service and politics, and served as the means to Reagan's ends -- he was perfectly happy not merely to share credit, but to give it away freely, in pursuit of his larger goals.
Imagine, then, how disappointing it must be for Reagan Republicans to read in the news that a senior Republican National Committee staffer was sacked because RNC Chairman Michael Steele "didn't feel he was getting enough credit for the GOP's electoral success earlier this month."
I don't know if this is the real reason now-former RNC communications director Trevor Francis left the committee on Monday.
All I know is that he is gone, that he is "unsure" of his future plans (a tip-off if ever there was one), that the RNC is denying it, and there are two unnamed "Republican strategists familiar with the situation" who say it is so.



