Your historical examples are nonsense.
Tax increases did not contribute to eliminating the deficit under Clinton. The internet bubble and economic growth did that.
Michigan has raised taxes to close the deficit. NJ has raised taxes to close the deficit. California has raised taxes to close the deficit. NY has raised taxes to close the deficit.
In every case the deficit is worse, not better, than it had been.
Under Reagan the deficit would have shrunk to zero had not the Democrat Congress increased spending massively. Ditto under George W Bush.
No, Reagan was right. The only way to increase gov't efficiency is to put it on a diet. And teh way to do that is not by raising taxes.
Reagan's old budget director, David Stockman, disagrees with you. As do most economists.
Feel free to back up your argument with empirical evidence. I've never seen it. Ever.
As I've stated, Bush's former chair of the Council of Economic Advisers, Greg Mankiw, ran the econometric models and concluded that for every $1 in income taxes cut, the government loses $0.83 in revenues. Good luck balancing the budget with that. If you cut taxes, you have to cut spending.