Cover image for The right path : from Ike to Reagan, how Republicans once mastered politics-- and can again
Title:
The right path : from Ike to Reagan, how Republicans once mastered politics-- and can again
ISBN:
9780812996142
Edition:
First Edition.
Physical Description:
xxviii, 194 pages ; 22 cm.
Contents:
Forty Augusts : from Watts to Katrina -- A dislike for Ike -- Between a rock and the right -- Goldwater, extremism, and the rise of LBJ -- Reagan's rendezvous with destiny -- The life of a driving dream -- Acid, amnesty, and abortion -- The dream is still with us -- A new hope -- You ain't seem nothing yet -- The polo populist -- A revolution unravels -- The worst of times -- The road to victory.
Summary:
"Although it can be difficult to remember now as they seemingly glide towards ideological and demographic irrelevance, from the mid-1960s to the middle of the first decade of the 21st century, the Republicans enjoyed a reign whose duration and scope rivaled those of Jackson, Lincoln, Wilson, or even FDR. Opening with the passage of the Voting Rights Act in 1965 and ending with the disillusionment that characterized the final months of George W. Bush's presidency, Scarborough ultimately takes today's Republican party to task for squandering opportunities to attain and hold power. By revisiting Eisenhower's understated diplomacy, Barry Goldwater's fierce rhetoric and Reagan's gift for channeling and connecting with voters, The Right Path vividly demonstrates how today's GOP has undermined its own cause and in doing so, fails the nation"--
Holds: